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Dick Fosbury Biography

Athlete

As a young high jumper in the early 1960s, Dick Fosbury had trouble mastering the standard technique, called the straddle. Instead he began doing the high jump by approaching the bar with his back to it, doing a modified scissor-kick and going over the bar backwards and horizontal to the ground. As goofy as it looked, it worked. Dubbed the "Fosbury Flop" by a Medford, Oregon reporter, Fosbury caused a sensation when he won the gold medal in the 1968 Olympics, jumping a height of 2.24 meters. The Fosbury Flop has since become a standard technique for high jumpers.

Now you know what the Fosbury Flop is. To read about more such terms, go to our loop on Who's What?... Other Oregon track and field figures include Steve Prefontaine and Phil Knight.

Four Good Links

Dick Fosbury Biography

Short and sweet, from HickockSports.com

Being Backwards Gets Results

Detailed 1969 Sports Illustrated story by Roy Blount, Jr.

Rotation Over the Bar in the Fosbury Flop

For the kinesiologists in the crowd, a detailed analysis of flop technique

The Flop That Flabbergasted

1999 newspaper story that recaptures the event

Vital Stats

Birth

6 March 1947
(age 62)

Birthplace

Portland, Oregon

Death

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Best Known As

The high jumper who came up with the Fosbury Flop