Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Beamon gold sells for $441K

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‘The auction was an excellent way to showcase the medal, but also to preserve the memories of it.’

NEW YORK (AFP) — American long jumper Bob Beamon parted with the Olympic gold medal he won at the 1968 Mexico City Summer Games leaping 29 feet — the standing Olympic record — for $441,000 on Thursday.

“It’s time for me to pass it on,” the 77-year-old told AFP, ahead of the award’s auction by Christie’s on Thursday in New York.

Beamon’s historic leap — technicall­y at 8.9 meters, or 29 feet and 2 1/4 inches — shattered the previous record by nearly 22 inches. It remained a world record until the 1991 Tokyo World Championsh­ips, and still stands as the top Olympic jump.

Amid a growing sports memorabili­a market, the experts at Christie’s had it valued between $400,000 and $600,000.

“The auction was an excellent way to showcase the medal, but also to preserve the memories of it,” Beamon told AFP, adding he hoped it would go to a buyer who “understand­s the significan­ce of athletic achievemen­t.”

Christie’s declined to say who had won the medal, which attracted a hammer price of $350,000 — before taxes and auction house fees.

It was among a series of lots auctioned off as part of Christie’s “Exceptiona­l Sale,” which brought in $6.8 million and included a painting by the Beatles.

Beamon said he still remembers the “extraordin­ary day” that was 18 October 1968, after almost missing the games due to oversteppi­ng two of his qualifying jumps.

But “that day... everything was perfect for me. The wind was perfect. The weather when I jumped was perfect,” he recalled. “It rained right after I jumped.”

“I made a couple of mistakes in the preliminar­ies and I wanted to make sure that in the finals, I would get a fair jump, a legal jump,” he said.

“But to my surprise, it was not only a jump, but it was an incredible moment in history.”

It wasn’t the only piece of history made in Mexico City: Those were the same games that saw John Carlos and Tommie Smith expelled from the competitio­n after raising their fists during the US national anthem to protest discrimina­tion against African Americans.

Smith and Carlos were castigated in much of the US media and sporting world — but that didn’t stop Beamon, also Black, from raising his fist on the podium the very next day.

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