Los Angeles Times

Czech gymnastics great resisted Soviets

- Associated Press news.obits@latimes.com

Vera Caslavska, a seven-time Olympic gymnastics gold medalist who stood up against the 1968 Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslov­akia, has died. She was 74.

The Czech Olympic Committee said Wednesday that Caslavska died in Prague late Tuesday. Caslavska had cancer of the pancreas and underwent surgery last year, the committee previously said. She later had chemothera­py.

“She was always a great role model to others,” said Jiri Kejval, the committee’s president. “Till the last moment, she was full of energy which she managed to pass on to all those around her. We will miss her greatly.”

Caslavska was born May 3, 1942, in Prague.

She won her first Olympic medal — a silver — at the 1960 Rome Games, but her golden era began four years later, when she won three golds in Tokyo — in the vault, the individual all-round and the balance beam — to establish herself as a major force in her sport.

Four years later, Caslavska became an outspoken supporter of Alexander Dubcek’s liberal reforms meant to lead toward democratiz­ation of communist Czechoslov­akia, an era known as the Prague Spring. She signed the Two Thousand Words manifesto, published in June 1968, which called for deeper pro-democratic changes. That document angered Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, who ordered Warsaw Pact troops to invade Czechoslov­akia to crush the reforms.

Facing possible persecutio­n, Caslavska went into hiding. She was allowed to join the national gymnastics team only just before the 1968 Mexico City Olympics.

She triumphed in four discipline­s, winning the gold in the vault, the individual all-round, the floor exercise and the uneven bars. With another two silvers at the 1968 Games, she became the top medalist and was later named the world’s female athlete of the year.

For many, she will be remembered for her silent protest against the Soviet invasion. Standing on the top of the medal stand alongside Soviet gymnast Larisa Petrik, with whom she shared the gold in the floor exercise, Caslavska turned her head down and to the right when the Soviet national anthem was played.

Combined with her gymnastic performanc­es, the gesture made her the star of the Games.

At home, Caslavska faced persecutio­n from the post-invasion communist regime.

It wasn’t until 1974 that she was allowed to work as coach in her country and later, in 1979-81, in Mexico.

After the 1989 anti-communist Velvet Revolution led by Vaclav Havel ended more than 40 years of communism, Caslavska became Havel’s adviser and was elected president of the Czechoslov­ak and later of the Czech Olympic Committee.

In 1995-2001, she was a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

In 1989, she received the U.N.’s Pierre de Coubertin Prize for promoting fair play and was also awarded the Olympic Order.

Her marriage to Josef Odlozil, an athlete she married during the Mexico Games, ended in the 1980s. Her son, Martin, was found guilty of assault that led to his father’s death in 1993 and was sentenced to four years in prison.

Although her son was soon pardoned by Havel, Caslavska was treated for depression and withdrew temporaril­y from public life.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ‘A GREAT ROLE MODEL TO OTHERS’ Vera Caslavska performs on balance beam at a competitio­n in 1966. She was a seven-time Olympic champion in gymnastics for Czechoslov­akia.
Associated Press ‘A GREAT ROLE MODEL TO OTHERS’ Vera Caslavska performs on balance beam at a competitio­n in 1966. She was a seven-time Olympic champion in gymnastics for Czechoslov­akia.

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