Miami Herald (Sunday)

IOC reinstates Thorpe’s 2 gold medals from 1912

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

Jim Thorpe has been reinstated as the sole winner of the 1912 Olympic pentathlon and decathlon in Stockholm — nearly 110 years after being stripped of those gold medals for violations of strict amateurism rules of the time.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee announced the change Friday on the 110th anniversar­y of Thorpe winning the decathlon and later being proclaimed by King Gustav V of Sweden as “the greatest athlete in the world.”

Thorpe, a Native American, returned to a tickertape parade in New York, but months later it was discovered he had been paid to play minor league baseball over two summers, an infringeme­nt of the Olympic amateurism rules. He was stripped of his gold medals in what was described as the first major internatio­nal sports scandal.

Thorpe to some remains the greatest all-around athlete ever. He was voted as the Associated Press’ Athlete of the Half Century in a poll in 1950.

In 1982 — 29 years after Thorpe’s death — the IOC gave duplicate gold medals to his family but his Olympic records were not reinstated, nor was his status as the sole gold medalist of the two events.

ETC.

Soccer: Spain will play host nation England in the

Aquarterfi­nals Wednesday at the Women’s European Championsh­ip after beating Denmark 1-0 on Marta Cardona’s 90-minute goal to finish second in Group B. Denmark, losing finalist in the last continenta­l showpiece in 2017, exits in the group stage.

Tennis: Fourth-seeded

Maxime Cressy ended

John Isner’s 10-match winning streak on Newport’s grass courts, beating the fellow American 6-2, 4-6, 6-3 to advance to the Hall of Fame Open final in Rhode Island. Cressy will face No. 3 seed Alexander Bublik of Kazakhstan. Bublik beat Jason Kubler of Australia 6-3, 6-2 in the other semifinal.

Golf: Jennifer Kupcho and Lizette Salas won the Dow Great Lakes Bay Invitation­al at Midland, Michigan, closing with a 9-under 61 in bestball play for a five-stroke victory. The U.S. Solheim Cup partners finished at 26-under 254.

College swimming:

Lia Thomas, who became the first openly transgende­r athlete to win an NCAA Division I national championsh­ip earlier this year, has been nominated for the 2022 NCAA Woman of the Year Award. The 22-year-old athlete was one of 577 graduating student-athletes from Divisions I, II and II to be nominated for the prestigiou­s award, the National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n said Thursday in a news release. Thomas was nominated for the honor by the University of Pennsylvan­ia, from which she graduated in May.

AAA

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