The Columbus Dispatch

Igor Vovkovinsk­iy, tallest man in US, dies in Minnesota

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ROCHESTER, Minn. – Igor Vovkovinsk­iy, the tallest man in the United States, has died in Minnesota. He was 38.

His family said on Facebook the Ukrainian-born Vovkovinsk­iy died of heart disease Friday at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. His mother, Svetlana Vovkovinsk­a, an ICU nurse at Mayo, initially posted about his death.

Vovkovinsk­iy came to the Mayo Clinic in 1989 as a child seeking treatment. A tumor pressing against his pituitary gland caused it to secrete abnormal levels of growth hormone. He grew to become the tallest man in the U.S. at 7 feet, 8.33 inches and ended up staying in Rochester.

His older brother, Oleh Ladan of Brooklyn Park, told the Star Tribune of Minneapoli­s that Vovkovinsk­iy was a celebrity when he arrived from Ukraine because of his size and the flickering Cold War of the late 1980s. But

Ladan said Vovkovinsk­iy “would have rather lived a normal life than be known.”

Vovkovinsk­iy appeared on “The Dr. Oz Show” and was called out by President Barack Obama during a campaign rally in 2009, when the president noticed him near the stage wearing a Tshirt that read, “World’s Biggest Obama Supporter.” In 2013, he carried the Ukrainian contestant onto the stage to perform in the Eurovision Song Contest.

When he was 27, Vovkovinsk­iy traveled to New York City and was declared America’s tallest living person by a Guinness World Records adjudicato­r on Oz’s show. He edged out a sheriff ’s deputy in Virginia by one-third of an inch.

He issued a plea in 2012 to cover the estimated $16,000 cost for specially made shoes that wouldn’t cause him crippling pain. At the time, he said he hadn’t owned a pair for years that fit his size 26, 10E feet. Thousands donated more than double what he needed. Reebok provided the custom shoes for free.

 ?? BEN GARVIN/AP ?? President Barack Obama, foreground, reaches up to shake the hand of 7-foot-8 Igor Vovkovinsk­iy during a rally Sept. 12, 2009. Vovkovinsk­iy died Friday of heart disease.
BEN GARVIN/AP President Barack Obama, foreground, reaches up to shake the hand of 7-foot-8 Igor Vovkovinsk­iy during a rally Sept. 12, 2009. Vovkovinsk­iy died Friday of heart disease.

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