Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rememberin­g a winner

- By Helene Elliott

Rafer Johnson made a difference long after winning gold in 1960.

Rafer Johnson’s body had grown weak but his spirit was undimmed the last time he attended a Special Olympics breakfast at Long Beach State. That was a year ago — ormaybe two years, Tai Babilonia guessed, since she had seen him at a meeting of the organizati­on that gripped his heart since he founded its Southern California chapter in 1969.

The precise date escaped her after she learned of Johnson’s death Wednesday, lost in her grief but comforted by memories of his selflessne­ss and humility. His Olympic decathlon medals — silver in 1956 and gold in 1960 — were testament to his extraordin­ary athletic talent. His work with Special Olympics and other advocates for the sick and unfortunat­e testified to his extraordin­ary generosity.

“He was so frail but he was there,” Babilonia, a two-time Olympic pairs skater who became involved with Special Olympics at Johnson’s urging, said of that gathering. “That just tells you so much about the man and his passion and his strength and everything about Rafer.

“Rafer Johnson inspired me to be the best that I could be. He’s at the top of the mountain for me. What a loss, but what a life. And whata family.”

Johnson’s children, Jenny and Joshua, knew little of their father’s athletic feats while they grew up. He had saved his memorabili­a but didn’t display anything at the family’s Los Angeles home. When the kids were studying the ancient Olympics at school and asked him if he had anything they could bringin, he had to dig his souvenirs out of storage.

Johnson didn’t value his life by his dust-catching trophies. He was comfortabl­e with who he was and his achievemen­ts as an athlete, as well as an organizer and memorably elegant torch lighter of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. “We preferred to display the kids’ stuff,” he said while striding along Bondi Beach before Jenny’s beach volleyball match at the 2000 Summer Olympics. “To me, it was more important to build their pride.”

Jenny Johnson Jordan is now associate beach volleyball coach at UCLA. Joshua Johnson, a three-time Bruin all-America javelin thrower, is managing director at a commercial real estate firm. “Whatever I’ve learned from him has been more by example than anything else,” Jenny said in 2000.

When Johnson retired from the board of LA84, the youth-focused foundation establishe­d with profits from the 1984 Olympics, the organizati­on pondered ways to honor him. LA84 President Renata Simril, whose candidacy had been strongly supported by Johnson, deeply admired him and wanted to recognize the remarkable scope of his life. She was surprised when she asked Johnson’s wife, Betsy, to contribute memorabili­a for an exhibit and was told they had nothing at hand.

“When I asked him about that, when he came to see the exhibition before we opened it publicly, he said he wanted to be a father to his kids. He didn’t want to be the Olympian, the humanitari­an. He wanted to give them space to be their best self and not to be overburden­ed, if that’s the right word, by who he was as a person and as an athlete,” said Simril, who worked with Johnson on coverage of the 2015 Special Olympics World Games during her brief stint as an executive at the Los Angeles Times.

“He was just a dad. He always wanted to shine his light on other people and he said in his book (published in 1999) that he always used his God-given talent to be the best that he could, and he was.He just wanted to use his God-given talent to help everybody be the best they couldbe.”

The exhibition, titled “Rafer Johnson: His Life. His Impact,” opened at the LA84 Foundation’s headquarte­rs in 2019. The building is closed due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns, but the display of his shoes, photos and other wonderful memorabili­a remains in place.

“We had a big celebrator­y Sunday brunch to unveil the exhibition and I called him a couple days later just to check in with him,” Simril said. “He got quiet and reflective. He said, ‘You know,

Renata, you and the LA84 foundation, at the exhibition, helped me realize that I made a life.’ I like to say we gave him his flowers while he was still with us.”

He didn’t build a brand, as many athletes do. He wasn’t an influencer by the current definition of someone who can sell products or sway public opinion. Good on those who do and on athletes who use social media to encourage voting and social justice. “Rafer wasn’t about him. He wasn’t about the limelight,” Simril said. “He was about quietly making a difference and inspiring people through his actions, not his words, not through press releases or about ‘See me, see me.’”

He had an unexpected­ly powerful impact on Babilonia. He pulled her aside at an

event they attended in the early 1980s and asked what she was up to; she was then performing in the Ice Capades with partner Randy Gardner. “Rafer said, ‘Tai, with all that you’re doing — and that’s great and it’s wonderful — don’t ever forget to giveback and to always pay it forward.’ And I had never heard the term pay it forward before,” she said. “That’s when I got involved in Special Olympics. ... It was Rafer Johnson who planted that seed and it changed my life.

“He’s just this bright light. It’s a little dim right now, but for me it shines so brightly.”

Rich Perelman, vice president of the 1984 LA Olympic organizing committee and editor of the sports examiner. knew Johnson was ailing but had difficulty accepting Johnson’s death. “It sounds so trite but he’s Rafer Johnson. He’s not supposed to get old. He’s not supposed to pass away. He’s eternal. And in a lot of ways he will be eternal ,” Perelman said.

“I hope that people will remember not that he was a gold medalist, which he was, gold and silver medalist. ... This is a guy who achieved much more in his life after his athletic career than he did during his athletic career and how many great, iconic Olympic athletes can we say that about? He was the absolute embodiment of a living legend. There are very few people who you can say are literally legends in their own time.”

Rafer Johnson’s last race was run long ago. May the memory of Johnson the person live on.

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 ?? Associated Press photos ?? Rafer Johnson wins in the 100 meters en route to the Olympic decathlon gold medal at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. Above left, Johnson participat­es in the 1996 Olympic flame relay leaduing up to that year’s Summer Games in Atlanta.
Associated Press photos Rafer Johnson wins in the 100 meters en route to the Olympic decathlon gold medal at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. Above left, Johnson participat­es in the 1996 Olympic flame relay leaduing up to that year’s Summer Games in Atlanta.

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