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Winner of two Olympic gold medals for the United States

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HONOLULU — Tommy Kono, who took up weight lifting in an internment camp for Japanese-Americans and went on to win two Olympic gold medals for the United States, has died. Hewas 85.

Kono died Sunday in Honolulu, the U.S. Olympic Committee announced. His daughter, JoAnn Sumida, told The NewYork Times the cause was hepatic encephalop­athy caused by cirrhosis of the liver.

He was born Tamio Kono in Sacramento, California in 1930. Kono was a frail, asthmatic 14-year-old when a neighbor first gave him a dumbbell at the Tule Lake internment center in Northern California, where he lived with his family for most of World War II.

He packed on 15 pounds of muscle by the time he left the camp in 1945.

“I didn’t want to be a weightlift­er,” Kono said in 1960, according to the Times. “I just want to be healthy.”

Before his weightlift­ing career, Kono went to high school and college in Sacramento and was drafted into the army.

Kono would become one of the sport’s greatest champions, winning golds in Helsinki in 1952 and Melbourne in 1956.

He also won a silver medal at the 1960 games in Rome and six straight world championsh­ips in the 1950s.

At various times he held 20 world records, according to the Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation. That organizati­on named him“Lifter of theCentury” on its 100th anniversar­y in 2005.

In the same period, he competed as a bodybuilde­r winning the title Mr. Universe three times.

Kono later became a coach of Olympic weightlift­ing teams for three different countries, including the U.S. team that competed inMontreal in 1976.

 ?? AP/FILE ?? Tommy Kono competes in a weightlift­ing match between the U.S. team and a visiting Russian team in 1958.
AP/FILE Tommy Kono competes in a weightlift­ing match between the U.S. team and a visiting Russian team in 1958.

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