Disqualified

Eddie Hart, Munich 1972, and the Voices of the Most Tragic Olympics

Nonfiction, Sports, Olympics, History, Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Disqualified by Eddie Hart, The Kent State University Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Eddie Hart ISBN: 9781631012600
Publisher: The Kent State University Press Publication: August 15, 2017
Imprint: The Kent State University Press/Black Squirrel Books Language: English
Author: Eddie Hart
ISBN: 9781631012600
Publisher: The Kent State University Press
Publication: August 15, 2017
Imprint: The Kent State University Press/Black Squirrel Books
Language: English

Having previously tied the world record, Eddie Hart was a strong favorite to win the 100-meter dash at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, Germany. Then the inexplicable happened: he was disqualified after arriving seconds late for a quarterfinal heat. Ten years of training to become the “World’s Fastest Human,” the title attached to an Olympic 100-meter champion, was lost in a heartbeat. But who was to blame?

Hart’s disappointment, though excruciating, was just one of many subplots to the most tragic of Olympic Games, at which eight Arab terrorists assassinated eleven Israeli athletes and coaches as the world watched in horror. Five terrorists were killed, but three escaped to their homeland as heroes and were never brought to trial. Swimmer Mark Spitz won seven gold medals but was rushed out of Germany afterward because he was Jewish. Other American athletes, besides Hart, seemed jinxed in Munich. The USA men’s basketball team thought it had earned the gold medal, but the Russians received it instead through an unprecedented technicality. Bob Seagren, the defending pole vault champion, was barred from using his poles and forced to compete with unfamiliar poles. And swimmer Rick DeMont lost one gold medal and the possibility of winning a second because of an allergy drug that had passed U.S. Olympic Committee specifications but was disallowed by the International Olympic Committee.

It was that kind of Olympics, confusing to some, fatal to others. Hart traveled back to Munich forty-three years later to relive his utter disappointment. He returned to the same stadium where he did earn a gold medal in the 400-meter relay. In Disqualified, his interesting life story, told with author Dave Newhouse, sheds entirely new light on what really happened at Munich. It includes interviews with Spitz and the victimized American athletes and conversations with two Israelis who escaped the terrorists. And Hart finally learned who was responsible for his disqualifications and those of Rey Robinson, who was in the same heat, leading to an interesting epilogue in which these two seniors reflect on the opportunity denied them long ago.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Having previously tied the world record, Eddie Hart was a strong favorite to win the 100-meter dash at the 1972 Olympics in Munich, Germany. Then the inexplicable happened: he was disqualified after arriving seconds late for a quarterfinal heat. Ten years of training to become the “World’s Fastest Human,” the title attached to an Olympic 100-meter champion, was lost in a heartbeat. But who was to blame?

Hart’s disappointment, though excruciating, was just one of many subplots to the most tragic of Olympic Games, at which eight Arab terrorists assassinated eleven Israeli athletes and coaches as the world watched in horror. Five terrorists were killed, but three escaped to their homeland as heroes and were never brought to trial. Swimmer Mark Spitz won seven gold medals but was rushed out of Germany afterward because he was Jewish. Other American athletes, besides Hart, seemed jinxed in Munich. The USA men’s basketball team thought it had earned the gold medal, but the Russians received it instead through an unprecedented technicality. Bob Seagren, the defending pole vault champion, was barred from using his poles and forced to compete with unfamiliar poles. And swimmer Rick DeMont lost one gold medal and the possibility of winning a second because of an allergy drug that had passed U.S. Olympic Committee specifications but was disallowed by the International Olympic Committee.

It was that kind of Olympics, confusing to some, fatal to others. Hart traveled back to Munich forty-three years later to relive his utter disappointment. He returned to the same stadium where he did earn a gold medal in the 400-meter relay. In Disqualified, his interesting life story, told with author Dave Newhouse, sheds entirely new light on what really happened at Munich. It includes interviews with Spitz and the victimized American athletes and conversations with two Israelis who escaped the terrorists. And Hart finally learned who was responsible for his disqualifications and those of Rey Robinson, who was in the same heat, leading to an interesting epilogue in which these two seniors reflect on the opportunity denied them long ago.

More books from The Kent State University Press

Cover of the book Savage Eye by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Modernizing the American War Department by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Outlaws of the Purple Cow and Other Stories by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Interpreting American History: The Age of Andrew Jackson by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Ohio's Western Reserve by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Native Fishes of Ohio by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book William McKinley and His America by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book The Country Doctor Revisited by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Teaching Hemingway and the Natural World by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Small Comforts by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Above and Beyond by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book The New Ray Bradbury Review, Number 1 (2008) by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Beyond the Velvet Curtain by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book A Singing Ambivalence by Eddie Hart
Cover of the book Darling Ro and the Benét Women by Eddie Hart
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy