Tamara Press
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Olympic medal record | |||
Women's Athletics | |||
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Gold | 1960 Rome | Shot put | |
Silver | 1960 Rome | Discus throw | |
Gold | 1964 Tokyo | Shot put | |
Gold | 1964 Tokyo | Discus throw |
Tamara Natanovna Press (Russian: Тамара Натановна Пресс) (May 10, 1937 in Kharkiv, Ukraine) is a former Soviet shot putter and discus thrower in the 1960's. She competed for VSS Trud. Together with her younger sister Irina Press who was also a track and field athlete, she was half of the "Press Sisters", who won almost everything that there was to win.
At the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome Tamara won the gold medal in the shot put and the silver medal in the discus. At the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo she won the gold medal in both disciplines. In the shot put and in the discus throw she set six world records.
She was also successful in the European championships. In 1958 in Stockholm she was third in the shot put, and in 1962 in Belgrade she was the European champion in the shot put as well as discus.
[edit] The end as the beginning of the questions
It was said about both sisters that their gender could not be determined. Some even thought that they might be hermaphrodites; still another opinion was that they were being injected with male hormones. Detractors called them the "Press Brothers". After the determination of gender for all international sporting events was made mandatory in 1968 (this test was abolished in Sydney in 2000) both women vanished from the sporting stage.
The western press took this as a confession, Russian newspapers deny this to this day.
[edit] Her place in history
The Press sisters came to symbolize the time in Soviet Union after the death of Stalin culminating in the policies of Mikhail Gorbachev. Tamara and Irina were the most popular Soviet sports stars, their biography was typical of the time: Their father had died in the war, they grew up far from their homeland, since the German troops had occupied and destroyed it. Later they studied at the University of Leningrad.
[edit] After sport
After the Soviet federation withdrew their candidacy in 1966 both began professional careers. Irina went to the border troops of the KGB and became an officer. Tamara became a civil engineer, wrote countless specialized books about her field, as well as about sport. Today both women hold honorary offices in Russian sports.
Olympic champions in women's shot put |
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1948: Micheline Ostermeyer | 1952: Galina Zybina | 1956: Tamara Tyshkevich | 1960: Tamara Press | 1964: Tamara Press | 1968: Margitta Gummel | 1972: Nadezhda Chizhova | 1976: Ivanka Hristova | 1980: Ilona Slupianek | 1984: Claudia Losch | 1988: Natalya Lisovskaya | 1992: Svetlana Krivelyova | 1996: Astrid Kumbernuss | 2000: Yanina Korolchik | 2004: Yumileidi Cumbá |
Olympic champions in women's discus throw |
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1928: Halina Konopacka | 1932: Lillian Copeland | 1936: Gisela Mauermayer | 1948: Micheline Ostermeyer | 1952: Nina Romaschkova | 1956: Olga Fikotová | 1960: Nina Ponomaryeva | 1964: Tamara Press | 1968: Lia Manoliu | 1972: Faina Melnik | 1976: Evelin Schlaak | 1980: Evelin Jahl | 1984: Ria Stalman | 1988: Martina Hellmann | 1992: Maritza Martén | 1996: Ilke Wyludda | 2000: Ellina Zvereva | 2004: Natalya Sadova |
This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.
Categories: 1937 births | Living people | Discus throwers | Shot putters | Soviet athletes | Olympic athletes of the Soviet Union | Olympic gold medalists for the Soviet Union | Olympic silver medalists for the Soviet Union | Athletes at the 1960 Summer Olympics | Athletes at the 1964 Summer Olympics