Flo Hyman

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Medal record
Flo Hyman
Flo Hyman
Women's Volleyball
Competitor for the Flag of the United States United States
Olympic Games
Silver Los Angeles 1984 Team Competition

Flora ("Flo") Jean Hyman (born July 31, 1954 in Inglewood, California – died January 24, 1986 in Japan) was an American volleyball player and Olympic silver medalist. She was the second of eight children. As a child Hyman was self-conscious about being very tall for her age but her mother taught her to be proud of it. She stood six feet tall (1.83m) on her 12th birthday. Her final adult height, which she reached by her 17th birthday, was just over 6'5" (1.96 m).

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[edit] Education

Hyman graduated from Morningside High School in Inglewood, California. She then attended the University of Houston. She did not complete her final year, such was her dedication to her volleyball career. Hyman said she would graduate once her volleyball career was over and that "You can go to school when you're 60. You're only young once, and you can only do this once".

[edit] Contribution to volleyball

"I had to learn to be honest with myself. I had to recognize my pain threshold. When I hit the floor, I have to realize it's not as if I broke a bone. Pushing yourself over the barrier is a habit. I know I can do it and try something else crazy. If you want to win the war, you've got to pay the price."

[citation needed]

By 1974 Hyman was a member of the USA Volleyball team but Hyman did not play in the 1980 Olympic Games due to the boycott of the Moscow Olympics. Though she played in the 1981 World Cup and the 1982 World Championship, when the USA won the Bronze medal. A speciality of Hyman was the "Flying Clutchman," a fast, hard-impacting volleyball spike that travels at 110 mph (180 km/h). It was perfected under Dr. Gideon Ariel, a former 1960 and 1964 Olympic shot putter in Coto de Caza, California. At the 1984 Olympics however, Hyman, by now both the tallest and oldest member of the team, led the USA to Silver medals, beaten by China in the final. The United States had defeated them earlier in the tournament.

[edit] Death

After the Olympics, Hyman moved to Japan, where she played for the Daiei team. In the summer of 1986 she intended to return to the United States permanently, but never got the chance to do so. On January 24, 1986 Flo Hyman died while sitting on the sidelines after being substituted out in a game against Hitachi. She told her team to keep fighting, then moments later slid to the floor and died. At first, the cause of her death was stated to be a heart attack, but an autopsy carried out in Culver City, California, six days after her death, at the request of her family, discovered that she had a very healthy heart. Instead, Flo Hyman's death was due to an aortic dissection resulting from previously undiagnosed Marfan syndrome, a relatively common genetic disorder that affects more than 1 in 5,000 people (fact from www.marfan.org). Apart from her height, near-sightedness, very long arms, large hands and large feet, she showed few other physical symptoms. There was a three week old blood clot around the tear, indicating that an earlier rip in the same spot had already begun to heal when the fatal second rupture occurred in her Aorta. [1]. It was then discovered her brother had Marfan's Syndrome as well, and he underwent open-heart surgery afterwards, which almost certainly saved his life. It is also believed Hyman was as lucky to have survived as long as she did, playing a physically explosive sport such as volleyball.

The Flo Hyman Memorial Award is named after her. In 1985, Flo Hyman appeared in a film entitled "Order of the Black Eagle", in which she portrayed a knife-wielding mercenary named Spike.

[edit] Achievements

  • Three times All American.
  • Worldcup Competition, top six players of 1981.
  • Best Hitter, Worldcup Competition 1981.
  • Bronze medal in the 1982 World Championship Peru
  • Silver medal in the 1984 US Olympics
  • Sports Illustrated November 29, 1999 #69 on greatest century woman athletes

[edit] References

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