Lorenzo Wright

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Olympic medal record
Competitor for Flag of the United States United States
Men's athletics
Gold 1948 London 4×100m relay

Lorenzo Christopher Wright (9 December 192627 March 1972) was a Detroit native and star athlete at Miller High School and Wayne State University; Wright is renowned for his noteworthy accomplishments in the sport of track and field.

Lorenzo C. Wright's crowning athletic achievement would come as a member of the gold medal winning 4×100 meter relay team at the 1948 Olympic Games. During those same London Games, Wright finished fourth in a fiercely contested long jump competition. Willie Steele of the U.S. won the gold medal at 25 feet 8 inches (7.8 m); Australia's Theo Bruce came in second, taking the silver medal at 24 feet 9.5 inches (7.56 m). Herb Douglas of the United States captured the bronze medal with a jump of 24 feet 9 inches (7.5 m), and Lorenzo Wright ended up in fourth place at 24 feet 5.25 inches (7.449 m) – a hand's width from a second trip to the medals podium.

At Miller High, Wright was a two-time Detroit Public School League Champion in the long jump; upon graduating from high school, he served eighteen months in the U.S. Army. Then, as a student-athlete for Wayne State University, Wright was an NCAA All-American in 1947 and 1948; placing second and third respectively in the long jump. Lorenzo Wright was a Central Collegiate Conference indoor champion in the 60-yard dash; he was also the inaugural Mid-American Conference titlist in the 100 and 220-yard dash, 220-yard low hurdles, and the long jump. Wright won two individual Penn Relays titles and ran on two winning relay squads. Wright also won the long jump event at the 1948 and 1952 National AAU Championships.

Wright's indoor and outdoor long jump marks, along with his times in the 100-meter and 220-yard dash are still Wayne State University varsity records – having stood the test of time for sixty years.

Following his athletic career, Wright served for many years as Director of the Detroit Public Secondary Schools Athletic League (DPSSAL). In 1972, at the age of 45, Lorenzo C. Wright was killed during a domestic dispute; four years later, he was honored posthumously as a charter member of the Wayne State University Athletic Hall of Fame. One of Detroit's major interscholastic athletic facilities, adjacent to Detroit's Martin Luther King Jr. High School, is named Lorenzo C. Wright Field.

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