Olga Fikotová

Olga Fikotová
Personal information
Born (1932-11-13) 13 November 1932
Libiš, near by Prague, Czech Republic
Sport
Sport Athletics
Event(s) Discus throw
Club RH Praha (CZE)
Spartan Women's Athletic Club (USA)
Los Angeles Mercurettes (USA)
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s) 57.61 m (1972)

Olga Fikotová (Czech pronunciation: [ˈolɡa ˈfɪkotovaː], born 13 November 1932) is a Czechoslovak and later American discus thrower. She is best known for winning gold at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics and for her romance across Cold War barriers with American hammer gold medalist Hal Connolly.

Biography

A natural athlete, she represented Czechoslovakia in basketball and handball before switching to discus throw in 1954. Two years later, she was still a medical student at the Charles University in Prague when she competed for Czechoslovakia in the 1956 Summer Olympics held in Melbourne, Australia in the Discus. The 24-year-old became Czechoslovakia's only gold medalist at the Olympics[1] when she won the event with a throw of 53.69 m ahead of Soviet pair Irina Beglyakova (52.54 m) and Nina Ponomaryova (52.02 m).[2]

Half a century later, she commented on her rapid progress:[3]

During the games she fell in love with the American athlete Harold Connolly who won the hammer throw.

The romance was well received by the Western media and public but not as popular with the Czechoslovak team minders. Several months later, Connolly visited her home in Prague where they planned to get married. Fikotová was surprisingly given a permit to marry a foreigner, possibly due to the positive involvement of Czechoslovak president Antonín Zápotocký, who met the couple a few days before the wedding.[1]

Their witnesses for the wedding were the legendary Czech couple and Olympic athletics gold medalists Emil Zátopek and Dana Zátopková. They had planned for a tiny mid-week wedding, but news of it somehow got out and it was attended by thousands of people.[4]

The couple moved to the United States after the wedding.

Olga and Harold both appeared on the June 10, 1958 episode the game show To Tell the Truth, in which each one was shown alongside two impostors and a panel attempted to guess who the real one was.[5]

After moving to the U.S., Olga wanted to continue representing Czechoslovakia, but the Czechoslovak Olympic Committee refused to allow her to do so and then spread the word that she had refused to represent Czechoslovakia any more. She was ostracized by several of her former compatriots for years before the truth became known.[1] Thereafter, as Olga Connolly, she took part in every Olympics till 1972[1] competing for the United States, placing 7th in 1960 and 6th in 1968.[6] She carried the flag for the United States at the 1972 Summer Olympics.

Olga Fikotová in 2012

In 1968, Olga published a book about her romance with Harold Connolly, The Rings of Destiny.[7] Olga and Harold remained married for 17 years before getting divorced in 1975.[1][4] One of their sons became a national-caliber javelin thrower and decathlete, and one of their daughters played on the U.S. national volleyball team.[6] For the past decade Olga specialized in holistic fitness studies and training. As a Certified Exercise Therapist she instructs wellness program at the University of California at Irvine.

References

Olympic Games
Preceded by
Janice Romary
Flagbearer for  United States
Munich 1972
Succeeded by
Gary Hall, Sr.
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