Henry 'Bobby' Pearce--a gental athlete [ 2006-11-28 15:22 ]
1928年阿姆斯特丹奥运会的单人双桨决赛中,澳大利亚选手Henry
Pearce比赛到中途时,船前游来一群鸭子。看着鸭子悠闲的游在水中,虽然自己正在比赛,但是他仍决定停下来,让鸭子先游过去再继续比赛。 虽然受到鸭群的干扰,
却并不影响他夺金牌的命运,他以7分11秒整,以五个船身的领先距离获得金牌。而他的绅士行为,成为了本届奥运会最富运动精神的代表。
The place of Henry 'Bobby' Pearce in sporting legend owes much to his feat in
becoming the first singles sculler ever to win back-to-back Olympic gold medals;
but he was also widely celebrated as the man who yielded passage to a family of
ducks. In the Amsterdam Olympics of 1928, Pearce was leading in his
quarter-final when he spied over his shoulder a duck, followed by a small
flotilla of ducklings, crossing the Stoten Canal directly in his path. He leaned
on his oars and waited until the ducks were clear; meantime his French opponent
caught up with him, then pulled away to a five-length lead. Pearce went on to
win that race and ultimately the final, setting a Games record. The gesture made
him an instant favourite with the schoolchildren of Holland.In 1966, Kahanamoku
was the first inductee into the Surfing Hall of Fame.
Pearce dominated
world sculling, winning the Olympic title again in Los Angeles in 1932, then
reigning for 12 years from 1933 as world professional champion. In England in
1928 on his way to the Amsterdam Games, he was deemed ineligible to compete in
the Diamond Sculls at Henley, under archaic rules which barred tradesmen - he
was a carpenter then. In 1930, after winning the Empire Games single sculls at
Hamilton, Ontario, Pearce accepted an offer from Lord Dewar, the Scotch whisky
tycoon, to become his Canadian sales representative. When Dewar nominated Pearce
for Henley again, it was under the stated occupation of whisky salesman. The
regatta committee accepted him, and he went on to win the Diamond Sculls
easily.
(南开大学通讯员 孙伟 王乐迪投稿)
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