One of several Black athletes who had threatened to boycott the 1968 Summer 
Games, he won two gold medals, then raised his fist at the presentation 
ceremony.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/19/sports/olympics/lee-evans-olympic-runner-who-protested-racism-dies-at-74.html

Lee Evans raised his fist after receiving the gold medal in the 400 meters at 
the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. With him were his teammates Larry 
James (left), who won the silver, and Ronald Freeman, who won the bronze. 
Credit... Associated Press

By Robert D. McFadden ( https://www.nytimes.com/by/robert-d-mcfadden )

May 19, 2021 Updated 6:03 p.m. ET

Lee Evans, the Black American runner who won two gold medals at the racially 
charged 1968 Summer Olympic Games in Mexico City and at a presentation ceremony 
wore a Black Panther-style beret and raised his fist to protest racism in the 
United States, died on Wednesday. He was 74.

His death was announced by USA Track and Field ( 
https://www.usatf.org/news/2021/usatf-mourns-loss-of-legend-lee-evans ) , which 
did not say where he died or cite the cause.

The newspaper The Mercury News ( 
https://www.mercurynews.com/2021/05/19/obituary-san-jose-state-track-legend-lee-evans-has-died/
 ) in San Jose, Calif., where Evans grew up, quoted friends of his as saying 
that he had died in a hospital in Nigeria after suffering a stroke. Evans was 
an assistant track coach at a sports academy ( http://socaschool.org/home/ ) 
there run by the Nigerian soccer star Segun Odegbami ( 
https://www.goal.com/en-ng/news/odegbami-former-super-eagles-captain-rues-his-failure-to-play-at-/biztyn59ah6e1anymkk20o9yr
 ) and had coached African track teams for many years. The paper quoted 
Odegbami as saying that Evans collapsed last week while having dinner with him 
and other friends.

Evans’s protest at the 1968 Olympic Games made headlines, but it was not the 
one that shocked the world at those Games.

That was the riveting image of raised fists on the winners’ platform by both 
American 200-meter sprint medalists, Tommie Smith (gold) and John Carlos 
(bronze), in what were widely regarded as defiant Black Power salutes as “The 
Star-Spangled Banner” was played and American flags were raised before a packed 
Olympic Stadium crowd and a global television audience.

Image
Evans crossed the finish line ahead of his teammates James (left) and Freeman 
in the 400 meters. Credit... Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Celebrated in books, films, photo essays and commentaries on civil rights in 
the world of sports, the protest — coming at a time of assassinations, antiwar 
demonstrations, urban riots and racial turmoil in America, and defended by 
Smith and Carlos as “human rights salutes” — marked an end to the age of 
innocence at the Olympic Games, which were once thought to have transcended 
domestic and international conflicts.

Evans, one of several Black athletes who had threatened to boycott the Games, 
faced a dilemma after Smith and Carlos were suspended and then expelled for 
life from the Olympics for their protest. He agonized over whether to pull out 
of his two scheduled races — a 400-meter run two days later, and a 1,600-meter 
team relay three days after that. Withdrawal, he knew, might end his running 
career.

Carlos persuaded him to go ahead, he said. And in the rarefied air of Mexico 
City, 7,350 feet above sea level, he smashed two world records. He won his 
first gold in the 400-meter in 43.86 seconds, a record that stood for 20 years, 
and his second gold anchoring the United States team in the 1,600-meter relay, 
run in 2 minutes 56.16 seconds, a record that lasted for 24 years.

The 400-meter race was swept by three Americans: Evans took the gold, Larry 
James the silver and Ron Freeman the bronze. On the victors’ platform 
afterward, all three received their medals wearing berets like those identified 
with the Black Panthers, and all three raised their fists, as Smith and Carlos 
had. But they lowered them and removed their berets when the national anthem 
was played and the American flags were raised.

That conciliatory gesture was taken into consideration by the International 
Olympic Committee, which did not penalize or reprimand the three sprinters — 
although Evans, at a news conference after the ceremony, said, “I feel I won 
this gold medal for Black people in the United States and Black people all over 
the world.”

>From left, Freeman, Vince Matthews, Evans and James leaving the Olympic 
>stadium in Mexico City on Oct. 21, 1968. Credit... Associated Press

After winning the 1,600-meter relay, the American team — Evans, James, Freeman 
and Vince Matthews — staged no demonstration during the awards ceremony, 
although Evans refused to shake hands with an Olympic official.

But protests rippled through the 1968 Olympics, including declarations of 
support for Smith and Carlos by other American medal winners and a decision by 
victorious Cuban runners to send their medals to Stokely Carmichael ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/1998/11/16/us/stokely-carmichael-rights-leader-who-coined-black-power-dies-at-57.html
 ) , the former chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, who 
had been named “honorary prime minister” of the Black Panther Party.

Evans continued to compete in 400-meter races after his 1968 Olympic triumphs, 
but he never again dominated the event as he had in Mexico City. He won the 
United States national championships in 1969 and 1972, but finished fourth in 
the 1972 Olympic trials. He was selected for the 1,600-meter relay at the 1972 
Munich Games, but the United States could not field a team because two runners 
had been suspended for staging yet another demonstration at the Olympics four 
years earlier.

Evans taking part in a 400-meter race at a track-and-field event in London in 
1967. He developed into a gangly but powerful runner in high school. Credit... 
Ed Lacey/Popperfoto, via Getty Images

Evans, who coached track-and-field teams in the United States, Africa and the 
Middle East for many years, was inducted into the United States National Track 
and Field Hall of Fame in Manhattan in 1983 and the United States Olympic Hall 
of Fame ( https://www.teamusa.org/Hall-of-Fame/Hall-of-Fame-Members/Lee-Evans ) 
in Colorado Springs in 1989.

Lee Edward Evans was born on Feb. 25, 1947, in Madera, Calif., the oldest of 
seven children of Dayton and Pearlie Mae Evans. His father was a construction 
worker. The family moved to San Jose in 1962 and picked cotton in the San 
Joaquin Valley in the summers. Lee never forgot how a field boss had cheated 
them at the weigh-in scales.

“I was scared they’d send the whole family away, so I didn’t say anything,” he 
recalled. “I’ve always been ashamed of that.”

At Overfelt High School in San Jose, from which he graduated in 1966, he 
developed into a gangly but powerful runner. He went undefeated in his high 
school career and won the first four Amateur Athletic Union races he entered.

Evans was a brilliant middle-distance runner. Many who follow track and field 
call the 400-meter a killer race, demanding the speed of a sprinter and the 
endurance of a long-distance runner. It is basically a quarter of a mile at the 
breakneck pace of a 100-yard dash.

While attending San Jose State University, Evans won the 400-meter at the 1967 
Pan American Games and the 1968 N.C.A.A. championships. He and his teammates 
Smith and Carlos became followers of Harry Edwards, the San Jose State 
sociologist who founded the Olympic Project for Human Rights. The organization 
was unable to get Black athletes to boycott the Mexico City Games but inspired 
the fist salutes and other protest gestures there.

Evans, right, with Tommie Smith in 2007. Smith and his fellow sprinter John 
Carlos had drawn attention at the 1968 Summer Olympics by raising clenched 
fists on the winners’ platform in what were widely regarded as defiant Black 
Power salutes. Credit... Michael Steele/Getty Images

Evans graduated from San Jose State in 1970 and from 1972 to 1974 competed in 
the International Track Association, a short-lived professional circuit. In 
addition to Nigeria, he later coached track and field in Cameroon, Qatar, Saudi 
Arabia and other countries. He was an assistant coach at the University of 
Washington in 2000 and 2001 and then head coach at the University of South 
Alabama until 2008, when he returned to Nigeria.

Evans had a son, Keith, from a marriage that ended in divorce in 1971. He and 
his second wife, Princess, a Liberian refugee, hoped to build a school near 
Monrovia, Liberia. He was in California to raise money for the project in 2011 
when he learned that he had a brain tumor. The tumor was found to be benign and 
removed.

Complete information on survivors was not immediately available.

Evans’s career was chronicled in Frank Murphy’s book “The Last Protest: Lee 
Evans in Mexico City” (2006).

In 2014, Evans was banned from coaching for four years by the Athletics 
Federation of Nigeria for giving a schoolgirl performance-enhancing substances 
that might have been responsible for her failing a doping test. But in 2019, 
apparently rehabilitated in the eyes of his many fans, he appeared on Nigerian 
television as a national hero, presented as a special guest of the Sports 
Parliament on NTA, the country’s largest network.

Robert D. McFadden is a senior writer on the Obituaries desk and the winner of 
the 1996 Pulitzer Prize for spot news reporting. He joined The Times in May 
1961 and is also the co-author of two books.


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