Lee Evans to sell medals

Ex-SJSU runner Lee Evans hopes to sell gold medals
By Elliott Almond ealmond@mercurynews.com
Posted: 02/28/2011 03:46:47 PM PST
Updated: 02/28/2011 07:37:05 PM PST

Last year, Tommie Smith tried to sell his famed gold medal from the 1968 Olympics. Now, it’s Lee Evans’ turn.

Evans, the San Jose State runner who won gold medals in the 400 meters and the 1,600 relay in Mexico City, said he hopes to raise $250,000 from the sale of both medals to help build a school in Liberia.

“I don’t need the medals,” he said by telephone from Nigeria. “I need money to build the school.”

Smith couldn’t find a buyer 42 years after his black-gloved salute on the victory stand became one of the most famous moments in Olympic history. Smith asked for $250,000 in a fall auction for his 200-meter medal, but Olympic memorabilia experts estimated the worth to be closer to $10,000.

Evans, however, is encouraged he can get six figures because a member of the “Miracle on Ice” 1980 U.S. hockey team, Mark Wells, sold his Olympic gold medal for $310,700 last year.

Evans, 63, is arranging the sale through Athletes United for Peace, a charitable organization based in New York with which he is affiliated. For sale information contact Evans at lee_e_evans@live.com. (To make a donation for the school project, send checks to AUP, 1070 Park Ave., New York, New York 10128).

Evans once rejected an offer of $60,000 for the relay medal.

"To go through the effort, pain and sacrifice I went through “… people don’t know,” he said. "What motivated me were my African ancestry and what


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my parents went through" in racially divided America in the 1950s.

“How can I give it away for $60,000?”

The medals have been held for almost three decades by Evans’ former Overfelt High track coach Stan Dowell, who said he has hidden them in his Alabama home.

Now semiretired and living in Nigeria, Evans wants to build a school to honor his wife, who couldn’t get a formal education while living in exile during civil wars that ravaged Liberia throughout the 1990s.

Evans met her two years ago in a refugee camp in Guinea, where he worked for the United Nations after resigning as track and cross-country coach at the University of South Alabama in 2008.

He has purchased 13 acres outside of the Liberian capital of Monrovia to build a school. In the meantime, Evans coaches youths in southern Nigeria.

Evans has a long association with Africa, having directed national track and field programs in Nigeria, as well as Saudi Arabia, from 1975-97. Evans received the NCAA Silver Anniversary Award in 1994 for his work in Africa and Asia. He also was given the Nelson Mandela Award for humanitarianism in 1983.

Evans said he first felt the pull of the continent while studying African-American history in sixth grade in Fresno. The lessons resonated with the student, whose parents had moved to the Central Valley from the South to work the fields.

“I felt his spirit was in me,” Evans said of Africans taken to the United States to be slaves. “I felt I had to come back to Africa for him.”

His social consciousness matured in the late 1960s at San Jose State, where many of the “Speed City” sprinters were as concerned with racial discrimination as winning medals. In Mexico City, Spartans sprinters Smith and John Carlos finished first and third in the 200 meters, then entered Olympic renown with their protest during the medal ceremony. Olympic leaders dismissed them from the Games.

The day after the podium protest, Evans became the first person to run faster than 44 seconds in the 400 meters. He won with a world-record time of 43.86, a record that endured for 20 years. Evans also anchored the 400 relay team to a world-record time of 2:56.16, a mark that lasted 24 years.

At the 400 medal ceremony, he wore a black beret symbolic of the militant Black Panther Party. But he didn’t wear his black glove or black socks like Smith and Carlos the day before. (The beret and glove were stolen from his bag at the Spartans’ track about a half year later.)

After the Olympics, Evans returned to San Jose to finish school and for a few years ran professionally. But he always wanted to coach, borrowing what the legendary Bud Winters taught him at San Jose State.

“Every day when I’m on the track, as soon as I say, ‘high knees,’ it is Bud Winters,” Evans said. “I say ‘high knees’ more than 300 times a day.”

Contact Elliott Almond at 408-920-5865 and follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/elliottalmond.

Lee Evans to Sell Gold Medals from 1968 Protest at Mexico City Olympics

November 29, 2010 by Jimson Lee

n an exclusive interview with Lee Evans, the 1968 Olympic 400 meter champion and anchor leg of the 4×400m relay (both World Records), I asked him on why he has decided to sell his Gold Medals from those Games.

SpeedEndurance.com: As you may be aware, Tommie Smith tried to sell his Gold medal and shoes twice. Once on eBay several years ago, and recently last month. Both times he did not get his reserve price. Were you inspired to sell yours after hearing about Tommie’s? Or, have you thought about it for a while?

Lee Evans: I decided to look into selling mine after reading about the British athlete who sold his for $300,000 and after reading about the Hockey player from the 1980 team selling his for $300,000. In 2001 I had an offer of $60,000 but did not sell.

SpeedEndurance.com: Everyone will be asking what you will do with the money once you sell them. Are you spearheading any foundation projects? You are currently the Head Coach of Athletics for Kima Inc, a consulting firm for the government of Cross River State in the City of Calabar, Nigeria. Is there any correlation?

Lee Evans: My wife who is Liberian has enlisted me to help her build a Primary school in her Mother’s village in Liberia. Presently there is no school there. Liberia in the last 4 years has been peaceful, before this peace there was a 15 year civil war that devastated the country. My wife and i want to help the poor and disadvantaged.

SpeedEndurance.com: Once you sell the medals, what event will your greatest memory? As far as physical items go, do you still have the track uniform? How about the black beret from the medal presentations? (Ron Freeman and Larry James would also have the same black berets)

Lee Evans: My greatest memory from the 1968 was the pride and tears my Mother shed in joy after my Olympic win. My brothers and Sisters told me that when they watched the race on television she cried and said “he came from me”. That has always touched my heart. The black beret and gloves were stolen from my bag the next spring at a track meet at Bud Winters Field in San Jose. I suggest you read my autobiography The Last Protest: Lee Evans in Mexico City

SpeedEndurance.com: Tommie Smith once quoted in a 2008 interview:

It [the raised fist silent gesture protest] was what I wanted to do. Of course, we had the platform of the Olympic Project of Human Rights that brought us athletes to that point. But during the games, the Olympic Project of Human Rights was shut. It was up to each athlete.

And you know the first group of black American athletes on the victory stand was the four-by-four-relay. And they didn’t do anything. They felt that it was necessary to make money.

What did he mean by that?

Lee Evans: That quote sounds like it came from John Carlos, not Tommie. The 4 x 400 meter relay was the last event, we wore Black berets and wore black socks, this was our protest. The first black athletes on the victory stand was the 100 meters, Jim Hines and Charlie Green, they were 1st and 3rd respectively. They did not protest.

About me, I was the first athlete to run the 400 meters under 45 seconds automatic timing, there were 3 athletes that had run the time by hand timing. I was the first athlete to run 400 meters under 44 seconds. 43.86… the record stood for 20 years. The athlete who broke my record Butch Reynolds was busted for drugs later. I also won 6 national 400 meter titles.

SpeedEndurance.com: Thank you for your time in answering these questions.

http://speedendurance.com/2010/11/29/lee-evans-to-sell-gold-medals-from-1968-protest-at-mexico-city-olympics/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Speedendurance+(Speedendurance.com)

Tommie would have known the 4x400m could NOT have been the first athletes on the podium. He had run enough 4x4s to know that it has traditionally been the last event on major meet schedules - at least it has been until next year’s London Olympics which will finish the track schedule with the 4x100 relays - intended as a showcase for Usain Bolt supposedly.

Wow, nice thinking! :rolleyes: