Yuriy Sedykh, a two-time Olympic champion in the hammer throw whose world record from 1986 still stands, has died. He was 66. (MORE SPORTS NEWS)
The Russian track and field federation said Sed🦩ykh di🀅ed early Tuesday following a heart attack.
"Deeply mourn the loss of Yuriy Sedykh," World Athletics senior vice president and pole vault great Sergei Bubka wrote on Twiܫtter. “For me, Yuriy was a friend, a wise mentor.”
Sedykh won gold at🦩 the 1976 and 1980 Olympics, but 🔥missed the 1984 Los Angeles Games because of a Soviet boycott. He returned to win a silver medal at the 1988 Seoul Olympics and won a world title in 1991.
Sedykh threw a world record 86.74 meters at the European ཧChampionships in Stuttgart, Germany, a mark which still stands. At this year's Tokyo Olympics, all 12 finalists in the men's hammer were born after Sedykh set the record.
Sedykh made his huge throw at a time when track and fie🌞ld was starting to realize the scale of performance-enhanc✃ing drug use.
Former Moscow anti-doping laboratory director Grigory Rodchenkov wrote in a book last year that Sedykh was “a huge steroid abuser" who benefited from a Soviet cover-up. Rodchenkov said o🌸ne of Sedykh's samples contained such large traces of the steroid stanozolol that it contaminated laboratory equipment.
Sedykh denied doping. In a 2015 inter🌱view with Russian newspaper Sport Express, Sedykh said athletes' big throws in the 1980s were bಞecause of better coaching and the Soviet Union's intensive talent scouting program.
After retiring, Sedykh worked in France as a physical education teacher. He was married to another Soviet world record holder, shot putter Natalya Lisovskaya. Their dau🌜ghter Alexia won hammer gold for France at the 2010 Youth Olympics.