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Jack Elder is an
Olympian with some
very big ideas.
1984 was not
the first time he
asked the questions
“what if” or “why
not”. But it was
when he joined
Winter Olympics
Oregon (or WOO) with
its purpose of
bidding to host the
Winter Olympic
Games.
It hasn’t
happened yet, but
jack Elder can be a
very persistent man.
His first success
in sport was when he
earned his Judo
Blackbelt at age 17.
During a
stint in the Army he
picked up the sport
of Luge and pursued
that opportunity all
the way to the 1972
Olympic Games in
Portland’s sister
city Sapporo, Japan.
After the
Games it was a
career in radio
broadcasting for
more than a decade.
Jack has always
believed that
athletes, especially
Olympians, should
give back, to their
sport, to their
country and to their
community.
In 1989, he
launched Oregon
Sports Action to
raise awareness for
under recognized
sports and to expand
interest in hosting
athletic events in
Oregon.
While an Olympic bid
never materialized
for WOO, a
conversation was
started.
Jack is good
about starting
conversations.
In a casual
conversation at a
1988 Olympic
committee meeting,
Jack learned that an
Olympic qualifying
basketball
tournament might
have to be moved. In
1992 The Dream Team
and the tournament
of the Americas was held in Portland, a result of that casual
conversation.
Jack’s next
conversation was
about a sports
commission to pursue
events for
Oregon.
From that
conversation came
the Oregon Sports
Authority.
Oregon Sports
Action with Jack at
it’s helm, is
dedicated to
continuing the
development of all
manners of sport in Oregon.
Oregon
sports Action has
quietly donated well
over one million
dollars to sports
organizations and
the Oregon Sports
Hall of Fame, the
repository of Oregon
Sports history.
Jack Elder
continues to ask the
question, “What can
Olympians do to give
back?”
He gives back
with his passion for
celebrating the
athlete in all of
us.
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