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The Black Athlete

A Shameful Story: The Myth of Integration in American Sport

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The Black Athlete

By: Jack Olsen
Narrated by: Jack Estes
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In 1968, Jack Olsen wrote what Sports Illustrated would later call the most significant series of stories in the magazine's history. Published across five consecutive issues beginning July 1, 1968, "The Black Athlete: A Shameful Story" shattered the comfortable myth that American sport was a level playing field, a rare arena where race didn't matter and Black athletes had found true equality. Olsen proved it was a lie.

Black collegiate athletes were recruited for their speed and strength, celebrated on the field, and abandoned everywhere else. Ostracized on campus, denied academic support, and discarded when their playing days ended. In professional sports, Black athletes could perform but rarely lead. Positions of authority and responsibility were reserved for white men. The system was not accidental. It was designed.

Olsen spent months interviewing sociologists, community leaders, coaches, athletic directors, and the athletes themselves. Men who had never been asked, or allowed, to tell the truth about their experience. What they told him sparked a national reckoning.

The series galvanized the movement that would produce one of the most iconic moments in sports history: the Black Power Salute by Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, their black-gloved fists raised in silence on the medal podium, seen by more than 80 million people worldwide.

More than fifty years later, the questions Jack Olsen asked about exploitation, inequality, and the myth of sport as a meritocracy remain as urgent as ever.

©1968 Jack Olsen (P)2026 Jack Olsen Literary Works, LLC
Racism & Discrimination Social Sciences
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