Iolanda Balaș (later Söter, Hungarian: Balázs
Jolán, born 12
December 1936 in Timișoara) is a former Romanian athlete,
Olympic champion and world record holder in high jump, who is considered one of the greatest high jumpers
ever.
Balaș was born in Timișoara to ethnic Hungarian
parents. Her mother, Etel Bozó was a homemaker, while her father, Frigyes,
was originally a locksmith, who served in the Hungarian army, before he was
captured and brought to the Soviet Union and later to Hungary, where he settled
in Budapest. Balaș tried to reunite the family and move to Hungary, but
although she managed to obtain the Hungarian passport in 1947, she was not
allowed to leave the country. When asked in an interview in 2005, whether
she was thinking about defection, she said that it came to her mind; however,
that action could have resulted in serious retaliation against her relatives
she would have left behind, and she did not want that.
After
finishing fifth in the 1956 Melbourne Olympics, she won two
Olympic gold medals at Rome in 1960 and Tokyo in 1964.
Between 1957 and 1966, Balaș won 150 consecutive competitions, not including
qualifying competitions or exhibitions. She improved the world
record 14 times, from 1.75 m to 1.91 m, and equalled it once outdoors and
once indoors. She was the first woman to jump over six feet. Her technique was
a sophisticated version of the scissors technique.
Her
record of 1.91 m, set in 1961, lasted until the end of 1971 (beaten
by Ilona Gusenbauer from Austria), when jumpers with a more
efficient technique (the straddle technique, and later
the Fosbury style) took over.
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