- Avery Brundage was born on September 28, 1887 in Detroit, Michigan, USA. He was married to Mariann Princess Reuss and Elizabeth Dunlap. He died on May 8, 1975 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Bavaria, Germany.
- SpousesMariann Princess Reuss(June 20, 1973 - May 8, 1975) (his death)Elizabeth Dunlap(December 22, 1927 - July 1, 1971) (her death)
- Presdient of U.S. Olympic Committee, 1928-1952.
- President of International Olympic Committee, 1952-1972.
- Inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame, 1983 (charter member).
- Inducted into the National Track & Field Hall of Fame in 1974 (inaugural class).
- Member of the U.S. team at the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm; finished 15th in the decathlon and 5th in the pentathlon.
- The Olympic Games belong to all the world, not the part of it at sea level.
- When I'm gone, there's nobody rich enough, thick-skinned enough and smart enough to take my place, and the Games will be in tremendous trouble.
- The professional athlete must always win if he is to be successful and he must perform and win in the way that the public, who pays the bills, wants him to perform and win. He is a paid worker and not a free agent. It is the same with a commercial artist. To be successful he must make or paint things that can be sold. It is not his taste but the taste of the purchaser which governs. No true artist or true amateur will submit to such dictation. An amateur artist creates -- he does not accept the standards of the mass -- he refuses to follow the crowd. He is not primarily interested in dollars.
- We live in a world that is sick socially, politically and economically. It is sick for only one reason -- lack of fair play and good sportsmanship in human relations. We must keep the Olympic movement on Olympic heights of idealism, for it will surely die if it is permitted to descend to more sordid levels.
- In an imperfect world, if participation in sport is to be stopped every time the politicians violate the laws of humanity, there will never be any international contests. Is it not better to try to expand the sportsmanship of the athletic field into other areas?
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