STILLWATER, Okla. (AP) — Jimmy Jackson, a former Olympian and three-time NCAA heavyweight champion at Oklahoma State, has died. He was 51.
Jackson had been suffering from diabetes and congestive heart failure before his death Tuesday in East Lansing, Mich., according to a statement released Wednesday by Oklahoma State. Cowboys coach John Smith said “we lost our great heavyweight, Jimmy Jackson.”
Jackson won consecutive NCAA titles from 1976 to 1978 and competed in the 1976 Montreal Games, reaching the third round in the Olympics.
Jackson had an 88-9-2 record at Oklahoma State and finished his career with a perfect 29-0 senior season. He had 44 career pins and at one point had 46 straight matches without a loss.
He and Richard Hutton are the only wrestlers to win three heavyweight titles at Oklahoma State, which has won more team national championships than any other school.
Services were planned Saturday at Brown’s Funeral Chapel in Grand Rapids, Mich. A visitation was to be held Friday.
Dutrow scratches House hearing
WASHINGTON (AP) — Big Brown’s trainer appears to be a late scratch for Thursday’s House hearing on the safety of thoroughbred racing, removing the most anticipated witness from Congress’ latest look at sports and steroids.
Rick Dutrow said Wednesday he has had a virus for several days and did not feel well enough to travel.
“I would go in a minute, but I just don’t feel well,” Dutrow said in a telephone interview. “To go down there when I’m not on top of my game would not be right.”
The Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade, and Consumer Protection had been looking forward to hearing from the trainer known for his candor and for methods that were brought into question after his star horse’s stunning last-place finish at this month’s Belmont Stakes.
Dutrow said he used a legal steroid on Big Brown — although the last dose was given in April — and the horse also ran the race on a quarter crack in the left front hoof in a failed attempt to become the first Triple Crown winner in 30 years.
S.E. Missouri forced to forfeit 44 victories
CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. (AP) — Southeast Missouri’s women’s basketball team was ordered to forfeit 44 victories Wednesday and the NCAA placed both the women’s and men’s programs on two years of probation for major and secondary violations.
The NCAA Committee on Infractions said the violations in the women’s program in the 2004-05 and 2005-06 seasons primarily involved impermissible housing, transportation and meals for prospective student athletes who moved near the university in the summer before enrolling for the first time. The men’s basketball program was penalized for allowing ineligible transfers to travel and practice.
The school was censured for lack of institutional control and a failure by former women’s coach B.J. Smith to monitor the program. Smith was coach from 2002-03 through 2005-06 before resigning in December 2006, compiling a 79-41 record over that span that was the best in the Ohio Valley Conference.
Southeast Missouri was 22-9 in 2005-06, winning the conference tournament and playing in the NCAA tournament, and 22-8 in 2004-05, losing in double overtime to Eastern Kentucky in the conference tournament championship game.