Lauri Pihkala

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File:Tahko-Pihkala-1988.jpg
A 1988 postage stamp commemorating the 100th anniversary of the birth of Lauri "Tahko" Pihkala.

Lauri "Tahko" Pihkala (born Gummerus, 5 January 1888 – 20 May 1981) was the inventor of pesäpallo, the Finnish variant of baseball.[1] He was born in the vicarage of Pihtipudas, the son of the minister Alexander Gummerus.[2] In 1969 he became one of the first persons to receive an honorary doctorate in Sport Sciences from the University of Jyväskylä, together with president Urho Kekkonen and Professor Kaarina Kari.[3]

Athletics

Lauri Pihkala at the Olympic Games
Games Event Rank Results Notes
1908 Summer Olympics High jump 16th Template:Convert Height was measured in inches. Source:[4]
Discus throw 12th–42nd unknown Source:[5]
Shot put Did not start Source:[6]
1912 Summer Olympics 800 metres, heats Did not finish

In the 1910s, he became the first Finnish professional coach in athletics and also worked as a physical education instructor with the Finnish Army.[1]

Pihkala was known for being an avid sports fan, and he developed several outdoor games.

Other

During the Finnish Civil War, he was responsible for propaganda in the White Guard flying unit "Devils of Kuhmoinen" of major Hans Kalm.

Pihkala's brother Martti Pihkala was a right-wing political activist. Lauri Pihkala didn't write any political texts in his publications. He tried to integrate the Finnish working class into society and hoped that sports could be one tool there.[7]

Some writers have claimed that Pihkala took part in the massacre in Harmoinen village in March 1918.[8] Others claim that while the murderers indeed belonged to Devils of Kuhmoinen, Pihkala was not present at the time of the massacre.[9]

Memorial of Pihkala by sculptor Nina Sailo was unveiled in 1988 on the south-east side of the Helsinki Olympic Stadium.[10]

Pihkala was a supporter of eugenics with the goal of strengthening Finland's military.[11]

References

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External links

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  1. a b Lauri Pihkala (1888-1981). Suomen urheilun Hall of Fame
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  9. Virtapohja, pp. 89–93.
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