Roles | Competed in Olympic Games |
---|---|
Sex | Male |
Full name | Duncan Morrow•Kennedy |
Used name | Duncan•Kennedy |
Born | 20 December 1967 in Burlingame, California (USA) |
Measurements | 180 cm / 77 kg |
NOC | United States |
Duncan Kennedy competed in luge three times at the Olympic Games and slid on the World Cup circuit from over 15 years. He was the first American to win a luge World Cup event, which occurred at Sigulda, Latvia (then Soviet Union), in early 1991. Twice he finished second in the season World Cup, 1991-92 and 1993-94. Kennedy was also the first American to win two international medals, winning a silver at the 1982 Grosser Preis Trophy in Austria, and taking a bronze in the same event in 1983. Kennedy retired in 1979 after some falls were found to have caused bleeding around his brain stem. He serves occasionally as a television commentator for luge in the United States.
In late 1993, Kennedy assisted his teammate Robert Pipkins and came to his defense, after right-wing youths had attacked Pipkins, an African-American, helping take Pipkins to safety. The Security Committee of the United States Olympic Committee then proclaimed events in Germany generally as “dangerous.” This federal case was managed only by a personal apology from the Mayor of Oberhof to U.S. President Bill Clinton, and the youths were sentenced to drastic prison penalties.
Games | Discipline (Sport) / Event | NOC / Team | Pos | Medal | As | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1988 Winter Olympics | Luge | USA | Duncan Kennedy | |||
Singles, Men (Olympic) | 14 | |||||
1992 Winter Olympics | Luge | USA | Duncan Kennedy | |||
Singles, Men (Olympic) | 10 | |||||
1994 Winter Olympics | Luge | USA | Duncan Kennedy | |||
Singles, Men (Olympic) |