1 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 2 00:00:02,042 --> 00:00:05,958 He was at the dawn of American organized sports. 3 00:00:06,042 --> 00:00:10,208 He set a record that lasted for 40 years. 4 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 5 00:00:10,292 --> 00:00:13,333 [cheers and applause] 6 00:00:13,417 --> 00:00:15,875 I haven't seen anything since then 7 00:00:15,958 --> 00:00:17,917 that approaches that level of greatness 8 00:00:18,000 --> 00:00:20,167 in so many different sports. 9 00:00:20,208 --> 00:00:22,500 One of the greatest athletes ever, ever, ever 10 00:00:22,542 --> 00:00:24,042 in all American history. 11 00:00:24,125 --> 00:00:27,417 Everybody will remember the names of Babe Ruth, 12 00:00:27,500 --> 00:00:31,042 Muhammad Ali, and certainly Michael Jordan, 13 00:00:31,125 --> 00:00:33,208 but their achievements don't match that 14 00:00:33,292 --> 00:00:35,500 of the greatest athlete that ever lived. 15 00:00:35,583 --> 00:00:38,750 And yet not many people remember his name. 16 00:00:40,792 --> 00:00:44,208 [narrator] Destined to become the world's greatest athlete. 17 00:00:44,292 --> 00:00:47,042 Jim Thorpe was good enough to dominate at multiple things, 18 00:00:47,125 --> 00:00:49,042 and that's why he stands alone 19 00:00:49,167 --> 00:00:51,083 when we talk about some of the greatest athletes 20 00:00:51,167 --> 00:00:52,500 that we've ever had. 21 00:00:52,625 --> 00:00:54,125 [man] It wasn't just track and field, 22 00:00:54,208 --> 00:00:56,875 but it was football, basketball, baseball. 23 00:00:56,958 --> 00:00:58,417 I heard he was a good ballroom dancer. 24 00:00:58,542 --> 00:00:59,792 [man] There was nothing that Jim Thorpe couldn't do 25 00:00:59,875 --> 00:01:01,500 as an athlete. 26 00:01:01,625 --> 00:01:05,208 But beyond that, what he represents is the perseverance 27 00:01:05,333 --> 00:01:07,292 of Native peoples in this country. 28 00:01:07,375 --> 00:01:09,167 Jim Thorpe was living in a time 29 00:01:09,292 --> 00:01:11,333 when most people around the globe 30 00:01:11,458 --> 00:01:15,333 didn't see Indigenous peoples as human beings. 31 00:01:15,417 --> 00:01:17,167 They would shout things at him like "dog soup," 32 00:01:17,250 --> 00:01:19,250 or they would do war whoops to taunt him. 33 00:01:19,333 --> 00:01:21,083 There was a lot of anti-Indigenous racism 34 00:01:21,167 --> 00:01:22,958 at that time. 35 00:01:23,042 --> 00:01:25,917 [Thorpe] Some of the memories are bitter. 36 00:01:26,000 --> 00:01:27,333 [man] The gold medals and trophies 37 00:01:27,417 --> 00:01:28,917 were taken away from him. 38 00:01:29,042 --> 00:01:32,167 It was an act of enormous injustice. 39 00:01:33,167 --> 00:01:34,750 And though my records have been wiped 40 00:01:34,833 --> 00:01:36,375 from the official books... 41 00:01:36,458 --> 00:01:39,125 I mean, it was something that he never got over 42 00:01:39,208 --> 00:01:43,125 and really loomed over him the rest of his life. 43 00:01:43,208 --> 00:01:45,833 ...I find some consolation in believing 44 00:01:45,917 --> 00:01:48,667 they are still remembered by the American people. 45 00:01:48,750 --> 00:01:52,333 People grabbed onto him almost like a folk hero 46 00:01:52,375 --> 00:01:55,125 as the man wronged by the big guys. 47 00:01:55,250 --> 00:01:58,000 They wanted some vindication for Jim. 48 00:01:58,042 --> 00:02:05,083 ♪ 49 00:02:14,625 --> 00:02:16,458 As a child, 50 00:02:16,542 --> 00:02:18,833 I had tried to emulate the spirited abandon 51 00:02:18,875 --> 00:02:21,458 of a running horse, 52 00:02:21,542 --> 00:02:24,417 head up and feet coming down with a thundering certainty. 53 00:02:24,542 --> 00:02:26,667 ♪♪ 54 00:02:26,750 --> 00:02:30,375 I ran and jumped and fought and wrestled 55 00:02:30,500 --> 00:02:34,042 and climbed trees as a youngster 56 00:02:34,125 --> 00:02:35,667 because it was as natural 57 00:02:35,750 --> 00:02:38,875 for an Indian child to do those things 58 00:02:38,958 --> 00:02:41,333 as it was to eat and sleep. 59 00:02:43,583 --> 00:02:47,000 Jim was born into poverty in Oklahoma 60 00:02:47,125 --> 00:02:49,167 in a small cabin in 1887. 61 00:02:49,208 --> 00:02:51,583 It's said that the night he was born, 62 00:02:51,667 --> 00:02:53,625 there was lightning striking on the river nearby. 63 00:02:53,750 --> 00:02:55,833 He was given the name Wa-tho-Huk, 64 00:02:55,917 --> 00:02:59,125 which means "bright path" or "path lit by lightning." 65 00:02:59,208 --> 00:03:01,250 And I mean, it's pretty fitting, right? 66 00:03:01,375 --> 00:03:04,167 He went on to shock the world. 67 00:03:04,208 --> 00:03:07,000 [woman] He was born on the Sac and Fox reservation. 68 00:03:07,083 --> 00:03:09,042 Growing up on the reservation, 69 00:03:09,125 --> 00:03:10,833 he liked challenging his own body, 70 00:03:10,875 --> 00:03:12,542 even as a little boy, 71 00:03:12,667 --> 00:03:14,833 whether it was swimming in the North Canadian River 72 00:03:14,917 --> 00:03:17,375 or it was chasing rabbits and catching them. 73 00:03:17,500 --> 00:03:20,167 It was catching wild horses. It was running over fences. 74 00:03:20,292 --> 00:03:22,500 And later people would comment 75 00:03:22,542 --> 00:03:25,250 that that was like a natural cross-training. 76 00:03:25,375 --> 00:03:26,875 The open plains and the river bottoms 77 00:03:26,958 --> 00:03:28,958 were my first track field. 78 00:03:29,042 --> 00:03:31,500 It was on them that I learned to run as a child. 79 00:03:31,625 --> 00:03:34,917 But the reservation existed really only for 80 00:03:35,000 --> 00:03:36,458 two or three more years. 81 00:03:39,542 --> 00:03:42,417 Before Europeans arrived in this country, 82 00:03:42,500 --> 00:03:46,042 there were millions of Native peoples already here. 83 00:03:46,125 --> 00:03:47,875 By the time of Jim Thorpe's birth, 84 00:03:47,958 --> 00:03:50,833 there were fewer than 300,000 left. 85 00:03:50,958 --> 00:03:53,292 [narrator] In the years leading up to Thorpe's birth, 86 00:03:53,417 --> 00:03:56,000 the United States' relentless westward expansion 87 00:03:56,083 --> 00:03:58,792 fueled the Lakota Sioux Wars, 88 00:03:58,875 --> 00:04:02,125 as the nation encroached on Indigenous lands 89 00:04:02,250 --> 00:04:05,500 and forced tribes onto reservations. 90 00:04:05,542 --> 00:04:08,417 Indian reservations were really prison camps, 91 00:04:08,500 --> 00:04:11,833 and they were only supposed to be around for 25 years, 92 00:04:11,958 --> 00:04:13,542 And at the end of 25 years, 93 00:04:13,625 --> 00:04:15,667 we would have all been assimilated or dead. 94 00:04:17,375 --> 00:04:19,000 [man] In 1887, 95 00:04:19,083 --> 00:04:21,333 Senator Henry Dawes introduced a bill 96 00:04:21,375 --> 00:04:23,042 known as the Dawes Act, 97 00:04:23,125 --> 00:04:24,833 also known as the Allotment Act. 98 00:04:24,875 --> 00:04:27,917 It sought to take away what the government considered 99 00:04:28,000 --> 00:04:30,125 excess Indian land. 100 00:04:30,208 --> 00:04:31,917 There are old accounts and images 101 00:04:32,000 --> 00:04:35,500 of "Indian land for sale" or "free Indian land." 102 00:04:35,542 --> 00:04:37,500 And so in order to get that land, 103 00:04:37,583 --> 00:04:41,125 they organized the famous Oklahoma land runs. 104 00:04:41,208 --> 00:04:42,583 ♪ 105 00:04:42,583 --> 00:04:44,167 [Buford] At the crack of a pistol, 106 00:04:44,208 --> 00:04:47,333 all these wagons and people and horses 107 00:04:47,375 --> 00:04:50,583 flooded into what had been their reservation. 108 00:04:50,667 --> 00:04:53,833 People just, like, ran and put their stake in the ground 109 00:04:53,958 --> 00:04:58,042 and claimed land -- stolen land, Native land. 110 00:05:00,458 --> 00:05:02,292 [Buford] Imagine what that was like, 111 00:05:02,375 --> 00:05:04,000 particularly for a three, four-year-old child 112 00:05:04,083 --> 00:05:05,625 like Jim Thorpe. 113 00:05:05,708 --> 00:05:08,042 You had this place that you were born into, 114 00:05:08,125 --> 00:05:11,667 and overnight it's overrun by these strange white people. 115 00:05:11,750 --> 00:05:15,542 [Proudfit] They were looking at Native people as savages 116 00:05:15,667 --> 00:05:19,333 to be killed and forcibly removed through any means. 117 00:05:19,375 --> 00:05:22,875 [Doyle] It's amazing that these communities survived. 118 00:05:22,958 --> 00:05:25,875 Even more stunning is that an athlete could emerge from 119 00:05:26,000 --> 00:05:27,500 those kind of circumstances. 120 00:05:28,833 --> 00:05:30,667 [Maraniss] Indian Territory of Oklahoma 121 00:05:30,708 --> 00:05:33,458 was the Wild West in every possible way. 122 00:05:33,542 --> 00:05:37,500 Jim Thorpe's father, Hiram, represented that. 123 00:05:37,625 --> 00:05:39,708 [Thorpe] My father was Hiram Phillip Thorpe, 124 00:05:39,875 --> 00:05:43,500 one half Sac and Fox Indian and one half Irish. 125 00:05:43,583 --> 00:05:45,500 He was a giant of a man. 126 00:05:45,583 --> 00:05:50,208 [Buford] Hiram would take his sons out into the rural land 127 00:05:50,292 --> 00:05:53,708 for days at a time and hunt and fish. 128 00:05:53,792 --> 00:05:56,917 But Hiram was also incredibly rough on them. 129 00:05:57,000 --> 00:06:00,875 When Jim was four, Hiram saw him dog-paddling 130 00:06:00,958 --> 00:06:02,958 along the edge of the North Canadian River, 131 00:06:03,042 --> 00:06:07,167 and threw the little guy out into the current 132 00:06:07,208 --> 00:06:09,583 to see how his son made it back. 133 00:06:09,667 --> 00:06:11,833 It was 40 yards to the bank, 134 00:06:11,958 --> 00:06:15,958 and it looked like a mile to me. 135 00:06:16,042 --> 00:06:19,583 But I made it under the watchful eye of my father. 136 00:06:19,667 --> 00:06:22,292 He said, "Don't be afraid of the water, son, 137 00:06:22,375 --> 00:06:23,792 and it won't be afraid of you." 138 00:06:23,875 --> 00:06:27,250 It encapsulates what Hiram was like. 139 00:06:27,333 --> 00:06:29,875 So Jim grew up with that kind of father. 140 00:06:31,750 --> 00:06:33,708 His father taught him and instilled in him 141 00:06:33,792 --> 00:06:35,750 at a very young age, to be a man, 142 00:06:35,833 --> 00:06:38,458 you had to step up, you had to compete. 143 00:06:38,542 --> 00:06:41,500 Native people, we love competition. 144 00:06:41,583 --> 00:06:44,167 [Buford] So there would be running contests, 145 00:06:44,292 --> 00:06:46,417 there would be swimming contests, 146 00:06:46,500 --> 00:06:48,333 there would be jumping contests. 147 00:06:48,417 --> 00:06:51,708 [Proudfit] You know, we invented so many sports 148 00:06:51,833 --> 00:06:56,083 that people know in European culture or American culture, 149 00:06:56,167 --> 00:07:00,667 whether it's soccer, lacrosse, or even the game of basketball. 150 00:07:00,708 --> 00:07:03,417 Jim Thorpe's love of athletic endeavors 151 00:07:03,500 --> 00:07:05,583 started in the Sac and Fox territory. 152 00:07:05,708 --> 00:07:10,250 For Jim Thorpe, sports are in his blood. 153 00:07:10,333 --> 00:07:12,542 My mother always looked upon me 154 00:07:12,625 --> 00:07:14,792 as a reincarnation of Black Hawk, 155 00:07:14,875 --> 00:07:19,542 the Indian chief for whom the Black Hawk War was named. 156 00:07:19,625 --> 00:07:21,875 [Buford] Black Hawk was this larger-than-life, 157 00:07:22,000 --> 00:07:24,667 heroic figure that every Indian boy in that tribe 158 00:07:24,750 --> 00:07:26,708 wanted to model himself on. 159 00:07:26,708 --> 00:07:28,833 [Proudfit] He fought against Andrew Jackson. 160 00:07:28,917 --> 00:07:31,583 Everyone in America knew Black Hawk's name. 161 00:07:31,667 --> 00:07:34,292 That's how impressive Black Hawk was. 162 00:07:34,375 --> 00:07:36,583 So much so that his name was appropriated 163 00:07:36,667 --> 00:07:39,042 for a World War I Army division, 164 00:07:39,167 --> 00:07:43,708 the Black Hawk helicopter, and for the Chicago NHL team. 165 00:07:46,750 --> 00:07:49,833 [narrator] The Dawes Act didn't just divide up Native land 166 00:07:49,875 --> 00:07:51,417 to be given to white settlers. 167 00:07:51,500 --> 00:07:53,250 The other portion of the Dawes Act 168 00:07:53,375 --> 00:07:55,667 was meant to take Indian children 169 00:07:55,792 --> 00:07:58,833 and put them in boarding schools far from their homes. 170 00:07:58,917 --> 00:08:00,667 [Buford] Bureau of Indian Affairs mandated 171 00:08:00,708 --> 00:08:02,667 that the children should go at a certain age 172 00:08:02,750 --> 00:08:04,333 off to Indian boarding schools. 173 00:08:04,417 --> 00:08:06,083 [Creek] Sometimes it was voluntary. 174 00:08:06,208 --> 00:08:07,750 Parents would send their kids there thinking 175 00:08:07,875 --> 00:08:09,417 it was the only way to ensure their survival. 176 00:08:09,500 --> 00:08:11,083 Other times it was by force. 177 00:08:11,167 --> 00:08:12,833 The United States, they would kidnap these kids 178 00:08:12,917 --> 00:08:14,792 and they would force them into these establishments. 179 00:08:14,875 --> 00:08:18,042 And the notion was to take the children of those warriors 180 00:08:18,125 --> 00:08:22,333 from the Lakota Sioux and "tame them," quote, unquote. 181 00:08:22,375 --> 00:08:24,042 The boarding school era was meant 182 00:08:24,125 --> 00:08:26,875 to take children away from their Native communities 183 00:08:26,958 --> 00:08:30,500 and teach them the Western way of life. 184 00:08:30,583 --> 00:08:33,750 [woman] They were really all about assimilation. 185 00:08:33,833 --> 00:08:36,958 Kids were stripped of their humanity and of their culture. 186 00:08:36,958 --> 00:08:39,167 [Buford] They were put into uniforms. 187 00:08:39,250 --> 00:08:42,042 If they didn't already have an Anglo name like Jim -- 188 00:08:42,125 --> 00:08:45,250 he was born with one -- they were assigned them. 189 00:08:46,250 --> 00:08:48,708 [Proudfit] You can actually see pictures of students 190 00:08:48,708 --> 00:08:51,542 who went in Native with long hair, 191 00:08:51,625 --> 00:08:54,792 with their earrings, with Native dress. 192 00:08:54,875 --> 00:08:57,833 And then you see another picture of them 193 00:08:57,958 --> 00:09:01,458 with their short hair looking very somber. 194 00:09:01,542 --> 00:09:05,042 [Buford] It was all a way to make them look white 195 00:09:05,125 --> 00:09:09,000 and act white and eventually be white. 196 00:09:09,125 --> 00:09:12,333 It was a full-on attempt to reshape an entire generation 197 00:09:12,375 --> 00:09:13,917 of Native people. 198 00:09:14,833 --> 00:09:16,375 [Maraniss] Jim Thorpe endured 199 00:09:16,458 --> 00:09:17,917 three different boarding schools. 200 00:09:18,000 --> 00:09:19,292 First, he went to 201 00:09:19,375 --> 00:09:21,417 the Sac and Fox boarding school nearby, 202 00:09:21,500 --> 00:09:23,167 which he hated and ran away from twice. 203 00:09:23,250 --> 00:09:25,167 [Thorpe] I tired of the classroom routine 204 00:09:25,208 --> 00:09:29,333 and ran away, walking back home 23 miles. 205 00:09:29,375 --> 00:09:34,167 My father met me at the door and marched me back to school. 206 00:09:34,208 --> 00:09:36,875 He kept doing that and doing that, running home. 207 00:09:36,958 --> 00:09:41,000 And finally Hiram said, "I'm gonna send you so far away, 208 00:09:41,042 --> 00:09:43,542 you will never be able to come back. 209 00:09:43,625 --> 00:09:45,292 [train whistle blows] 210 00:09:45,292 --> 00:09:48,833 Then he was sent to the Haskell Institute in Kansas. 211 00:09:48,875 --> 00:09:51,500 It was at Haskell I saw my first football game 212 00:09:51,583 --> 00:09:53,750 and developed a love for it, 213 00:09:53,833 --> 00:09:56,792 a love I've had through the years. 214 00:09:56,875 --> 00:10:00,750 [Maraniss] And finally ended up at the flagship 215 00:10:00,875 --> 00:10:02,458 U.S. government boarding school. 216 00:10:02,542 --> 00:10:05,625 On February 4th, 1904, 217 00:10:05,708 --> 00:10:08,167 I entered the Carlisle Indian School 218 00:10:08,250 --> 00:10:10,125 at Carlisle, Pennsylvania. 219 00:10:10,208 --> 00:10:12,667 Well, the Carlisle Indian Industrial School is founded 220 00:10:12,792 --> 00:10:14,417 right after the wars 221 00:10:14,500 --> 00:10:16,167 of the Lakota Sioux out in the Plains. 222 00:10:16,250 --> 00:10:18,917 Had the motto, "Kill the Indian, save the man." 223 00:10:19,000 --> 00:10:22,125 And this is where he came of age in a lot of ways, 224 00:10:22,208 --> 00:10:25,333 and where he began his career in sports. 225 00:10:26,542 --> 00:10:28,500 [Maraniss] The football team in particular 226 00:10:28,583 --> 00:10:30,542 was the reason that anybody knew Carlisle. 227 00:10:30,625 --> 00:10:32,333 When the Carlisle Indians, 228 00:10:32,375 --> 00:10:35,417 this exotic team of Native people, would go play, 229 00:10:35,500 --> 00:10:37,458 they would draw a huge crowd. 230 00:10:37,542 --> 00:10:40,083 The founder of Carlisle was Richard Pratt. 231 00:10:40,167 --> 00:10:42,333 He had been an officer in the Far West 232 00:10:42,375 --> 00:10:44,875 during the so-called Indian Wars. 233 00:10:45,000 --> 00:10:46,875 [man] He's interested in assimilation 234 00:10:46,875 --> 00:10:48,667 for the Indigenous people, 235 00:10:48,750 --> 00:10:51,167 but he also believes they have to prove themselves. 236 00:10:51,250 --> 00:10:52,917 And one of the ways they can prove to whites 237 00:10:53,000 --> 00:10:55,333 that they're worthy is through sports. 238 00:10:57,708 --> 00:10:59,292 [Maraniss] Jim loved football, 239 00:10:59,375 --> 00:11:01,500 and by the time he got to Carlisle, he wanted to play. 240 00:11:01,625 --> 00:11:03,583 As much as Jim wanted to play football, 241 00:11:03,667 --> 00:11:06,167 he was too short and slight. 242 00:11:06,208 --> 00:11:08,458 About three months after my arrival, 243 00:11:08,542 --> 00:11:10,833 I weighed 116 pounds, 244 00:11:10,917 --> 00:11:13,667 and I was five foot, three inches in height. 245 00:11:13,708 --> 00:11:16,125 He was a scrawny young guy. 246 00:11:16,208 --> 00:11:18,167 [cheers and applause] 247 00:11:18,208 --> 00:11:21,042 [Buford] Football was played at the highest level 248 00:11:21,125 --> 00:11:24,250 of collegiate hierarchy, which is Yale and Harvard. 249 00:11:24,375 --> 00:11:26,333 Football was important to them. 250 00:11:26,417 --> 00:11:30,167 It was the game that was going to teach the leaders of tomorrow 251 00:11:30,208 --> 00:11:32,750 how to lead, how to be strategic, how to be smart. 252 00:11:32,833 --> 00:11:34,500 [man] In lieu of a real war, 253 00:11:34,583 --> 00:11:36,250 we're going to put them out on this field 254 00:11:36,375 --> 00:11:38,708 to turn boys into men. 255 00:11:41,750 --> 00:11:43,458 [narrator] I've always felt 256 00:11:43,542 --> 00:11:46,417 that football was pretty closely related to warfare. 257 00:11:46,500 --> 00:11:49,917 I mean, violence is certainly a part of man, 258 00:11:50,000 --> 00:11:51,667 so why not admit it? 259 00:11:51,750 --> 00:11:54,583 Use it. Let it out. 260 00:11:54,667 --> 00:11:56,417 Football was a game of brute force. 261 00:11:56,500 --> 00:12:01,167 Think of two semis just crashing straight into one another. 262 00:12:01,292 --> 00:12:03,958 It's a collision sport. It's a violent sport. 263 00:12:04,042 --> 00:12:08,250 Every play is an act of violence. 264 00:12:08,333 --> 00:12:11,000 American football was dominated by the famous 265 00:12:11,083 --> 00:12:13,333 so-called flying wedge. 266 00:12:13,417 --> 00:12:16,542 The offense would mass behind a lead player, 267 00:12:16,625 --> 00:12:18,875 and, based on models of warfare, 268 00:12:18,958 --> 00:12:21,458 would charge through the opposing line. 269 00:12:21,542 --> 00:12:24,667 It took steamroller tactics to move the pigskin 270 00:12:24,667 --> 00:12:27,667 towards the opposing team's goalposts. 271 00:12:27,667 --> 00:12:30,333 [Creek] In the 1904 college season alone, 272 00:12:30,417 --> 00:12:32,750 there were 20 deaths in football and hundreds of injuries. 273 00:12:32,833 --> 00:12:36,167 Guys had broken femurs. Guys were missing ears. 274 00:12:36,208 --> 00:12:37,917 One guy even had his eye gouged out. 275 00:12:38,000 --> 00:12:40,167 You could punch, you could bite, you could scratch. 276 00:12:40,167 --> 00:12:41,500 And so a lot of times, these guys 277 00:12:41,583 --> 00:12:43,000 were just running into each other, 278 00:12:43,042 --> 00:12:44,625 trying to do whatever they could 279 00:12:44,708 --> 00:12:46,000 to take the opposing player out of the game. 280 00:12:46,042 --> 00:12:48,167 Helmets were definitely not required. 281 00:12:48,208 --> 00:12:50,042 The helmets maybe they were wearing 282 00:12:50,125 --> 00:12:52,833 were little leather helmets with very little padding. 283 00:12:52,917 --> 00:12:54,500 [Maraniss] It was a free-for-all. 284 00:12:54,625 --> 00:12:57,583 Football was a free-for-all. It was almost outlawed. 285 00:12:57,667 --> 00:13:00,708 ♪ 286 00:13:00,792 --> 00:13:02,542 The president of Harvard was calling for 287 00:13:02,625 --> 00:13:04,208 football to be abolished. 288 00:13:04,333 --> 00:13:05,667 [Eisenberg] There was definitely public pressure. 289 00:13:05,750 --> 00:13:07,667 There were op-eds written. 290 00:13:07,708 --> 00:13:10,500 [Maraniss] The Chicago Tribune did a series about the number 291 00:13:10,542 --> 00:13:12,458 of deaths and injuries, 292 00:13:12,542 --> 00:13:15,583 and it read like an after action report from Vietnam, 293 00:13:15,667 --> 00:13:19,833 you know, listing all of these dead halfbacks and linemen. 294 00:13:19,917 --> 00:13:21,583 [Eisenberg] And so this was not a tenable situation. 295 00:13:21,667 --> 00:13:25,833 As popular as it was becoming, you couldn't have people dying. 296 00:13:29,000 --> 00:13:31,208 [Buford] Teddy Roosevelt was president, 297 00:13:31,333 --> 00:13:34,375 and he was a Harvard man, and he loved football. 298 00:13:34,458 --> 00:13:37,125 So he called a conference in the White House 299 00:13:37,208 --> 00:13:38,833 of the leaders of these top schools 300 00:13:38,958 --> 00:13:42,292 and said, "You've got to make football safer." 301 00:13:42,375 --> 00:13:45,125 You couldn't have our Ivy League leaders of tomorrow 302 00:13:45,208 --> 00:13:47,833 getting killed on the football field. 303 00:13:47,875 --> 00:13:50,292 It was this close to kind of being out of here, 304 00:13:50,375 --> 00:13:52,333 which is wild to think of when you think about 305 00:13:52,417 --> 00:13:55,333 how important it's become in our American sports culture. 306 00:13:55,375 --> 00:13:57,208 ♪ 307 00:13:57,292 --> 00:14:01,167 At the end of the 1904 term, Jim decided to leave Carlisle 308 00:14:01,250 --> 00:14:03,125 and to work in their outing program, 309 00:14:03,208 --> 00:14:05,292 which was a kind of placement program 310 00:14:05,375 --> 00:14:09,375 where Indian kids would work as farmers or cooks or maids. 311 00:14:09,500 --> 00:14:12,500 It was also seen as a form of introduction into white society. 312 00:14:12,542 --> 00:14:15,542 [Thorpe] I was anxious to go for the experience. 313 00:14:15,625 --> 00:14:18,958 I did all the housework and learned to sew and cook. 314 00:14:19,042 --> 00:14:21,833 I longed to be out in the open again. 315 00:14:21,875 --> 00:14:24,375 I felt smothered with the indoor work. 316 00:14:24,500 --> 00:14:26,875 So he goes on to work as a farmhand for two years, 317 00:14:26,958 --> 00:14:29,792 laboring in the field and breaking wild horses 318 00:14:29,875 --> 00:14:31,542 just like his father taught him. 319 00:14:31,625 --> 00:14:33,833 [Doyle] Breaking horses is incredibly physical work. 320 00:14:33,875 --> 00:14:35,292 You know, you're using your arms. 321 00:14:35,375 --> 00:14:36,667 You're using your hands. 322 00:14:36,750 --> 00:14:37,958 You're using your legs to jump up 323 00:14:38,042 --> 00:14:39,500 to corral the horses. 324 00:14:39,583 --> 00:14:41,042 You're hanging on for dear life. 325 00:14:41,125 --> 00:14:42,833 By the end of the summer, 326 00:14:42,917 --> 00:14:45,375 Jim's body had changed dramatically. 327 00:14:45,458 --> 00:14:48,875 When Jim returned to Carlisle, he was primed. He was ready. 328 00:14:48,958 --> 00:14:51,833 And it was then that the origin story 329 00:14:51,875 --> 00:14:54,917 of Jim Thorpe the athlete began. 330 00:15:00,708 --> 00:15:04,167 [Hill] What is wonderful about reflecting 331 00:15:04,250 --> 00:15:06,750 on Jim Thorpe's legacy is that you start to hear 332 00:15:06,833 --> 00:15:08,833 all these stories that sound like, 333 00:15:08,917 --> 00:15:10,167 "Did somebody make that up? 334 00:15:10,292 --> 00:15:12,167 Did that really actually happen?" 335 00:15:12,250 --> 00:15:14,583 And one of the more famous ones is the high jump story. 336 00:15:14,667 --> 00:15:17,875 [Maraniss] At Carlisle, one day he was in overalls, 337 00:15:17,958 --> 00:15:20,042 walking toward the athletic fields, 338 00:15:20,125 --> 00:15:22,917 saw members of the track team at the high jump pit. 339 00:15:23,042 --> 00:15:26,167 Jim had no idea what the high jump was. 340 00:15:26,208 --> 00:15:27,625 He had never seen it before. 341 00:15:27,708 --> 00:15:29,333 [Thorpe] For several minutes 342 00:15:29,417 --> 00:15:31,333 they successfully went higher and higher. 343 00:15:31,375 --> 00:15:36,125 Eventually, they placed the bar at a point they couldn't scale. 344 00:15:36,125 --> 00:15:40,167 He watched boy after boy fail to make it over the bar. 345 00:15:40,208 --> 00:15:42,167 Intrigued, Jim walks over, 346 00:15:42,250 --> 00:15:45,292 and in his overalls Jim decided to give it a try. 347 00:15:45,375 --> 00:15:47,042 If you know anything about Olympic sports 348 00:15:47,167 --> 00:15:48,667 or if you've seen this, 349 00:15:48,708 --> 00:15:50,458 it's an extraordinarily difficult 350 00:15:50,542 --> 00:15:52,167 thing to do. 351 00:15:52,208 --> 00:15:55,000 [man] Jim Thorpe had no experience, no training. 352 00:15:55,042 --> 00:15:57,250 He certainly didn't have the proper attire or footwear. 353 00:15:57,375 --> 00:16:01,042 In just one graceful move, he runs up, 354 00:16:01,125 --> 00:16:04,875 leaps into the air, easily clears the bar. 355 00:16:04,958 --> 00:16:06,542 The boys were stunned. 356 00:16:06,625 --> 00:16:08,375 [Hill] Jim Thorpe made everything look effortless. 357 00:16:08,458 --> 00:16:10,958 Things that take people years and years and years 358 00:16:11,042 --> 00:16:12,833 of training, of coaching to do, 359 00:16:12,917 --> 00:16:15,083 he could do just like that. 360 00:16:15,167 --> 00:16:18,167 For the fun of it, I ran and jumped the bar, 361 00:16:18,250 --> 00:16:20,500 turned around and laughed. 362 00:16:20,583 --> 00:16:23,292 Jim just walked away as if it was no big deal. 363 00:16:23,417 --> 00:16:26,833 When this story reaches Pop Warner, he said, 364 00:16:26,875 --> 00:16:29,417 "Jim Thorpe just set the school record." 365 00:16:29,500 --> 00:16:32,417 ♪ 366 00:16:32,500 --> 00:16:34,583 [Maraniss] Pop Warner, who was the track coach, 367 00:16:34,583 --> 00:16:37,458 brought Thorpe into his office the next day and said, 368 00:16:37,542 --> 00:16:40,125 "Here's your uniform. You're on the track team." 369 00:16:40,208 --> 00:16:43,042 [Buford] But Jim really wasn't interested in track and field. 370 00:16:43,167 --> 00:16:45,000 He wanted to play football really badly. 371 00:16:45,042 --> 00:16:46,667 And so when he introduced the idea 372 00:16:46,750 --> 00:16:50,000 of wanting to play football to Pop Warner, he thought, 373 00:16:50,083 --> 00:16:51,750 "Why would I ever let you do this?" [laughs] 374 00:16:51,833 --> 00:16:54,458 "Because have you seen what happens on a football field?" 375 00:16:54,542 --> 00:16:56,125 But Jim was persistent. 376 00:16:56,125 --> 00:16:58,708 He would constantly, every day ask Pop, 377 00:16:58,792 --> 00:17:00,292 "When is it gonna be my turn? 378 00:17:00,375 --> 00:17:02,333 When am I gonna have a chance to play football?" 379 00:17:02,375 --> 00:17:05,292 I kept after him until he finally threw a suit to me, 380 00:17:05,375 --> 00:17:08,458 hoping to get rid of me, I guess. 381 00:17:08,542 --> 00:17:10,125 There was this exercise 382 00:17:10,208 --> 00:17:13,208 where Warner would set up players every 10 yards, 383 00:17:13,292 --> 00:17:14,750 all the way down the field, 384 00:17:14,833 --> 00:17:16,542 and have somebody try to run through 385 00:17:16,667 --> 00:17:18,833 without getting tackled, and nobody could ever do it. 386 00:17:18,875 --> 00:17:21,333 [Anderson] Jim is looking at 40 players, 387 00:17:21,375 --> 00:17:24,750 and their sole objective is to tackle Thorpe. 388 00:17:24,875 --> 00:17:27,167 The only experience I've ever had with a football 389 00:17:27,250 --> 00:17:28,875 was at Haskell. 390 00:17:29,000 --> 00:17:31,958 If that could be called experience. 391 00:17:32,042 --> 00:17:35,375 My hand had never gripped a real football. 392 00:17:35,500 --> 00:17:38,000 Warner figured these players were gonna show Jim 393 00:17:38,083 --> 00:17:40,083 what football was all about. 394 00:17:40,167 --> 00:17:41,917 Thorpe takes off. 395 00:17:42,000 --> 00:17:45,250 He cuts, he weaves, he dodges, he stiff-arms. 396 00:17:45,375 --> 00:17:48,542 Warner is watching it slack-jaw. 397 00:17:50,042 --> 00:17:52,333 I heard him say to one of the trainers, 398 00:17:52,417 --> 00:17:54,958 "He's certainly a wild Indian." 399 00:17:55,042 --> 00:17:58,125 What he just saw, that moment, 400 00:17:58,208 --> 00:18:03,083 was the birth of Jim Thorpe, of the football player. 401 00:18:03,167 --> 00:18:04,792 [narrator] Jim Thorpe is now a member 402 00:18:04,875 --> 00:18:06,625 of the Carlisle football team. 403 00:18:06,708 --> 00:18:09,167 His dreams of playing collegiate football 404 00:18:09,208 --> 00:18:10,958 are closer than ever, 405 00:18:11,042 --> 00:18:14,792 but he's relegated to the backup squad. 406 00:18:14,875 --> 00:18:17,667 [Petrzela] In October of 1907, Jim got his big break 407 00:18:17,750 --> 00:18:20,583 when Carlisle played the University of Pennsylvania 408 00:18:20,667 --> 00:18:22,792 at Franklin Field in Philadelphia. 409 00:18:22,875 --> 00:18:27,042 Pop Warner put him in to replace an injured player, 410 00:18:27,042 --> 00:18:28,875 but it didn't go exactly according to plan. 411 00:18:28,958 --> 00:18:33,167 When I was given the ball to carry in my first big game, 412 00:18:33,208 --> 00:18:36,292 I got excited and didn't follow my interference. 413 00:18:36,375 --> 00:18:41,000 The result was I crashed into a stone wall of opposition 414 00:18:41,083 --> 00:18:42,833 and was thrown for a loss. 415 00:18:42,875 --> 00:18:45,000 Jim was not off to a great start. 416 00:18:45,083 --> 00:18:47,417 But if Jim Thorpe was confident in anything, 417 00:18:47,500 --> 00:18:50,417 it was that he wasn't gonna let one bad play stop him. 418 00:18:50,417 --> 00:18:53,208 The next time the ball was passed to me, 419 00:18:53,333 --> 00:18:54,917 I got away around end 420 00:18:55,000 --> 00:18:57,750 and tore 75 yards to a touchdown. 421 00:18:57,875 --> 00:19:01,833 And Pop Warner soon decided I was there to stay. 422 00:19:01,875 --> 00:19:04,125 Along came Mr. Pop Warner, 423 00:19:04,208 --> 00:19:06,625 one of football's most brilliant minds. 424 00:19:08,208 --> 00:19:11,792 A lot of people have heard of Pop Warner football. 425 00:19:11,792 --> 00:19:16,083 It is associated with youth football all across America. 426 00:19:16,208 --> 00:19:18,708 But not many people know the man behind it. 427 00:19:18,833 --> 00:19:20,167 All these Pop Warner leagues 428 00:19:20,250 --> 00:19:23,042 that comes from Pop Warner the coach. 429 00:19:23,125 --> 00:19:25,792 Pop Warner was not a pop. 430 00:19:25,875 --> 00:19:28,750 He didn't have any kids. He played football at Cornell. 431 00:19:28,875 --> 00:19:30,375 And he was older than some of the other players, 432 00:19:30,375 --> 00:19:32,167 so they started calling him Pop. 433 00:19:32,250 --> 00:19:37,333 But Pop Warner was a brilliant football coach. 434 00:19:37,417 --> 00:19:39,250 Pop Warner's coaching style was that of an innovator. 435 00:19:39,333 --> 00:19:42,542 [Schefter] He was known for trick plays. 436 00:19:42,625 --> 00:19:45,333 He came up with trick plays before there were trick plays. 437 00:19:45,375 --> 00:19:46,750 One of his plays, the hidden ball, 438 00:19:46,833 --> 00:19:48,542 he sewed a pocket into a player's uniform 439 00:19:48,667 --> 00:19:50,500 and had him stuff the ball in there 440 00:19:50,542 --> 00:19:51,917 so he could run down the field without anyone knowing 441 00:19:51,917 --> 00:19:53,542 he was actually carrying it. 442 00:19:53,625 --> 00:19:55,000 The rules committee would slap it down and say, 443 00:19:55,083 --> 00:19:56,708 "No, you can't do that anymore." 444 00:19:56,708 --> 00:19:58,833 So then Warner would go back to the drawing board 445 00:19:58,875 --> 00:20:02,667 and come up with another trick play or another innovation. 446 00:20:02,708 --> 00:20:05,708 He was pushing, pushing, pushing the rules all the time. 447 00:20:05,792 --> 00:20:08,875 Warner's imagination was constantly firing. 448 00:20:08,958 --> 00:20:10,625 He developed a blocking sled. 449 00:20:10,708 --> 00:20:12,333 He developed tackling dummies. 450 00:20:12,417 --> 00:20:14,333 He developed the single wing offense, 451 00:20:14,417 --> 00:20:17,125 the double wing offense, lightweight uniforms. 452 00:20:17,208 --> 00:20:20,917 So much of what he developed we still see today 453 00:20:21,000 --> 00:20:22,500 nearly a hundred years later. 454 00:20:22,542 --> 00:20:25,708 [narrator] By 1908, under Pop's guidance, 455 00:20:25,792 --> 00:20:28,625 Jim is beginning to make a name for himself. 456 00:20:28,708 --> 00:20:30,542 By the time Carlisle was scheduled to play 457 00:20:30,625 --> 00:20:32,750 University of Pennsylvania in October, 458 00:20:32,833 --> 00:20:36,708 Jim Thorpe had created a identity of toughness. 459 00:20:36,833 --> 00:20:39,458 So he came into that game with a target on his back. 460 00:20:39,542 --> 00:20:42,458 [Thorpe] Word passed through the Penn Eleven to get Thorpe, 461 00:20:42,542 --> 00:20:44,458 put him out of the game. 462 00:20:44,542 --> 00:20:46,750 They did everything in the world to cripple me, 463 00:20:46,833 --> 00:20:49,833 but they didn't take into consideration the tough hide 464 00:20:49,875 --> 00:20:53,083 and the stubborn constitution of the prairie Indian. 465 00:20:53,167 --> 00:20:54,583 Well, you think about it, you know, 466 00:20:54,708 --> 00:20:56,333 you're an Indian kid in a boarding school. 467 00:20:56,417 --> 00:20:58,833 You've been taken away from your parents violently. 468 00:20:58,875 --> 00:21:00,833 For young Indian kids, you really don't have a chance 469 00:21:00,875 --> 00:21:02,750 to express that anger in any other way 470 00:21:02,833 --> 00:21:05,208 except through competitive sports. 471 00:21:05,208 --> 00:21:07,500 [narrator] In a fiercely contested game, 472 00:21:07,583 --> 00:21:11,542 Carlisle trails 6-0 in the final minutes, 473 00:21:11,667 --> 00:21:14,333 but Jim Thorpe refuses to back down. 474 00:21:14,458 --> 00:21:16,667 In the real world, he could never really compete 475 00:21:16,792 --> 00:21:18,292 with white people. 476 00:21:18,417 --> 00:21:20,500 Playing football, he got to compete with them 477 00:21:20,542 --> 00:21:22,625 on an equal playing field. 478 00:21:22,708 --> 00:21:25,458 [Thorpe] I got the ball on a fast pass and was on my way, 479 00:21:25,542 --> 00:21:28,542 skirting the end, carrying the mail 65 yards 480 00:21:28,667 --> 00:21:31,500 to a touchdown, tying the score. 481 00:21:32,708 --> 00:21:35,625 Penn had been doped to win, 482 00:21:35,708 --> 00:21:38,167 and our tie proved quite an upset. 483 00:21:38,292 --> 00:21:40,333 [narrator] With Jim's help, Carlisle goes on 484 00:21:40,417 --> 00:21:43,583 to a 10-2 record that year. 485 00:21:43,667 --> 00:21:45,292 [Williams] At the same time Jim's establishing himself 486 00:21:45,375 --> 00:21:46,792 as a football phenomenon, 487 00:21:46,875 --> 00:21:49,542 he also has his eye on another sport. 488 00:21:54,083 --> 00:21:56,375 When Jim arrived at Carlisle, 489 00:21:56,500 --> 00:21:57,875 he hadn't done any track and field. 490 00:21:57,958 --> 00:22:00,167 He just knew how to jump and he knew how to run. 491 00:22:00,250 --> 00:22:02,708 And he was this incredibly gifted athlete. 492 00:22:02,708 --> 00:22:04,792 Now that Jim was on the track team, 493 00:22:04,792 --> 00:22:07,542 he was introduced to all these other sports and competitions 494 00:22:07,625 --> 00:22:09,292 that he'd never seen before. 495 00:22:09,375 --> 00:22:11,125 He needed to be taught, 496 00:22:11,208 --> 00:22:14,417 and there was a very gifted athlete on the team already 497 00:22:14,500 --> 00:22:16,292 called Albert Exendine. 498 00:22:16,375 --> 00:22:19,167 Warner said to Albert, "Take Jim under your wing, 499 00:22:19,250 --> 00:22:20,708 and teach him what he needs to know." 500 00:22:36,375 --> 00:22:37,792 The next thing you know, 501 00:22:37,875 --> 00:22:40,333 Jim Thorpe is a track and field star. 502 00:22:43,292 --> 00:22:45,500 [narrator] Jim excels at track and field, 503 00:22:45,542 --> 00:22:48,125 but his true passion remains football. 504 00:22:48,208 --> 00:22:49,958 Jim really comes into his own 505 00:22:50,042 --> 00:22:53,542 as a football phenomenon in 1911, 506 00:22:53,542 --> 00:22:55,708 Carlisle had a very good season, 507 00:22:55,792 --> 00:22:58,958 and Pop signed up to play against Harvard. 508 00:23:00,125 --> 00:23:02,000 Well, everyone around the country 509 00:23:02,042 --> 00:23:05,583 who was following football was primed for this contest. 510 00:23:05,667 --> 00:23:08,458 The little Indian school and Harvard. 511 00:23:09,958 --> 00:23:12,500 [Creek] Harvard at the time was an absolute powerhouse. 512 00:23:12,542 --> 00:23:14,750 Starting in the late 1800s, over the course of two decades, 513 00:23:14,875 --> 00:23:16,625 they won nine national championships. 514 00:23:16,708 --> 00:23:18,042 They were unstoppable. 515 00:23:20,542 --> 00:23:24,375 One can only imagine that Jim Thorpe could recognize 516 00:23:24,500 --> 00:23:26,167 who he was playing against. 517 00:23:26,208 --> 00:23:27,958 These are the elites of this country. 518 00:23:28,042 --> 00:23:30,167 These are the sons of the industrialists. 519 00:23:30,250 --> 00:23:32,125 These are the sons of the landowners 520 00:23:32,208 --> 00:23:35,583 that have taken his homelands away from his family, 521 00:23:35,667 --> 00:23:37,333 away from his tribe. 522 00:23:37,417 --> 00:23:39,667 And so a part of me has to think 523 00:23:39,750 --> 00:23:41,625 that perhaps it was a little bit personal. 524 00:23:43,333 --> 00:23:45,000 But with the most important game 525 00:23:45,083 --> 00:23:48,292 of Thorpe's career looming, there's a problem. 526 00:23:48,292 --> 00:23:50,042 [Buford] Jim had an injury, 527 00:23:50,167 --> 00:23:54,667 so his leg was visibly bandaged from his ankle to his knee. 528 00:23:54,708 --> 00:23:56,500 It was his kicking leg. 529 00:23:56,583 --> 00:23:59,292 "Crippled Jimmy Thorpe," as the press named him. 530 00:23:59,375 --> 00:24:00,750 [crowd cheering] 531 00:24:00,875 --> 00:24:02,333 [Williams] From the opening drive 532 00:24:02,375 --> 00:24:04,833 Jim plays every minute of the game, 533 00:24:04,958 --> 00:24:06,625 offense and defense, 534 00:24:06,708 --> 00:24:08,167 because that's the way the game was played back then. 535 00:24:08,292 --> 00:24:10,875 [Schefter] He never got a break, 536 00:24:10,958 --> 00:24:13,542 and he stayed out there the entire time. 537 00:24:13,667 --> 00:24:16,000 So here he is running the football, 538 00:24:16,125 --> 00:24:18,500 playing defense, kicking. 539 00:24:18,542 --> 00:24:19,833 [Eisenberg] There were no substitutions. 540 00:24:19,958 --> 00:24:21,542 There was no bench. 541 00:24:21,625 --> 00:24:23,458 The whole idea was you don't come off the field. 542 00:24:23,542 --> 00:24:25,167 It is a game of stamina. 543 00:24:25,208 --> 00:24:28,667 If we look at the NFL today, there's nobody who does 544 00:24:28,792 --> 00:24:32,167 what Jim Thorpe did back in the day. 545 00:24:32,208 --> 00:24:35,250 We have to put ourselves in the DeLorean and go back 546 00:24:35,375 --> 00:24:37,417 and think about what the game looked like 547 00:24:37,500 --> 00:24:38,833 when Jim Thorpe was playing. 548 00:24:38,917 --> 00:24:40,542 [Watson] What you would be seeing back 549 00:24:40,625 --> 00:24:42,458 in the beginning of the 20th century 550 00:24:42,542 --> 00:24:44,167 was a totally different game. 551 00:24:44,208 --> 00:24:47,750 The rules are changing every year back then. 552 00:24:47,875 --> 00:24:49,875 [Eisenberg] There was no passing in the beginning, 553 00:24:49,958 --> 00:24:51,792 so that was considered borderline cheating. 554 00:24:51,792 --> 00:24:54,292 They didn't wear uniforms. Very little padding. 555 00:24:54,375 --> 00:24:56,542 They had what they called team sweaters. 556 00:24:56,667 --> 00:24:58,167 You couldn't tell who was on what team. 557 00:24:58,208 --> 00:25:01,542 Touchdowns for much of that period were five points. 558 00:25:01,625 --> 00:25:03,500 Field goals were four points. 559 00:25:03,542 --> 00:25:05,292 The yard markers were different. 560 00:25:05,375 --> 00:25:06,750 The length of the field was different. 561 00:25:06,833 --> 00:25:08,750 There was very little scoring, 562 00:25:08,875 --> 00:25:10,417 and the vast majority of plays 563 00:25:10,500 --> 00:25:13,333 were just taking the ball into the line. 564 00:25:13,417 --> 00:25:15,375 It sounds like a made-up universe, 565 00:25:15,458 --> 00:25:17,042 like some kind of bizarro version of football, 566 00:25:17,042 --> 00:25:20,708 but that's very much how football was played. 567 00:25:20,792 --> 00:25:22,500 Jim Thorpe was made for football 568 00:25:22,625 --> 00:25:24,583 because he was great at everything 569 00:25:24,667 --> 00:25:26,500 and he loved to hit people, 570 00:25:26,542 --> 00:25:29,583 which was what football was all about. 571 00:25:29,708 --> 00:25:31,750 [Thorpe] I gave little quarter when I played football, 572 00:25:31,833 --> 00:25:33,833 and I never asked for any. 573 00:25:33,875 --> 00:25:35,917 When I was hurt, I bit my lip, 574 00:25:36,000 --> 00:25:38,667 bandaged the injury between quarters 575 00:25:38,750 --> 00:25:40,500 and kept giving what I had just received. 576 00:25:40,625 --> 00:25:42,667 Even with his injured leg, 577 00:25:42,750 --> 00:25:46,167 Jim still managed to kick two field goals in the first half. 578 00:25:46,250 --> 00:25:47,958 [crowd cheers] 579 00:25:48,042 --> 00:25:49,375 [narrator] Along with a field goal, 580 00:25:49,500 --> 00:25:51,208 Harvard scores a touchdown. 581 00:25:51,208 --> 00:25:55,542 And going into the half, Carlisle is down 9-6. 582 00:25:55,625 --> 00:25:57,833 In the second half Carlisle comes roaring back, 583 00:25:57,917 --> 00:26:00,250 and Jim's fingerprints are all over the game. 584 00:26:00,333 --> 00:26:01,958 He's running, he's kicking, 585 00:26:01,958 --> 00:26:04,167 he's tackling, all on a busted leg. 586 00:26:04,250 --> 00:26:05,750 It gives you an idea 587 00:26:05,833 --> 00:26:07,917 of how great of an athlete he has to be. 588 00:26:07,917 --> 00:26:09,833 Just from a physical-toll standpoint, 589 00:26:09,958 --> 00:26:12,083 to do what Jim Thorpe was doing, 590 00:26:12,167 --> 00:26:14,875 frankly, looking back on it, it's like, it's crazy. 591 00:26:15,000 --> 00:26:17,708 [laughs] It is absolutely crazy. 592 00:26:17,792 --> 00:26:19,625 [Williams] Carlisle scores a touchdown. 593 00:26:19,625 --> 00:26:21,792 Then Jim connects for two field goals. 594 00:26:21,875 --> 00:26:23,667 Suddenly, the unthinkable happens. 595 00:26:23,792 --> 00:26:26,292 Carlisle beats Harvard. 596 00:26:26,375 --> 00:26:28,000 Years later, Sports Illustrated 597 00:26:28,083 --> 00:26:30,875 would point to this game and Jim's performance in it 598 00:26:30,958 --> 00:26:33,333 that would have earned Jim the Heisman Trophy 599 00:26:33,333 --> 00:26:35,625 had the Heisman Trophy existed. 600 00:26:35,708 --> 00:26:37,000 There's something poetic 601 00:26:37,125 --> 00:26:38,875 and there's some sense of justice 602 00:26:38,958 --> 00:26:41,625 in the way that Jim played, because when he played 603 00:26:41,708 --> 00:26:43,458 he played for all Native peoples. 604 00:26:43,542 --> 00:26:45,875 [Thorpe] Harvard, the Crimson Tide, 605 00:26:45,875 --> 00:26:47,958 was our big enemy that year. 606 00:26:48,042 --> 00:26:51,167 Our victory proved a great upset. 607 00:26:51,208 --> 00:26:52,833 Sturdy old John Harvard 608 00:26:52,917 --> 00:26:54,583 being knocked over by the little Indian school 609 00:26:54,667 --> 00:26:57,083 was a calamity no one had looked for. 610 00:26:57,167 --> 00:26:59,500 There's the famous headline, "Thorpe Beat Harvard." 611 00:26:59,542 --> 00:27:02,500 He was seen as this amazing football player. 612 00:27:02,625 --> 00:27:05,333 [Maraniss] Jim Thorpe had probably the first 613 00:27:05,458 --> 00:27:09,083 nationally recognized brilliant game of his career. 614 00:27:09,208 --> 00:27:11,500 Harvard was such a big deal that all of 615 00:27:11,500 --> 00:27:13,500 the newspapers from New York and Boston 616 00:27:13,625 --> 00:27:15,750 and Philadelphia covered that game. 617 00:27:15,875 --> 00:27:19,583 ♪♪ 618 00:27:19,667 --> 00:27:21,167 [Hill] Jim Thorpe's performance against Harvard 619 00:27:21,250 --> 00:27:23,875 you kind of have to rank right up there 620 00:27:23,958 --> 00:27:25,708 with some of the greatest games and performances 621 00:27:25,792 --> 00:27:27,333 that you've seen throughout history. 622 00:27:27,417 --> 00:27:29,625 It's like Kobe Bryant dropping 81, 623 00:27:29,708 --> 00:27:32,500 Tiger winning the Masters by 12 strokes, 624 00:27:32,583 --> 00:27:35,500 Wayne Gretzky's Game 7 magic over Toronto. 625 00:27:35,583 --> 00:27:39,708 All those ridiculous athletic accomplishments 626 00:27:39,833 --> 00:27:42,917 that became the defining games for the defining athlete, 627 00:27:43,000 --> 00:27:44,875 that's what that game was for him. 628 00:27:45,000 --> 00:27:47,000 [narrator] Carlisle goes on to have only one loss 629 00:27:47,167 --> 00:27:48,542 that entire season 630 00:27:48,625 --> 00:27:51,875 as Thorpe's star continues to rise. 631 00:27:51,958 --> 00:27:53,833 [narrator] Jim Thorpe makes gridiron history, 632 00:27:54,000 --> 00:27:57,667 scores 25 touchdowns, 198 points in a single season, 633 00:27:57,833 --> 00:27:59,750 a combined record never equaled. 634 00:27:59,875 --> 00:28:03,125 [Jones] Jim gets named captain of the Carlisle football team, 635 00:28:03,208 --> 00:28:06,042 and Walter Camp, who's the father of American football, 636 00:28:06,125 --> 00:28:09,083 ends up naming Thorpe to his All-American list. 637 00:28:09,167 --> 00:28:11,542 [Williams] Jim Thorpe is at the top of his game, 638 00:28:11,667 --> 00:28:14,417 and yet he was about to level up again. 639 00:28:19,500 --> 00:28:24,042 [Thorpe] The year 1912 came. 640 00:28:24,125 --> 00:28:27,167 The magic year of the Olympiad. 641 00:28:27,208 --> 00:28:30,542 I trained as I've never trained before or since. 642 00:28:30,667 --> 00:28:34,833 In my heart, I had known since 1909 643 00:28:34,875 --> 00:28:38,958 that I would compete in the game of games. 644 00:28:41,000 --> 00:28:44,833 The modern Olympic Games were created by a French lord, 645 00:28:44,875 --> 00:28:48,500 Baron Pierre de Coubertin, in 1896. 646 00:28:48,583 --> 00:28:50,542 It was his vision 647 00:28:50,625 --> 00:28:53,667 to build a festival of international sport 648 00:28:53,750 --> 00:28:55,875 that would bring countries together 649 00:28:55,958 --> 00:28:59,333 to sit higher than our political differences. 650 00:28:59,417 --> 00:29:01,917 He was inspired after France had been crushed 651 00:29:02,000 --> 00:29:03,750 in the Franco-Prussian War. 652 00:29:03,833 --> 00:29:06,542 [Buford] He thought that if nations could fight 653 00:29:06,542 --> 00:29:10,292 on a field of sports, they'd get it out of their system 654 00:29:10,375 --> 00:29:12,000 and the world would be a better place. 655 00:29:12,042 --> 00:29:16,750 So he decided to revive the ancient Greek Olympics 656 00:29:16,833 --> 00:29:19,833 with the idea that sports would take the place 657 00:29:19,875 --> 00:29:22,042 of armed conflict. 658 00:29:22,125 --> 00:29:25,333 So he created what was known as the modern Olympics. 659 00:29:25,375 --> 00:29:28,167 [cheers and applause] 660 00:29:28,167 --> 00:29:31,958 ♪ 661 00:29:32,042 --> 00:29:36,458 The first four Olympics were not particularly successful. 662 00:29:36,542 --> 00:29:39,500 There was no guarantee that this idea of Coubertin's 663 00:29:39,542 --> 00:29:40,917 was going to survive. 664 00:29:41,000 --> 00:29:42,958 [Boykoff] Baron Pierre de Coubertin 665 00:29:43,042 --> 00:29:47,375 revived the Olympics on a bed of contradictions. 666 00:29:47,458 --> 00:29:49,500 The Olympics were supposed to be for everybody, 667 00:29:49,583 --> 00:29:51,542 but the baron excluded women. 668 00:29:51,625 --> 00:29:53,167 He thought it was unseemly 669 00:29:53,250 --> 00:29:55,667 to have women involved in sport on any level. 670 00:29:55,750 --> 00:29:57,333 And also he was classist. 671 00:29:57,417 --> 00:30:00,833 I mean, he had a real class bias in favor of aristocrats, 672 00:30:00,917 --> 00:30:04,000 trying to exclude working people from the Olympics 673 00:30:04,042 --> 00:30:07,750 with a specialized definition of amateurism from the very start. 674 00:30:07,833 --> 00:30:10,500 The Olympics were the ultimate example 675 00:30:10,625 --> 00:30:16,708 of what amateurism and the amateur ideal was in that era. 676 00:30:16,792 --> 00:30:19,000 The idea was that people should play sports 677 00:30:19,083 --> 00:30:22,167 purely for their passion, not for a paycheck. 678 00:30:22,208 --> 00:30:25,000 That was considered kind of lowbrow and unseemly. 679 00:30:25,042 --> 00:30:29,583 No money could ever cross your palm in any way, 680 00:30:29,708 --> 00:30:31,333 or else you were a professional. 681 00:30:31,417 --> 00:30:35,000 Every athlete taking part in the 1912 Olympics 682 00:30:35,083 --> 00:30:39,167 had to sign a form in which they had to promise 683 00:30:39,250 --> 00:30:42,125 they had never accepted money of any kind 684 00:30:42,208 --> 00:30:44,542 in any connection with sports. 685 00:30:44,667 --> 00:30:47,792 It was formed and created by and for 686 00:30:47,875 --> 00:30:50,792 wealthy aristocratic athletes. 687 00:30:50,875 --> 00:30:52,583 They didn't need money. 688 00:30:52,708 --> 00:30:56,000 This version of the Olympics is unrecognizable from today's. 689 00:30:56,042 --> 00:30:57,917 [Wigglesworth] Today we are accustomed to seeing 690 00:30:58,042 --> 00:31:00,000 professionals from their sport, 691 00:31:00,000 --> 00:31:03,500 in basketball or in hockey compete at the Olympics. 692 00:31:03,583 --> 00:31:05,250 Across just about every sport, 693 00:31:05,333 --> 00:31:07,542 Olympic athletes are encouraged to go out 694 00:31:07,625 --> 00:31:10,708 and get sponsors to help them underwrite their training 695 00:31:10,792 --> 00:31:12,500 in their competition, 696 00:31:12,583 --> 00:31:16,500 in effect getting paid to compete at that Olympic level. 697 00:31:16,542 --> 00:31:19,792 That was not the case back in Jim Thorpe's competitive days. 698 00:31:19,875 --> 00:31:22,333 So you roll around into 1912, 699 00:31:22,333 --> 00:31:25,333 which is the fifth Olympiad, in Stockholm. 700 00:31:26,875 --> 00:31:29,667 [Boykoff] The United States Olympic team's journey 701 00:31:29,750 --> 00:31:32,083 to even participate in Stockholm 702 00:31:32,208 --> 00:31:34,000 was quite the adventure in and of itself. 703 00:31:34,083 --> 00:31:37,417 When Jim Thorpe got to the pier in Manhattan 704 00:31:37,500 --> 00:31:39,333 and saw the SS Finland, 705 00:31:39,375 --> 00:31:42,417 it was a sight unlike anything he had ever seen before. 706 00:31:42,500 --> 00:31:44,958 It was this floating paradise of a sort, 707 00:31:45,042 --> 00:31:48,375 the breadth of that ship, where it was going, 708 00:31:48,458 --> 00:31:51,250 to a world that he'd never seen before. 709 00:31:51,333 --> 00:31:53,167 And it's important to remember 710 00:31:53,208 --> 00:31:54,625 that this was only a few months 711 00:31:54,708 --> 00:31:56,542 after the sinking of the Titanic. 712 00:31:56,625 --> 00:32:00,625 So going on a transatlantic journey was a little bit iffy. 713 00:32:00,708 --> 00:32:02,625 ♪ 714 00:32:02,708 --> 00:32:05,333 [Boykoff] They loaded on thousands of pounds of food 715 00:32:05,375 --> 00:32:07,750 for both the humans as well as the horses 716 00:32:07,875 --> 00:32:09,958 that were there for the equestrian events. 717 00:32:10,042 --> 00:32:12,417 They built a special cork track. 718 00:32:12,542 --> 00:32:15,708 There was a makeshift swimming pool down in the lower deck. 719 00:32:15,792 --> 00:32:19,250 Athletes could practice the discus by throwing it overboard 720 00:32:19,333 --> 00:32:21,333 and then pulling it back up with a rope. 721 00:32:21,458 --> 00:32:23,167 So there are all these ingenious schemes 722 00:32:23,208 --> 00:32:25,250 that allowed the athletes to stay fresh 723 00:32:25,333 --> 00:32:27,417 as they get ready for the Olympic Games. 724 00:32:27,500 --> 00:32:30,917 ♪ 725 00:32:31,000 --> 00:32:33,000 There's a mythos around Jim Thorpe 726 00:32:33,042 --> 00:32:36,167 that he didn't train on the boat going over to Sweden 727 00:32:36,292 --> 00:32:38,333 and that he wasn't a person 728 00:32:38,417 --> 00:32:41,667 who really dedicated himself to his excellence. 729 00:32:41,708 --> 00:32:44,583 I think the media characterizations of Jim Thorpe 730 00:32:44,708 --> 00:32:48,583 were very much that he didn't have to work at his success. 731 00:32:48,667 --> 00:32:51,375 [Maraniss] Why would people say that Jim didn't train? 732 00:32:51,458 --> 00:32:55,583 The same reason why do so many sportswriters, 733 00:32:55,667 --> 00:32:58,000 when they're defining an African American athlete, 734 00:32:58,125 --> 00:33:00,333 they'll just say that they have natural talent 735 00:33:00,458 --> 00:33:02,792 as opposed to actually working at it, right? 736 00:33:02,875 --> 00:33:05,333 Well, that was the way that they could disparage Jim Thorpe. 737 00:33:05,417 --> 00:33:07,750 He was just natural. He didn't have to train. 738 00:33:07,833 --> 00:33:09,000 But it's baloney. 739 00:33:09,083 --> 00:33:10,833 When in reality Jim Thorpe 740 00:33:10,917 --> 00:33:12,500 was actually playing it smart. 741 00:33:12,583 --> 00:33:14,708 He was tapering off as the Olympic Games approached, 742 00:33:14,833 --> 00:33:17,000 just like athletes do today. 743 00:33:17,083 --> 00:33:19,083 [Thorpe] I was in the best condition of my life. 744 00:33:19,208 --> 00:33:21,333 I didn't work out strenuously, 745 00:33:21,417 --> 00:33:24,333 contenting myself with an occasional run 746 00:33:24,458 --> 00:33:28,000 or trot about the deck, as I felt ready for action 747 00:33:28,083 --> 00:33:31,167 and didn't want to become stale or overtrained. 748 00:33:31,208 --> 00:33:34,208 I think the mythos around Jim Thorpe's not training 749 00:33:34,208 --> 00:33:36,625 is tied up in a mythos around American Indians 750 00:33:36,708 --> 00:33:40,542 in general, that we're not hardworking, that we're lazy. 751 00:33:40,625 --> 00:33:43,042 They were sort of setting the stage 752 00:33:43,125 --> 00:33:47,042 for his abilities to be both adulated 753 00:33:47,167 --> 00:33:49,000 and disrespected at the same time. 754 00:33:49,042 --> 00:33:51,792 [Watson] When you look at just how 755 00:33:51,875 --> 00:33:53,583 minorities are described in the media 756 00:33:53,708 --> 00:33:55,500 in the turn of the 20th century, 757 00:33:55,583 --> 00:33:58,875 as much as their accomplishments were celebrated, 758 00:33:58,958 --> 00:34:01,167 there was still that dehumanization. 759 00:34:01,208 --> 00:34:03,833 Native American achievements never could stand on their own. 760 00:34:03,958 --> 00:34:07,250 They were always portrayed through this lens of aggression. 761 00:34:07,333 --> 00:34:09,208 [Watson] The words that were used to describe them 762 00:34:09,292 --> 00:34:11,208 made it very clear that you are still deemed 763 00:34:11,292 --> 00:34:12,833 as "less than" in society. 764 00:34:12,917 --> 00:34:14,833 They were savages. 765 00:34:14,875 --> 00:34:16,708 Violent. 766 00:34:16,792 --> 00:34:20,167 [Watson] On a "warpath" or "scalping" their opponent. 767 00:34:20,250 --> 00:34:22,083 Those were words that were used to describe 768 00:34:22,167 --> 00:34:25,042 how they believed these individuals lived their lives. 769 00:34:25,167 --> 00:34:26,667 [Proudfit] The sportswriters 770 00:34:26,750 --> 00:34:28,000 and the journalists of the time 771 00:34:28,083 --> 00:34:30,042 frame and control the narrative. 772 00:34:30,125 --> 00:34:31,917 And for Native people, 773 00:34:31,917 --> 00:34:33,500 other people have been representing us 774 00:34:33,625 --> 00:34:36,333 and mischaracterizing us since time immemorial. 775 00:34:36,375 --> 00:34:39,375 [Jones] It was a way of stripping Native Americans of 776 00:34:39,458 --> 00:34:43,458 both their dignity and their humanity. 777 00:34:45,333 --> 00:34:47,167 [Boykoff] At the time that Jim Thorpe 778 00:34:47,250 --> 00:34:50,167 and the rest of the Olympic team traveled to Stockholm, 779 00:34:50,292 --> 00:34:55,000 there was a practice in place on all ships of segregating, 780 00:34:55,083 --> 00:34:56,708 in a lot of ways, by race. 781 00:34:56,833 --> 00:34:59,625 The context is important politically at that time, 782 00:34:59,708 --> 00:35:01,792 1912 was a year that Woodrow Wilson 783 00:35:01,875 --> 00:35:03,250 was elected president, 784 00:35:03,375 --> 00:35:05,083 and one of the first things he did 785 00:35:05,083 --> 00:35:08,583 was he racially segregated the federal bureaucracy. 786 00:35:08,667 --> 00:35:11,500 So African American people had to use different bathrooms, 787 00:35:11,583 --> 00:35:14,458 eat in different lunchrooms, work in different spaces. 788 00:35:14,542 --> 00:35:17,167 And that segregated culture made its way 789 00:35:17,250 --> 00:35:19,125 on board the USS Finland. 790 00:35:19,250 --> 00:35:22,000 Jim and another American athlete, Abel Kiviat, 791 00:35:22,042 --> 00:35:23,542 who was Jewish, 792 00:35:23,542 --> 00:35:25,542 were both put in steerage on the ship 793 00:35:25,625 --> 00:35:29,417 rather than with the better quarters higher up. 794 00:35:29,500 --> 00:35:31,042 Thorpe and his fellow Olympians 795 00:35:31,125 --> 00:35:33,333 who weren't lily-white Olympians 796 00:35:33,375 --> 00:35:35,333 who could stay in the top accommodation on the top floor 797 00:35:35,458 --> 00:35:38,833 had to grapple with a lot of racism on the way to Stockholm, 798 00:35:38,917 --> 00:35:40,333 but also more broadly in life. 799 00:35:40,375 --> 00:35:42,708 [cheers and applause] 800 00:35:42,792 --> 00:35:46,417 ♪ 801 00:35:46,500 --> 00:35:48,625 [Wigglesworth] Jim Thorpe made the Olympic team to compete 802 00:35:48,708 --> 00:35:52,500 in both the pentathlon and the decathlon, 803 00:35:52,583 --> 00:35:55,167 two events that are really widely regarded 804 00:35:55,292 --> 00:35:58,625 as being among the most difficult in the Games. 805 00:35:58,708 --> 00:36:01,917 [narrator] Although Jim had earned recognition back home, 806 00:36:02,042 --> 00:36:04,000 he is far from being the favorite. 807 00:36:04,083 --> 00:36:07,542 Contenders like Sweden's Hugo Wieslander 808 00:36:07,542 --> 00:36:11,167 and even his own American teammate Avery Brundage 809 00:36:11,208 --> 00:36:12,542 are expected to dominate. 810 00:36:12,625 --> 00:36:14,458 In the narrative of Jim Thorpe, 811 00:36:14,542 --> 00:36:18,958 Avery Brundage appears a number of times as a nemesis. 812 00:36:19,042 --> 00:36:21,667 Avery Brundage was a terrible man. 813 00:36:21,750 --> 00:36:26,167 He was known from the 1940s through the 1960s and beyond 814 00:36:26,208 --> 00:36:28,958 as "Slavery Avery" for his racist beliefs. 815 00:36:29,042 --> 00:36:33,042 In his personal papers, he heaps praise on the Nazis, 816 00:36:33,125 --> 00:36:36,458 calling them an "intelligent, beneficent dictatorship." 817 00:36:36,542 --> 00:36:38,458 And he was convinced in his own mind 818 00:36:38,542 --> 00:36:40,000 that he was going to win. 819 00:36:40,042 --> 00:36:42,833 On July 7, 1912, 820 00:36:42,917 --> 00:36:45,917 the competition begins with the pentathlon, 821 00:36:46,000 --> 00:36:47,500 a single-day challenge 822 00:36:47,542 --> 00:36:50,333 featuring five track and field events. 823 00:36:50,417 --> 00:36:53,250 Jim comes out of the gates soaring at the pentathlon, 824 00:36:53,333 --> 00:36:55,333 almost literally. 825 00:36:55,458 --> 00:36:57,667 He finishes first in the long jump. 826 00:36:57,792 --> 00:36:59,500 He then takes third in the javelin 827 00:36:59,583 --> 00:37:02,375 behind Sweden's Hugo Wieslander. 828 00:37:02,500 --> 00:37:05,500 One of Jim's most dominant wins was in the pentathlon 200. 829 00:37:05,625 --> 00:37:07,667 He left the competition in the dust, 830 00:37:07,708 --> 00:37:10,500 and he would finish in a time of 22.9. 831 00:37:10,583 --> 00:37:13,375 The specificity of that number is significant 832 00:37:13,542 --> 00:37:17,042 because 1912 marked the first Olympics ever 833 00:37:17,125 --> 00:37:19,583 that used electronic timers. 834 00:37:19,667 --> 00:37:21,208 He follows that up with another win, 835 00:37:21,333 --> 00:37:24,375 coming in first in the discus, easily defeating 836 00:37:24,458 --> 00:37:27,417 his second-place American rival, Avery Brundage. 837 00:37:27,500 --> 00:37:30,208 [Jones] The final event of the pentathlon 838 00:37:30,292 --> 00:37:33,208 is the 1,500 meter, the metric mile. 839 00:37:33,292 --> 00:37:34,792 For the Sac and Fox people, 840 00:37:34,875 --> 00:37:36,792 they had a traditional way of looking at running, 841 00:37:36,875 --> 00:37:40,458 allowing the Earth to move you forward rather than your legs. 842 00:37:40,542 --> 00:37:43,458 And that was the same kind of conceptual energy 843 00:37:43,542 --> 00:37:45,167 that Jim brought to his running. 844 00:37:45,292 --> 00:37:47,625 He was in his most comfortable, safest space 845 00:37:47,708 --> 00:37:49,792 when he was running as fast as he could. 846 00:37:49,875 --> 00:37:52,875 Jim Thorpe would win his fourth overall event 847 00:37:52,958 --> 00:37:55,458 and finish five seconds ahead of his nearest competitor, 848 00:37:55,542 --> 00:37:58,917 showing just how dominant he was in those 1912 Olympics. 849 00:38:00,542 --> 00:38:02,417 [Williams] So let's be clear. 850 00:38:02,500 --> 00:38:05,667 Typically in a multi-discipline event like the pentathlon, 851 00:38:05,750 --> 00:38:08,500 the athlete who wins generally does fairly well 852 00:38:08,583 --> 00:38:10,625 in some combination of the events. 853 00:38:10,708 --> 00:38:12,417 [O'Brien] But Jim Thorpe just didn't do well 854 00:38:12,500 --> 00:38:14,000 in all the events. 855 00:38:14,125 --> 00:38:15,417 Jim Thorpe won four out of 856 00:38:15,500 --> 00:38:17,042 the five events in the pentathlon. 857 00:38:17,167 --> 00:38:18,875 That is absolutely unheard of. 858 00:38:18,958 --> 00:38:22,208 [narrator] He outclasses both Sweden's Hugo Wieslander 859 00:38:22,333 --> 00:38:25,167 and his own teammate, Avery Brundage, 860 00:38:25,208 --> 00:38:27,667 who unexpectedly fails to win a medal. 861 00:38:27,750 --> 00:38:30,500 Jim was not particularly aware of Avery Brundage, 862 00:38:30,625 --> 00:38:33,667 but Avery Brundage became very aware of Jim Thorpe. 863 00:38:33,750 --> 00:38:37,500 An American Indian was not supposed to beat Avery Brundage. 864 00:38:37,542 --> 00:38:40,000 With the nation's eyes fixed on him, 865 00:38:40,083 --> 00:38:43,333 Jim is about to embark on the grueling decathlon, 866 00:38:43,417 --> 00:38:46,667 squaring off against Brundage in a showdown 867 00:38:46,708 --> 00:38:49,333 that would reverberate through the rest of his life. 868 00:38:54,708 --> 00:38:58,542 [narrator] With Jim Thorpe's outstanding performance 869 00:38:58,625 --> 00:39:00,042 in the pentathlon having already secured a gold medal, 870 00:39:00,167 --> 00:39:01,708 another soon-to-be famous American 871 00:39:01,792 --> 00:39:04,667 also has high hopes in the 1912 Olympics. 872 00:39:04,708 --> 00:39:07,333 Believe it or not, at the very same Olympic Games 873 00:39:07,375 --> 00:39:09,125 where Thorpe was competing, 874 00:39:09,208 --> 00:39:12,083 so was future General George S. Patton. 875 00:39:12,208 --> 00:39:14,000 And his event was the modern pentathlon, 876 00:39:14,083 --> 00:39:16,833 which is a military-themed event that focused on running, 877 00:39:16,917 --> 00:39:20,375 shooting, swimming, fencing, and horseback riding. 878 00:39:20,458 --> 00:39:23,792 When Baron Pierre de Coubertin created the Olympics, 879 00:39:23,875 --> 00:39:26,833 he had people like George Patton in mind as participants. 880 00:39:26,875 --> 00:39:29,583 Patton was the son of a wealthy family, 881 00:39:29,667 --> 00:39:33,542 had all the training required at his fingertips to do well. 882 00:39:33,625 --> 00:39:35,250 But George Patton didn't do well at all. 883 00:39:35,375 --> 00:39:36,625 In fact, he placed fifth. 884 00:39:36,708 --> 00:39:38,333 [Maraniss] In the swimming event, 885 00:39:38,417 --> 00:39:40,083 he had to get pulled from the pool. 886 00:39:40,167 --> 00:39:43,625 And he claimed that he would have won the sharpshooting, 887 00:39:43,708 --> 00:39:46,958 except that his bullets the judges said missed the target 888 00:39:47,042 --> 00:39:49,708 actually went so cleanly through the other bullets of his 889 00:39:49,792 --> 00:39:51,833 that they couldn't see them. 890 00:39:53,292 --> 00:39:56,208 [narrator] At the conclusion of the modern pentathlon, 891 00:39:56,208 --> 00:39:58,333 a brand-new event is set to begin. 892 00:39:58,458 --> 00:40:00,625 At the 1912 Olympics, 893 00:40:00,708 --> 00:40:02,833 the decathlon was introduced for the very first time. 894 00:40:02,958 --> 00:40:05,917 You have to master 10 different events. 895 00:40:06,000 --> 00:40:07,750 [O'Brien] The 100 meters, the long jump, 896 00:40:07,833 --> 00:40:10,458 the shot put, the high jump and the 400 meters, 897 00:40:10,542 --> 00:40:12,667 110-meter hurdles, the discus, 898 00:40:12,708 --> 00:40:14,625 the pole vault, the javelin, 899 00:40:14,625 --> 00:40:16,625 and the metric mile -- the 1,500 meters. 900 00:40:16,708 --> 00:40:19,333 The decathlon, in my opinion, is the most difficult event 901 00:40:19,417 --> 00:40:21,000 in the sport of track and field. 902 00:40:21,125 --> 00:40:23,000 [Jones] Jim is looking for his second gold medal. 903 00:40:23,042 --> 00:40:26,375 Meanwhile, Avery Brundage is looking for redemption 904 00:40:26,458 --> 00:40:29,125 after losing to Jim during the pentathlon. 905 00:40:29,208 --> 00:40:32,917 On Saturday, July 13, 1912, 906 00:40:33,000 --> 00:40:36,750 the decathlon begins with the 100-meter dash. 907 00:40:36,833 --> 00:40:38,542 [Petrzela] On the first day of the decathlon, 908 00:40:38,667 --> 00:40:42,125 Thorpe finished in the top three in all three events 909 00:40:42,208 --> 00:40:43,792 and finished the day number one. 910 00:40:43,875 --> 00:40:46,500 His rival, Avery Brundage, on the other hand, 911 00:40:46,583 --> 00:40:48,958 was in a distant 14th place. 912 00:40:49,042 --> 00:40:50,458 [cheers and applause] 913 00:40:50,542 --> 00:40:52,333 [Jones] Day two begins with the high jump, 914 00:40:52,417 --> 00:40:55,250 which Jim is heavily favored to win, 915 00:40:55,375 --> 00:40:56,917 but there's a problem. 916 00:40:57,000 --> 00:41:01,667 When he went to compete, his sneakers were missing. 917 00:41:03,500 --> 00:41:06,625 There is some sense that Avery Brundage was involved, 918 00:41:06,708 --> 00:41:09,250 that he took the shoes in an effort 919 00:41:09,333 --> 00:41:11,667 to sabotage his performance. 920 00:41:13,167 --> 00:41:17,125 Jim is then facing continuing the decathlon without his shoes. 921 00:41:17,208 --> 00:41:18,917 Jim, needing to compete, 922 00:41:19,042 --> 00:41:23,333 went out and found a pair of sneakers out of the trash. 923 00:41:23,417 --> 00:41:25,667 So he and Pop Warner jerry-rigged two shoes 924 00:41:25,750 --> 00:41:27,708 that were different sizes. 925 00:41:27,792 --> 00:41:31,333 Thorpe had to wear two pairs of heavy socks on one shoe. 926 00:41:31,458 --> 00:41:34,167 As an athlete, you train for this one moment, 927 00:41:34,333 --> 00:41:35,750 and when that moment comes, 928 00:41:35,875 --> 00:41:37,667 you want everything to be absolutely perfect. 929 00:41:37,708 --> 00:41:40,292 Even in absolutely perfect conditions, 930 00:41:40,375 --> 00:41:41,750 competing in the Olympic high jump 931 00:41:41,875 --> 00:41:43,625 is a near impossible task. 932 00:41:43,708 --> 00:41:46,750 And Jim did it with shoes he found in the trash. 933 00:41:46,833 --> 00:41:49,500 [narrator] Thorpe jumps over six feet, 934 00:41:49,583 --> 00:41:52,667 the only athlete to reach that threshold. 935 00:41:52,750 --> 00:41:55,333 Over six feet with garbage shoes. 936 00:41:55,375 --> 00:41:56,792 [Williams] Like most of 937 00:41:56,875 --> 00:41:58,875 the high jump competitors of his day, 938 00:41:58,958 --> 00:42:00,917 Jim utilized the straddle technique. 939 00:42:01,042 --> 00:42:02,917 Decades later, in 1968, 940 00:42:03,000 --> 00:42:05,750 Dick Fosbury revolutionizes the sport 941 00:42:05,833 --> 00:42:08,083 by utilizing a different technique, 942 00:42:08,208 --> 00:42:09,625 jumping backward over the bar. 943 00:42:09,708 --> 00:42:11,333 This is the technique 944 00:42:11,458 --> 00:42:15,708 that all Olympic high jumpers utilize today. 945 00:42:15,792 --> 00:42:17,500 [Thorpe] The Europeans looked upon the red man 946 00:42:17,583 --> 00:42:19,500 as a curiosity of some sort. 947 00:42:19,583 --> 00:42:21,750 It seemed they were disappointed 948 00:42:21,750 --> 00:42:24,708 that I didn't wear the warpaint or the head feathers. 949 00:42:24,792 --> 00:42:28,375 I decided I would live up to their conception of the Indian, 950 00:42:28,458 --> 00:42:30,375 so I broke out in a war dance 951 00:42:30,458 --> 00:42:32,542 with accompaniment of full-tone yells. 952 00:42:32,625 --> 00:42:36,000 I think it was part of his desire to really show that 953 00:42:36,083 --> 00:42:38,417 even though the boarding schools 954 00:42:38,500 --> 00:42:40,750 attempted to strip Jim of all of his culture 955 00:42:40,833 --> 00:42:42,250 and turn him into a white man, 956 00:42:42,333 --> 00:42:45,250 they didn't take his identity from him inside. 957 00:42:45,333 --> 00:42:48,792 He was letting the world know that he was a Native American. 958 00:42:48,875 --> 00:42:53,125 [narrator] The next three events see Jim extending his lead. 959 00:42:53,208 --> 00:42:54,833 So the last great obstacle 960 00:42:54,917 --> 00:42:58,042 between Jim Thorpe and the Olympic gold medal in 1912 961 00:42:58,125 --> 00:43:00,125 is the eighth event, the pole vault. 962 00:43:00,208 --> 00:43:03,375 [Thorpe] I considered myself rather heavy for vaulting. 963 00:43:03,458 --> 00:43:05,667 Before I sailed for the Olympic Games, 964 00:43:05,667 --> 00:43:08,667 my highest pole vault was nine feet, six inches. 965 00:43:08,750 --> 00:43:11,625 I knew I could do better, 966 00:43:11,708 --> 00:43:13,708 but I was afraid to attempt the higher mark 967 00:43:13,792 --> 00:43:16,333 for fear the ash pole might break. 968 00:43:16,375 --> 00:43:17,958 The pole vault is intimidating, 969 00:43:18,042 --> 00:43:19,375 and it's one of the most difficult events 970 00:43:19,458 --> 00:43:20,833 in the decathlon. 971 00:43:20,917 --> 00:43:22,542 It was the event that kept me 972 00:43:22,708 --> 00:43:24,292 off the 1992 Olympic team. 973 00:43:24,375 --> 00:43:26,042 [announcer] He's just coming to grips with the fact, 974 00:43:26,042 --> 00:43:28,125 "I have no points in this particular event. 975 00:43:28,208 --> 00:43:30,750 I'm now not going to the Olympic Games." 976 00:43:30,833 --> 00:43:35,458 One misstep, one miscalculation, and it's all over. 977 00:43:35,542 --> 00:43:41,500 ♪ 978 00:43:41,542 --> 00:43:43,417 [Jones] Despite his concern, 979 00:43:43,500 --> 00:43:47,167 Jim launched himself 10 feet, eight inches into the air, 980 00:43:47,208 --> 00:43:48,750 smashing his personal best 981 00:43:48,875 --> 00:43:51,333 and keeping him on track to win his second gold. 982 00:43:52,375 --> 00:43:54,417 [narrator] It's at this point in the competition, 983 00:43:54,500 --> 00:43:58,708 having dropped to 11th place, that Avery Brundage realizes 984 00:43:58,833 --> 00:44:01,417 he has no chance of defeating Thorpe. 985 00:44:01,542 --> 00:44:04,125 He did something that he would rue till his dying days, 986 00:44:04,208 --> 00:44:06,875 and that was he dropped out of the competition. 987 00:44:07,000 --> 00:44:09,250 [Maraniss] Thorpe was creaming Brundage by so much 988 00:44:09,333 --> 00:44:10,625 that he quit after eight events. 989 00:44:10,708 --> 00:44:12,208 He didn't even finish it himself. 990 00:44:12,292 --> 00:44:14,375 And probably there was some measure of jealousy 991 00:44:14,542 --> 00:44:16,333 for the rest of his life. 992 00:44:16,875 --> 00:44:18,917 This would not be the last time 993 00:44:19,000 --> 00:44:22,000 that Brundage runs afoul of an Olympic champion. 994 00:44:22,083 --> 00:44:24,667 Brundage went on to a storied career. 995 00:44:24,708 --> 00:44:28,125 He was a power broker in Olympic circles. 996 00:44:28,208 --> 00:44:33,833 He was passionate about the spirit and ideals of amateurism. 997 00:44:33,917 --> 00:44:36,542 [Jones] Brundage was the Olympic Committee chairman 998 00:44:36,625 --> 00:44:38,667 for the 1936 Games in Berlin. 999 00:44:38,750 --> 00:44:41,000 [narrator] The undisputed star of the competition 1000 00:44:41,083 --> 00:44:44,000 was Ohio State University track star Jesse Owens. 1001 00:44:44,083 --> 00:44:46,917 [Jones] Just days after Jesse Owens won gold, 1002 00:44:47,000 --> 00:44:49,750 Brundage came after him as a professional athlete 1003 00:44:49,875 --> 00:44:54,000 and banned him from amateur sports for life. 1004 00:44:54,083 --> 00:44:57,500 [narrator] Going into the final event, the 1500 meter, 1005 00:44:57,542 --> 00:44:59,833 Jim's lead is nearly insurmountable. 1006 00:44:59,917 --> 00:45:03,833 As soon as the race begins, Jim is off, 1007 00:45:03,875 --> 00:45:05,542 and no one can catch him. 1008 00:45:05,625 --> 00:45:08,167 When Jim crossed the finish line in the 1500, 1009 00:45:08,208 --> 00:45:11,667 he not only took a gold medal but cemented his legacy 1010 00:45:11,750 --> 00:45:13,958 as one of the premier athletes of his day. 1011 00:45:14,042 --> 00:45:15,792 Jim Thorpe would finish in the top three 1012 00:45:15,875 --> 00:45:17,333 in eight of the 10 events. 1013 00:45:17,417 --> 00:45:19,583 He would win four of those events outright. 1014 00:45:19,667 --> 00:45:22,333 And in the decathlon, that's total dominance. 1015 00:45:23,250 --> 00:45:27,000 For me, Jim Thorpe's achievement at the Stockholm Olympics 1016 00:45:27,083 --> 00:45:29,000 are a singular achievement. 1017 00:45:29,125 --> 00:45:31,833 I haven't seen anything since then 1018 00:45:31,875 --> 00:45:34,333 that approaches that level of greatness 1019 00:45:34,375 --> 00:45:35,833 in so many different sports. 1020 00:45:35,875 --> 00:45:39,208 "Citius, altius, fortius" was the motto 1021 00:45:39,292 --> 00:45:40,875 of the modern Olympics. 1022 00:45:40,875 --> 00:45:44,167 It meant "faster, higher, stronger." 1023 00:45:44,250 --> 00:45:47,083 And Jim Thorpe embodied all of these. 1024 00:45:47,208 --> 00:45:49,292 [Wigglesworth] His record stood for decades 1025 00:45:49,375 --> 00:45:50,833 and really set a new bar 1026 00:45:50,917 --> 00:45:53,333 for what we as athletes can accomplish. 1027 00:45:54,417 --> 00:45:56,958 [Thorpe] At the close, of the Olympic Games, 1028 00:45:57,083 --> 00:46:00,500 all the winners were marched before the royal box 1029 00:46:00,542 --> 00:46:03,583 before the applauding thousands. 1030 00:46:03,667 --> 00:46:05,667 [narrator] Jim Thorpe's two gold medals 1031 00:46:05,708 --> 00:46:09,042 are the last Olympic medals ever made from pure gold. 1032 00:46:09,125 --> 00:46:12,667 He's also awarded two ceremonial trophies, 1033 00:46:12,708 --> 00:46:15,000 presented by Czar Nicholas of Russia 1034 00:46:15,125 --> 00:46:17,333 and King Gustav of Sweden. 1035 00:46:17,458 --> 00:46:19,875 [Thorpe] King Gustav placed a laurel wreath on my head 1036 00:46:19,958 --> 00:46:21,958 and, in English, said, 1037 00:46:21,958 --> 00:46:26,292 "Sir, you are the greatest athlete in the world." 1038 00:46:26,375 --> 00:46:31,708 And the story is that Jim responded, "Thanks, King." 1039 00:46:31,708 --> 00:46:34,333 Now, we don't know if that actually happened. 1040 00:46:34,417 --> 00:46:37,000 I don't think he said it. He says he didn't say it. 1041 00:46:37,042 --> 00:46:42,208 That was sort of representative of Jim Thorpe, "the Indian," 1042 00:46:42,292 --> 00:46:44,625 not knowing how to deal with royalty. 1043 00:46:44,708 --> 00:46:48,208 It was all representative of the way that Thorpe was idealized, 1044 00:46:48,292 --> 00:46:51,167 romanticized, and diminished at the same time. 1045 00:46:52,250 --> 00:46:57,625 When Jim won the gold medals, he was a sensation, 1046 00:46:57,708 --> 00:47:01,042 the first international celebrity athlete. 1047 00:47:01,125 --> 00:47:03,542 He astonished the world: 1048 00:47:03,625 --> 00:47:07,333 this phenomenal performance, and by an American Indian. 1049 00:47:07,417 --> 00:47:09,417 [Wigglesworth] The whole point of the Olympics 1050 00:47:09,542 --> 00:47:11,542 is to compete and represent your country. 1051 00:47:11,625 --> 00:47:14,958 Jim accomplished so much representing the United States, 1052 00:47:15,042 --> 00:47:20,375 and he returned from the Games celebrated as an American hero. 1053 00:47:20,458 --> 00:47:22,375 [narrator] Jim even receives a letter 1054 00:47:22,458 --> 00:47:25,500 from President Howard Taft saying Thorpe's qualities 1055 00:47:25,583 --> 00:47:29,417 "characterize the best type of American citizen." 1056 00:47:29,500 --> 00:47:31,542 The irony is that at that time, 1057 00:47:31,667 --> 00:47:35,542 he was not even recognized as an American citizen 1058 00:47:35,708 --> 00:47:37,833 because Native Americans in this country 1059 00:47:37,917 --> 00:47:40,667 had not yet been granted citizenship. 1060 00:47:40,750 --> 00:47:43,042 [Buford] He returns home, 1061 00:47:43,125 --> 00:47:47,083 and Carlisle gives a welcoming reception for him. 1062 00:47:47,208 --> 00:47:50,167 [Thorpe] We were met by the leading citizens of the town. 1063 00:47:50,250 --> 00:47:53,208 There was hand-shaking, congratulations, and speeches. 1064 00:47:53,292 --> 00:47:55,042 Jim was the center of attention. 1065 00:47:55,208 --> 00:47:57,375 You couldn't open a paper without reading about him. 1066 00:47:57,458 --> 00:47:59,542 They were throwing parades. There was parties. 1067 00:47:59,625 --> 00:48:02,250 He was expected to make appearances all across America. 1068 00:48:02,375 --> 00:48:05,000 [Buford] New York gives him this ticker-tape parade, 1069 00:48:05,083 --> 00:48:09,542 with him at the front in the first car, by himself. 1070 00:48:09,625 --> 00:48:13,750 And Jim, as all the media said the next day, sat there, 1071 00:48:13,833 --> 00:48:15,750 scrunched down in the front seat 1072 00:48:15,875 --> 00:48:18,667 with a Panama hat over his face and chewing gum. 1073 00:48:18,750 --> 00:48:21,250 Obviously not the happy hero. 1074 00:48:21,375 --> 00:48:24,042 And really, that's true of most of his life: 1075 00:48:24,042 --> 00:48:27,583 that he was never searching for glory or for fame. 1076 00:48:27,667 --> 00:48:29,375 He just loved sports. 1077 00:48:29,500 --> 00:48:33,500 In a lot of ways, Thorpe was the first celebrity sports star. 1078 00:48:33,542 --> 00:48:35,875 [Hill] Back then, the idea of a celebrity athlete 1079 00:48:35,958 --> 00:48:37,500 was completely foreign. 1080 00:48:37,625 --> 00:48:39,500 He's known all around the world. There's no social media. 1081 00:48:39,625 --> 00:48:42,958 You think about how slow information passed at that time, 1082 00:48:43,042 --> 00:48:46,250 and yet still everybody knew about his athletic feats. 1083 00:48:46,333 --> 00:48:48,167 [Hill] He didn't have Gatorade or Nike behind him, 1084 00:48:48,250 --> 00:48:51,292 pushing him out there and making him a celebrity. 1085 00:48:51,375 --> 00:48:53,708 There's no media vehicle driving it 1086 00:48:53,833 --> 00:48:55,833 beyond what he is accomplishing at a time 1087 00:48:55,875 --> 00:48:59,125 where people who looked like him weren't supposed to be famous 1088 00:48:59,208 --> 00:49:01,000 and athletes in general 1089 00:49:01,083 --> 00:49:02,708 were not really supposed to be famous like that. 1090 00:49:02,833 --> 00:49:04,583 [narrator] Jim Thorpe has ushered in 1091 00:49:04,708 --> 00:49:07,000 a new era of celebrity athlete, 1092 00:49:07,083 --> 00:49:09,667 but his career is just getting started. 1093 00:49:15,375 --> 00:49:18,833 [narrator] After the fanfare of the Olympics faded, 1094 00:49:18,917 --> 00:49:20,375 Jim Thorpe returns to Carlisle, 1095 00:49:20,500 --> 00:49:23,125 ready for another season on the gridiron. 1096 00:49:23,208 --> 00:49:25,208 ♪ 1097 00:49:25,292 --> 00:49:28,250 [Buford] The West Point game of 1912 1098 00:49:28,333 --> 00:49:32,375 has to be seen in light of Jim's prior reputation: 1099 00:49:32,500 --> 00:49:36,833 the fantastic 1911 season that made him a football phenomenon 1100 00:49:36,875 --> 00:49:39,375 and then the Olympic Games of 1912. 1101 00:49:39,500 --> 00:49:41,458 So he comes to this game 1102 00:49:41,583 --> 00:49:44,833 between Carlisle, the little Indian school, 1103 00:49:44,875 --> 00:49:46,500 and West Point, 1104 00:49:46,583 --> 00:49:51,083 that trains the future officers of the American Army. 1105 00:49:51,167 --> 00:49:55,333 November 9, 1912: the Army against the Indians. 1106 00:49:55,417 --> 00:49:57,667 You can't imagine a football game 1107 00:49:57,750 --> 00:49:59,750 loaded with more meaning than that. 1108 00:49:59,833 --> 00:50:02,000 ♪ 1109 00:50:02,042 --> 00:50:03,500 [Doyle] The largest 1110 00:50:03,583 --> 00:50:05,708 and most famous battles of the Great Plains 1111 00:50:05,792 --> 00:50:08,792 happened just prior to the boarding-school era. 1112 00:50:08,875 --> 00:50:10,542 Jim Thorpe and the Carlisle players 1113 00:50:10,625 --> 00:50:14,458 were a generation after the warriors who were killed 1114 00:50:14,542 --> 00:50:17,250 at these famous battles, like Battle of the Little Bighorn. 1115 00:50:17,333 --> 00:50:20,833 And just 20 years before the Army-Carlisle game 1116 00:50:20,875 --> 00:50:22,792 was the massacre at Wounded Knee. 1117 00:50:22,875 --> 00:50:25,292 There were over 200 innocent women, men, 1118 00:50:25,375 --> 00:50:27,875 and children killed by the U.S. Army. 1119 00:50:27,958 --> 00:50:30,542 So going into the game with West Point, 1120 00:50:30,625 --> 00:50:32,875 the Carlisle players were highly motivated. 1121 00:50:32,958 --> 00:50:34,375 ♪ 1122 00:50:34,458 --> 00:50:36,375 [Thorpe] We traveled to West Point, 1123 00:50:36,458 --> 00:50:40,042 the academy on the Hudson, and met the Army, 1124 00:50:40,125 --> 00:50:43,375 rated the toughest, cleverest team of the season. 1125 00:50:43,458 --> 00:50:46,708 Our chances to win were held to be slight. 1126 00:50:46,792 --> 00:50:50,625 [Anderson] Before the game, Pop Warner delivers a speech 1127 00:50:50,708 --> 00:50:53,917 that was unlike any in the history of the sport 1128 00:50:54,000 --> 00:50:55,458 since or before. 1129 00:50:55,542 --> 00:50:58,583 Telling his players what it could represent: 1130 00:50:58,708 --> 00:51:03,208 all of the payback for all of the injustices and violence 1131 00:51:03,208 --> 00:51:07,333 that's been perpetrated on their people for so many decades. 1132 00:51:07,375 --> 00:51:09,042 He would literally tell his players, 1133 00:51:09,125 --> 00:51:10,833 "You are gonna be playing against the sons 1134 00:51:10,958 --> 00:51:12,625 of the men who killed your ancestors." 1135 00:51:12,708 --> 00:51:15,125 [Anderson] "Now is the time for revenge. 1136 00:51:15,208 --> 00:51:17,000 We are going to prove 1137 00:51:17,083 --> 00:51:21,042 that we can play the white man's game better than the white man. 1138 00:51:21,125 --> 00:51:22,542 Remember Wounded Knee." 1139 00:51:22,542 --> 00:51:24,750 I mean, if that's not a motivator, 1140 00:51:24,833 --> 00:51:26,708 I'm really not sure what is. 1141 00:51:26,792 --> 00:51:29,208 ♪ 1142 00:51:29,292 --> 00:51:31,292 [Buford] With the help of the media, 1143 00:51:31,375 --> 00:51:33,417 the public was primed for this contest. 1144 00:51:33,500 --> 00:51:35,458 The Army players, who were outfitted 1145 00:51:35,542 --> 00:51:37,417 in their black-and-gold uniforms, 1146 00:51:37,500 --> 00:51:42,292 on average weighed 40 pounds more and were four inches taller 1147 00:51:42,375 --> 00:51:46,250 than the Indian players, adorned in their red sweaters. 1148 00:51:46,375 --> 00:51:48,917 To the fans in the stands at West Point, 1149 00:51:49,000 --> 00:51:51,750 this game looked like it was gonna be a total mismatch. 1150 00:51:53,292 --> 00:51:56,542 The Army team that day was incredibly historic. 1151 00:51:56,625 --> 00:52:01,167 On the roster were four future legendary generals 1152 00:52:01,333 --> 00:52:04,583 who would go on to lead America in World War II. 1153 00:52:04,667 --> 00:52:08,000 In fact, it was called later "the class the stars fell on" 1154 00:52:08,083 --> 00:52:11,292 because so many generals were on that team, 1155 00:52:11,375 --> 00:52:13,667 including future president of the United States 1156 00:52:13,708 --> 00:52:16,333 Dwight David Eisenhower. 1157 00:52:16,417 --> 00:52:18,292 This was a delicious matchup: 1158 00:52:18,375 --> 00:52:22,083 Pop Warner's bag of tricks versus the Army kids 1159 00:52:22,167 --> 00:52:25,250 who had spent years studying military strategy. 1160 00:52:25,333 --> 00:52:28,417 For Pop, this game was particularly personal. 1161 00:52:28,500 --> 00:52:33,042 As a teen, he had applied to West Point, and he was rejected. 1162 00:52:33,042 --> 00:52:34,958 [Williams] From the opening kickoff, 1163 00:52:34,958 --> 00:52:37,292 this game is an absolute war. 1164 00:52:37,375 --> 00:52:40,542 Reports from the game talk about the violent collisions 1165 00:52:40,667 --> 00:52:42,167 and the intensity. 1166 00:52:42,292 --> 00:52:44,542 While Jim dominates the game in the first half, 1167 00:52:44,625 --> 00:52:47,208 Carlisle doesn't have a lot to show for his efforts. 1168 00:52:47,292 --> 00:52:50,667 At halftime, they only lead 7-6. 1169 00:52:50,708 --> 00:52:52,542 [Anderson] In the locker room at halftime, 1170 00:52:52,667 --> 00:52:55,292 Eisenhower huddled with Leland Hobbs, 1171 00:52:55,375 --> 00:52:58,000 who would go on to lead the 30th Infantry 1172 00:52:58,083 --> 00:53:00,458 in Western Europe in World War II. 1173 00:53:00,542 --> 00:53:03,292 The two of them conspired to deliver 1174 00:53:03,375 --> 00:53:05,500 what they called "the old one-two." 1175 00:53:05,583 --> 00:53:08,250 Their mission: send Thorpe to the sideline 1176 00:53:08,333 --> 00:53:10,042 if not the hospital. 1177 00:53:10,125 --> 00:53:13,000 [Maraniss] Eisenhower writes about this later, 1178 00:53:13,083 --> 00:53:14,583 acknowledging that their goal 1179 00:53:14,667 --> 00:53:17,083 was to knock Jim Thorpe unconscious. 1180 00:53:17,167 --> 00:53:20,750 Eisenhower would later recall he and his fellow teammate, 1181 00:53:20,833 --> 00:53:23,667 in trying to pursue Jim, 1182 00:53:23,708 --> 00:53:27,042 Jim stepped aside and let them collide with each other 1183 00:53:27,125 --> 00:53:28,917 and they were taken out of the game. 1184 00:53:29,042 --> 00:53:32,083 Thorpe was a locomotive, and they just couldn't stop him. 1185 00:53:33,167 --> 00:53:35,625 [Buford] Damon Runyon, who's a wonderful American humorist, 1186 00:53:35,708 --> 00:53:38,500 was in the stands watching, and he said, 1187 00:53:38,542 --> 00:53:41,375 "No one had to ask who had had the ball 1188 00:53:41,458 --> 00:53:42,958 or who had made the play. 1189 00:53:43,042 --> 00:53:45,542 They knew that it was Jim Thorpe." 1190 00:53:45,667 --> 00:53:48,167 [Anderson] Late in the game, Thorpe caught a punt 1191 00:53:48,250 --> 00:53:50,667 at Carlisle's 45-yard line. 1192 00:53:50,750 --> 00:53:54,333 And immediately, five Army defenders are on him. 1193 00:53:54,417 --> 00:53:58,375 In a blur of twists and turns and stiff-arms, 1194 00:53:58,500 --> 00:54:01,333 Thorpe gets through that first crush of defenders. 1195 00:54:01,375 --> 00:54:03,583 And over the next 50 yards 1196 00:54:03,667 --> 00:54:08,375 manages to repel every other Army defender on the field... 1197 00:54:08,500 --> 00:54:10,292 ♪♪ 1198 00:54:10,375 --> 00:54:12,708 ...scoring for Carlisle. 1199 00:54:12,833 --> 00:54:17,333 It was the most magnificent football run that Pop Warner 1200 00:54:17,417 --> 00:54:20,667 and everyone else in attendance had ever seen. 1201 00:54:20,708 --> 00:54:23,250 And even the cadets on the sideline stand up 1202 00:54:23,250 --> 00:54:25,500 and applaud for Jim Thorpe. 1203 00:54:25,542 --> 00:54:30,083 [narrator] Thorpe and Carlisle go on to soundly defeat Army. 1204 00:54:30,167 --> 00:54:31,792 It wasn't even close. 1205 00:54:31,875 --> 00:54:35,000 Carlisle ended up beating Army that day, 27-6, 1206 00:54:35,042 --> 00:54:38,000 and Jim was by far the best player on the field. 1207 00:54:38,083 --> 00:54:40,875 [Thorpe] I can say for the men who made up the team, 1208 00:54:40,875 --> 00:54:42,875 of which I was proud to be the captain, 1209 00:54:42,958 --> 00:54:46,208 I've never known a team to function more perfectly. 1210 00:54:46,333 --> 00:54:48,625 The Indians in the crowd rejoiced 1211 00:54:48,708 --> 00:54:52,458 over the fact that their people, the Carlisle boys, 1212 00:54:52,542 --> 00:54:57,125 were thumping the white kids at a game created by whites. 1213 00:54:57,208 --> 00:54:59,000 [narrator] The 1913 Howitzer, 1214 00:54:59,042 --> 00:55:02,333 the West Point student yearbook, sums up the match. 1215 00:55:02,417 --> 00:55:05,417 "The Carlisle Indians gave us the worst defeat 1216 00:55:05,500 --> 00:55:07,625 we have had in years, 1217 00:55:07,708 --> 00:55:11,208 and the running of Thorpe was by far the most wonderful 1218 00:55:11,333 --> 00:55:15,000 and spectacular ever seen on our field." 1219 00:55:15,042 --> 00:55:16,500 [Thorpe] It was a mighty battle 1220 00:55:16,583 --> 00:55:18,292 we fought that day against the army. 1221 00:55:18,375 --> 00:55:21,333 Every loyal Red son of Carlisle did his duty. 1222 00:55:21,375 --> 00:55:24,208 And I call it the greatest act of athletic revenge 1223 00:55:24,292 --> 00:55:25,958 in American history. 1224 00:55:27,042 --> 00:55:30,458 [Buford] Jim Thorpe had the great football season in 1912. 1225 00:55:30,542 --> 00:55:33,708 Pop Warner said life was "juicy fat" for Jim Thorpe. 1226 00:55:33,792 --> 00:55:36,375 Like with so many stories of celebrity athletes 1227 00:55:36,500 --> 00:55:38,458 and their meteoric rises, it always seems 1228 00:55:38,542 --> 00:55:40,625 that when they're at the top of their game, 1229 00:55:40,708 --> 00:55:43,625 along comes something to just knock them off their perch. 1230 00:55:43,708 --> 00:55:46,833 In 1913, just a year after his Olympic victory, 1231 00:55:46,958 --> 00:55:48,500 a scandal broke out. 1232 00:55:48,583 --> 00:55:50,500 [Thorpe] This was the first rumble, 1233 00:55:50,583 --> 00:55:53,083 which was to attain a thunderous crescendo 1234 00:55:53,167 --> 00:55:58,333 and hurl my records and hopes from the heights into oblivion. 1235 00:56:03,208 --> 00:56:06,167 [Maraniss] 1912, for Jim Thorpe, 1236 00:56:06,250 --> 00:56:07,958 was the single greatest year that any athlete ever had. 1237 00:56:08,042 --> 00:56:10,667 He won his gold medals by the greatest margin ever 1238 00:56:10,708 --> 00:56:13,333 and then had this great All-American football season 1239 00:56:13,458 --> 00:56:14,833 where they defeated Army. 1240 00:56:14,875 --> 00:56:17,042 I don't think you can find any athlete 1241 00:56:17,125 --> 00:56:18,875 who did all of that in one year. 1242 00:56:20,042 --> 00:56:23,542 [narrator] But 1913 would prove to be very different. 1243 00:56:23,625 --> 00:56:26,583 It all started with an article in a small paper 1244 00:56:26,667 --> 00:56:28,542 in Worcester, Massachusetts. 1245 00:56:28,625 --> 00:56:32,333 Apparently, a journalist was visiting a baseball coach 1246 00:56:32,333 --> 00:56:34,750 and saw a photograph of Jim Thorpe behind him. 1247 00:56:34,875 --> 00:56:36,750 And the coach said, "Oh, yeah. That was Jim Thorpe. 1248 00:56:36,833 --> 00:56:38,833 He used to play baseball for me." 1249 00:56:38,875 --> 00:56:40,625 Even though it was just the minor leagues, 1250 00:56:40,708 --> 00:56:42,167 because Jim was paid, 1251 00:56:42,250 --> 00:56:43,833 it technically made him a professional. 1252 00:56:43,917 --> 00:56:46,125 And that violated the amateur status 1253 00:56:46,208 --> 00:56:48,833 that you had to have to compete in the Olympic Games. 1254 00:56:48,875 --> 00:56:50,917 Jim had signed that form for the Olympics, 1255 00:56:51,000 --> 00:56:53,417 saying he had never accepted any money, 1256 00:56:53,500 --> 00:56:54,958 that he was an amateur. 1257 00:56:55,042 --> 00:56:56,792 But he wasn't. 1258 00:56:56,875 --> 00:56:59,625 ♪♪ 1259 00:56:59,708 --> 00:57:02,000 [Maraniss] The story immediately spread all over the country, 1260 00:57:02,042 --> 00:57:05,500 to the big papers in New York, Philadelphia. 1261 00:57:05,500 --> 00:57:07,792 And so the question was, "What do we do?" 1262 00:57:07,875 --> 00:57:11,667 Jim was busted and agonized over what he was to do. 1263 00:57:11,750 --> 00:57:16,125 The only person that he could rely on in this mess 1264 00:57:16,208 --> 00:57:17,583 was Pop Warner. 1265 00:57:17,667 --> 00:57:19,333 [Creek] So when the scandal broke out, 1266 00:57:19,375 --> 00:57:21,583 Pop Warner acted like he knew nothing about it, 1267 00:57:21,708 --> 00:57:24,083 which is impossible considering he knew most of his players 1268 00:57:24,167 --> 00:57:25,667 played summer ball. 1269 00:57:25,750 --> 00:57:29,333 Pop sat down and crafted a letter with Jim 1270 00:57:29,375 --> 00:57:31,083 to send to the American Olympic Committee, 1271 00:57:31,208 --> 00:57:34,458 saying, in essence, "I was just an Indian schoolboy. 1272 00:57:34,542 --> 00:57:36,167 I didn't know any better, 1273 00:57:36,292 --> 00:57:40,000 and I'm so sorry that I have brought this on everyone." 1274 00:57:40,083 --> 00:57:41,708 [Thorpe] All my life, 1275 00:57:41,792 --> 00:57:44,333 I have laid my cards face up on the table. 1276 00:57:44,375 --> 00:57:47,167 I went to my room and wrote the letter. 1277 00:57:47,208 --> 00:57:48,792 I found it the hardest 1278 00:57:48,875 --> 00:57:51,833 and cruelest I have ever written in my life. 1279 00:57:53,667 --> 00:57:57,458 The letter that Jim Thorpe ultimately submitted 1280 00:57:57,542 --> 00:57:59,167 to the International Olympic Committee, 1281 00:57:59,250 --> 00:58:01,917 it put all the blame on Jim Thorpe 1282 00:58:02,000 --> 00:58:05,292 instead of the responsible adults that were around him, 1283 00:58:05,375 --> 00:58:07,000 including Pop Warner, 1284 00:58:07,083 --> 00:58:09,958 who gets off scot-free in the depiction of this letter. 1285 00:58:10,042 --> 00:58:13,750 After all these years, the only thing I wish to say now 1286 00:58:13,833 --> 00:58:15,875 is that I have reason to believe 1287 00:58:16,000 --> 00:58:18,500 that some of the authorities at Carlisle knew where I was 1288 00:58:18,625 --> 00:58:22,833 during 1909 and 1910 and what I was doing. 1289 00:58:22,958 --> 00:58:26,042 What they'd done essentially, is hang Jim out to dry. 1290 00:58:26,125 --> 00:58:29,208 Pop Warner certainly was not going to take the fall. 1291 00:58:29,292 --> 00:58:31,042 Nobody. 1292 00:58:31,125 --> 00:58:34,958 It was Jim who was at fault, and he was the scapegoat. 1293 00:58:35,042 --> 00:58:38,833 I mean, Pop Warner... It was such a deep betrayal. 1294 00:58:38,958 --> 00:58:42,000 I mean, after everything that Jim Thorpe had done 1295 00:58:42,042 --> 00:58:45,708 to really give Pop Warner his own separate legacy, 1296 00:58:45,792 --> 00:58:47,542 all the success and the attention 1297 00:58:47,667 --> 00:58:49,250 he was able to bring him as a coach, 1298 00:58:49,333 --> 00:58:53,833 for him to then just, at a crucial moment in his life, 1299 00:58:53,875 --> 00:58:56,042 just totally stab him in the back... 1300 00:58:58,500 --> 00:59:03,417 So they insisted that he send back his medals. 1301 00:59:03,500 --> 00:59:05,500 [Maraniss] The gold medals and trophies 1302 00:59:05,542 --> 00:59:06,875 were taken away from him. 1303 00:59:06,958 --> 00:59:10,167 It was an act of enormous injustice. 1304 00:59:10,250 --> 00:59:14,292 His records would be stripped from the Olympic record, 1305 00:59:14,375 --> 00:59:16,583 and the second- and third-place winners 1306 00:59:16,667 --> 00:59:18,875 would be bumped up to first and second, 1307 00:59:18,958 --> 00:59:20,417 and he would just be eliminated. 1308 00:59:20,500 --> 00:59:22,125 Hugo Wieslander, 1309 00:59:22,208 --> 00:59:24,083 the Swedish track star who placed second to Jim, 1310 00:59:24,167 --> 00:59:27,125 was offered his gold medal when Jim was stripped of the award. 1311 00:59:27,208 --> 00:59:29,833 But he said, "No. This belongs to Thorpe." 1312 00:59:29,917 --> 00:59:32,833 Jim was busted. It was over. 1313 00:59:32,875 --> 00:59:36,542 This incredible victory in Stockholm 1314 00:59:36,667 --> 00:59:40,083 that made him the idol of the whole world was over. 1315 00:59:40,208 --> 00:59:42,792 [O'Brien] As athletes, we win or lose on the track. 1316 00:59:42,875 --> 00:59:44,917 Our performance is out there on the field of play. 1317 00:59:45,000 --> 00:59:47,333 And it's the purest form of sport. 1318 00:59:47,458 --> 00:59:49,417 There's a start line and a finish line. 1319 00:59:49,500 --> 00:59:51,667 And they stole that from Jim Thorpe. 1320 00:59:51,750 --> 00:59:54,292 I adopted a fatalistic viewpoint 1321 00:59:54,375 --> 00:59:57,458 and considered the episode just another event 1322 00:59:57,542 --> 01:00:01,167 in the Red man's life of ups and downs. 1323 01:00:01,292 --> 01:00:03,042 Jim Thorpe losing his medals 1324 01:00:03,125 --> 01:00:07,708 was one of the great injustices in the sports world of all time. 1325 01:00:07,833 --> 01:00:12,250 This injustice happened on the firm foundation of hypocrisy. 1326 01:00:12,333 --> 01:00:13,958 It was actually not uncommon 1327 01:00:13,958 --> 01:00:16,167 for athletes to do exactly what Jim did. 1328 01:00:16,292 --> 01:00:19,208 Most of the time, athletes used a pseudonym 1329 01:00:19,292 --> 01:00:22,458 to protect their names and to protect their amateur status. 1330 01:00:22,542 --> 01:00:25,667 There were so many pseudonyms in the Eastern Carolina League 1331 01:00:25,792 --> 01:00:27,667 that they called it "the Pocahontas league" 1332 01:00:27,708 --> 01:00:29,667 'cause everybody was named John Smith. 1333 01:00:29,750 --> 01:00:31,792 Dwight Eisenhower, the future president, 1334 01:00:31,875 --> 01:00:34,500 played under the name Wilson in the Kansas State League. 1335 01:00:34,542 --> 01:00:36,667 Jim Thorpe played under the name Jim Thorpe. 1336 01:00:36,750 --> 01:00:38,167 He never tried to hide it. 1337 01:00:38,292 --> 01:00:40,125 And the final hypocrisy 1338 01:00:40,208 --> 01:00:44,542 is that even the bylaws of the Olympics in 1912 1339 01:00:44,667 --> 01:00:47,125 said that any challenge to someone's amateurism 1340 01:00:47,208 --> 01:00:49,875 had to come within 30 days of the Olympics. 1341 01:00:49,958 --> 01:00:52,625 The stories broke six months later. 1342 01:00:52,708 --> 01:00:54,042 [Boykoff] Because of the manner 1343 01:00:54,125 --> 01:00:55,833 in which the medals were taken away, 1344 01:00:55,917 --> 01:00:57,875 it was a ding to his integrity. 1345 01:00:57,958 --> 01:00:59,750 It wasn't just that people thought 1346 01:00:59,875 --> 01:01:01,958 he didn't deserve the metals. 1347 01:01:02,042 --> 01:01:04,375 It was that he supposedly cheated 1348 01:01:04,458 --> 01:01:06,167 en route to getting the medals. 1349 01:01:06,250 --> 01:01:08,375 One of the prevailing stereotypes of the day 1350 01:01:08,458 --> 01:01:11,208 was that Native Americans were deceitful and untrustworthy. 1351 01:01:11,292 --> 01:01:13,833 And so I think it was easy for American society 1352 01:01:13,958 --> 01:01:15,833 to label Jim that way. 1353 01:01:15,875 --> 01:01:18,833 [narrator] Regarding the journalist who broke the story, 1354 01:01:18,917 --> 01:01:21,000 Thorpe later reflected... 1355 01:01:21,042 --> 01:01:23,833 [Thorpe] He wrote the story that hurtled around the world 1356 01:01:23,958 --> 01:01:26,875 and toppled me from the heights of amateur athletics. 1357 01:01:27,000 --> 01:01:29,542 He must have been proud of his scoop. 1358 01:01:29,625 --> 01:01:31,708 I wonder if, in his happiness, 1359 01:01:31,833 --> 01:01:34,875 he ever thought what his story would cost me. 1360 01:01:34,958 --> 01:01:37,917 [O'Brien] It's every athlete's goal to win those major medals. 1361 01:01:38,000 --> 01:01:41,500 Those titles become part of you. That's part of your identity. 1362 01:01:41,583 --> 01:01:45,042 Having them take away my titles, having them take away my medals 1363 01:01:45,167 --> 01:01:48,500 would be like taking a piece of me away physically. 1364 01:01:48,583 --> 01:01:51,792 Jim would tell one of his friends, 1365 01:01:51,875 --> 01:01:53,500 "They took my medals away. 1366 01:01:53,583 --> 01:01:57,375 I won them fair and square, and now I don't have them. 1367 01:01:57,458 --> 01:01:59,333 Now I don't have anything." 1368 01:02:04,875 --> 01:02:08,125 [Williams] As soon as Jim loses his amateur status, 1369 01:02:08,208 --> 01:02:09,708 everyone assumes he's simply gonna pursue a career 1370 01:02:09,792 --> 01:02:11,042 playing professional football. 1371 01:02:11,125 --> 01:02:13,417 Instead, owners from a different sport 1372 01:02:13,500 --> 01:02:15,542 saw the value in Jim's celebrity, 1373 01:02:15,625 --> 01:02:19,042 and offers began to flow in from professional baseball. 1374 01:02:20,583 --> 01:02:22,000 [Eisenberg] Jim is a commodity. 1375 01:02:22,083 --> 01:02:24,000 He's the best known athlete in America, 1376 01:02:24,042 --> 01:02:26,167 and people are fascinated by him. 1377 01:02:26,208 --> 01:02:29,833 [Maraniss] He was signed by the New York Giants in 1913 1378 01:02:29,917 --> 01:02:32,750 because he was the most famous athlete in the world. 1379 01:02:32,833 --> 01:02:35,917 And the Giants, led by John McGraw, 1380 01:02:36,000 --> 01:02:38,042 knew that later that year, they'd be traveling 1381 01:02:38,125 --> 01:02:40,875 around the world with the Chicago White Sox, 1382 01:02:40,958 --> 01:02:43,333 bringing baseball to the rest of the world. 1383 01:02:43,375 --> 01:02:46,458 The rest of the world knew none of the famous baseball players. 1384 01:02:46,542 --> 01:02:48,333 They didn't know Christy Mathewson. 1385 01:02:48,333 --> 01:02:49,958 They didn't know Ty Cobb. 1386 01:02:50,042 --> 01:02:53,833 They knew one athlete from America: Jim Thorpe. 1387 01:02:53,958 --> 01:02:56,125 [Petrzela] When Thorpe signed with the New York Giants 1388 01:02:56,125 --> 01:02:58,958 and went around the world doing exhibition games, 1389 01:02:59,042 --> 01:03:03,125 he played baseball in places including Japan, Egypt, 1390 01:03:03,208 --> 01:03:05,917 and even in front of the king and queen in London. 1391 01:03:06,000 --> 01:03:09,333 On the voyage home, they traveled on the Lusitania, 1392 01:03:09,458 --> 01:03:12,667 the same ship that, just a few months later, 1393 01:03:12,708 --> 01:03:16,208 was sunk by a German U-boat in World War I. 1394 01:03:18,250 --> 01:03:20,083 [Williams] Prior to signing with the Giants, 1395 01:03:20,167 --> 01:03:22,167 Jim had played a couple of years of minor-league baseball, 1396 01:03:22,250 --> 01:03:25,708 but this was primarily with small, scrappy farm teams. 1397 01:03:25,792 --> 01:03:27,500 These were really sandlot games, 1398 01:03:27,542 --> 01:03:30,042 nothing compared to what he'd experience in the majors. 1399 01:03:30,167 --> 01:03:31,833 [Creek] The fact that he went 1400 01:03:31,875 --> 01:03:33,208 up to the professional league so quickly, 1401 01:03:33,292 --> 01:03:34,875 he just didn't have time to acquire the skills 1402 01:03:35,000 --> 01:03:36,833 needed to be a good ballplayer. 1403 01:03:36,917 --> 01:03:39,208 But folks in the front office wanted him on the team 1404 01:03:39,292 --> 01:03:41,667 because they knew they could bring the fans in 1405 01:03:41,708 --> 01:03:44,000 and sell tickets... [crowd cheering] 1406 01:03:44,083 --> 01:03:47,208 ...even though he really wasn't ready for that experience. 1407 01:03:47,292 --> 01:03:49,792 Hitting is when you figure out who really can play baseball 1408 01:03:49,875 --> 01:03:51,500 and who cannot. 1409 01:03:51,583 --> 01:03:53,500 When something's coming at you 90 miles an hour, 1410 01:03:53,542 --> 01:03:56,292 100 miles an hour, that ain't easy to get around on. 1411 01:03:56,375 --> 01:03:58,542 And one of the biggest obstacles for Jim Thorpe 1412 01:03:58,625 --> 01:04:00,167 was that he couldn't hit a curveball. 1413 01:04:00,250 --> 01:04:02,042 [Eisenberg] In fact, his batting average 1414 01:04:02,167 --> 01:04:04,917 in his first year with the Giants was in the .160s. 1415 01:04:05,000 --> 01:04:07,042 Let me tell you. I'm the sportswriter. 1416 01:04:07,167 --> 01:04:11,458 So I know if I've got Jim Thorpe in front of me hitting .160, 1417 01:04:11,542 --> 01:04:12,833 I'm not being really nice. 1418 01:04:12,917 --> 01:04:14,833 The headlines are savage. 1419 01:04:14,917 --> 01:04:18,208 "Jim Thorpe is a joke. Why is he in the major leagues?" 1420 01:04:18,292 --> 01:04:21,083 [Hill] The criticism, the denigration 1421 01:04:21,167 --> 01:04:23,042 was there immediately 1422 01:04:23,167 --> 01:04:25,667 and I think really gave you a window of a racial dynamic 1423 01:04:25,750 --> 01:04:27,833 where you build people up, then, 1424 01:04:27,917 --> 01:04:29,792 when they get to the place that you built them up, 1425 01:04:29,875 --> 01:04:31,667 you start chopping away. 1426 01:04:31,667 --> 01:04:35,625 It wasn't just like Joe DiMaggio getting booed at a game. 1427 01:04:35,708 --> 01:04:37,167 No one was talking about his race. 1428 01:04:37,208 --> 01:04:38,833 No one was talking about his culture. 1429 01:04:38,917 --> 01:04:40,833 They would shout things at him like "Dog soup," 1430 01:04:40,917 --> 01:04:42,792 or they would do war whoops to taunt him. 1431 01:04:42,875 --> 01:04:44,542 [crowd booing] 1432 01:04:44,625 --> 01:04:47,375 It was almost like all of Jim's acceptance in society 1433 01:04:47,458 --> 01:04:49,958 and as a player hinged on his performance. 1434 01:04:50,042 --> 01:04:52,208 If he wasn't winning, the crowds weren't with him. 1435 01:04:52,208 --> 01:04:54,542 [Maraniss] John McGraw, the manager, 1436 01:04:54,625 --> 01:04:56,458 doesn't let him play much. 1437 01:04:56,542 --> 01:04:59,292 He's a benchwarmer for most of that first year. 1438 01:04:59,375 --> 01:05:02,333 [Buford] Huge problem was that McGraw was a micromanager. 1439 01:05:02,375 --> 01:05:04,667 He liked to tell a player every single step 1440 01:05:04,792 --> 01:05:07,083 of what he was supposed to do when he was going up to bat. 1441 01:05:07,167 --> 01:05:11,250 Warner left Jim alone. He rarely got in his way. 1442 01:05:11,333 --> 01:05:13,417 McGraw was the polar opposite. 1443 01:05:13,500 --> 01:05:17,875 And he and Jim quickly developed an antipathy to each other. 1444 01:05:17,958 --> 01:05:20,250 [Petrzela] Jim struggled a lot with baseball, 1445 01:05:20,333 --> 01:05:22,167 which didn't come so naturally to him. 1446 01:05:22,250 --> 01:05:24,000 [Eisenberg] But playing baseball, 1447 01:05:24,125 --> 01:05:26,500 by far the most popular sport in America at the time, 1448 01:05:26,583 --> 01:05:28,625 that kept him in the spotlight. 1449 01:05:28,708 --> 01:05:32,083 As a football player, he's still the star that he was in college, 1450 01:05:32,208 --> 01:05:35,667 and that got the attention of the Ohio League. 1451 01:05:35,750 --> 01:05:38,958 [Creek] Jim's professional football career began in 1915 1452 01:05:39,042 --> 01:05:41,333 with the Canton Bulldogs in the Ohio League. 1453 01:05:41,375 --> 01:05:43,333 [Maraniss] The Ohio League was the precursor 1454 01:05:43,375 --> 01:05:46,042 to the National Football League, but it was nothing like it. 1455 01:05:46,125 --> 01:05:48,000 It wasn't even really a league. 1456 01:05:48,042 --> 01:05:51,708 Players could go from one team to another week by week, 1457 01:05:51,792 --> 01:05:53,208 depending on who would pay them more. 1458 01:05:53,333 --> 01:05:55,083 [Eisenberg] No rules about scheduling. 1459 01:05:55,208 --> 01:05:56,917 No rules about contracts. 1460 01:05:57,000 --> 01:05:59,167 It was very loosely structured. 1461 01:05:59,250 --> 01:06:01,125 [Williams] Most people at the time 1462 01:06:01,208 --> 01:06:04,208 were barely even aware that pro football existed. 1463 01:06:04,292 --> 01:06:06,583 This was years before the advent of the NFL. 1464 01:06:06,708 --> 01:06:10,250 Back then, college football was considered the real draw. 1465 01:06:10,375 --> 01:06:12,167 [Schefter] Boxing was more popular. 1466 01:06:12,208 --> 01:06:16,375 Horse racing was more popular. Tennis, golf, baseball. 1467 01:06:16,458 --> 01:06:19,417 Everything was more popular than football back in the day. 1468 01:06:19,500 --> 01:06:22,167 It may be shocking for people to understand this, 1469 01:06:22,208 --> 01:06:24,042 especially seeing what football has become today, 1470 01:06:24,167 --> 01:06:27,083 but, you know, it wasn't some billion-dollar industry. 1471 01:06:27,167 --> 01:06:29,000 It wasn't powered by shoe companies. 1472 01:06:29,083 --> 01:06:31,167 It wasn't supposed to be this thing 1473 01:06:31,208 --> 01:06:33,000 where people were supposed to get rich. 1474 01:06:33,125 --> 01:06:34,708 [Eisenberg] The Canton Bulldogs 1475 01:06:34,708 --> 01:06:36,667 had one of the better teams in the Ohio League, 1476 01:06:36,750 --> 01:06:39,250 and they offered Jim $250 a game, 1477 01:06:39,375 --> 01:06:42,458 which is $7,000 in today's dollars. 1478 01:06:42,542 --> 01:06:46,000 It was unheard of to pay anyone that amount of money. 1479 01:06:46,083 --> 01:06:48,167 It's the first time there's money in football. 1480 01:06:48,250 --> 01:06:51,208 The salary was a headline. 1481 01:06:51,333 --> 01:06:54,375 Really, you can point to that 1482 01:06:54,458 --> 01:06:57,542 as a birth moment of professional football. 1483 01:06:57,708 --> 01:07:00,083 It's Jim Thorpe signing with the Canton Bulldogs. 1484 01:07:00,208 --> 01:07:03,042 Jim Thorpe helped put that sport on the map. 1485 01:07:04,375 --> 01:07:07,083 [Eisenberg] Jim's best years as a pro football player 1486 01:07:07,167 --> 01:07:09,083 were with the Canton Bulldogs. 1487 01:07:09,167 --> 01:07:10,500 He's a dominant player. 1488 01:07:10,583 --> 01:07:12,542 He's the best player on every field. 1489 01:07:12,625 --> 01:07:15,208 Jim would go on to help them become a dynasty. 1490 01:07:15,292 --> 01:07:17,875 He won four national championships in five years. 1491 01:07:17,958 --> 01:07:21,042 This was the apex of Jim's professional football career. 1492 01:07:21,125 --> 01:07:24,667 And they have an incredible run until the early '20s 1493 01:07:24,750 --> 01:07:27,208 with him as coach and player. 1494 01:07:27,292 --> 01:07:29,417 People come to see him play. 1495 01:07:29,500 --> 01:07:33,000 He encourages other players, like Knute Rockne, 1496 01:07:33,042 --> 01:07:36,125 to come and play with him or against him. 1497 01:07:36,208 --> 01:07:38,750 They just wanted to be on the same field with him 1498 01:07:38,875 --> 01:07:40,500 because he was so revered. 1499 01:07:40,583 --> 01:07:42,708 A professional game at Massillon, Ohio. 1500 01:07:42,833 --> 01:07:44,208 I was with the Canton Bulldogs. 1501 01:07:44,333 --> 01:07:46,000 And Rockne, he slipped through and tackled me 1502 01:07:46,083 --> 01:07:49,042 for a couple-yard losses, and I said, "Well, Rock, 1503 01:07:49,042 --> 01:07:50,500 you're doing fine work." 1504 01:07:50,583 --> 01:07:52,333 But I said, "Listen. 1505 01:07:52,417 --> 01:07:54,417 All these people up here in the stands come to see old Jim run. 1506 01:07:54,500 --> 01:07:56,167 How about letting old Jim run?" 1507 01:07:56,292 --> 01:07:58,083 He says, "Well, you big rascal, 1508 01:07:58,167 --> 01:08:00,000 if you think you can do it, let's see you do it." 1509 01:08:00,083 --> 01:08:02,167 So the next time I carried the ball around, 1510 01:08:02,250 --> 01:08:04,125 I hit him in the side of the head with my knee 1511 01:08:04,250 --> 01:08:06,958 and my hip and my elbow and knocked him out. 1512 01:08:07,042 --> 01:08:08,583 So I run on down for a touchdown. 1513 01:08:08,667 --> 01:08:11,000 I walked up to him and I said, "Thataboy, Rock. 1514 01:08:11,083 --> 01:08:13,417 You let old Jim run, didn't you?" 1515 01:08:13,542 --> 01:08:16,292 [narrator] Even while playing for the Canton Bulldogs, 1516 01:08:16,375 --> 01:08:19,667 Jim Thorpe never gives up on baseball. 1517 01:08:19,833 --> 01:08:24,375 After marrying Iva Miller in 1913 and starting a family, 1518 01:08:24,458 --> 01:08:27,667 he dedicates himself to honing his baseball skills, 1519 01:08:27,708 --> 01:08:30,625 driven by his relentless competitive spirit. 1520 01:08:30,708 --> 01:08:32,750 [Buford] Other sports came easily to him. 1521 01:08:32,875 --> 01:08:36,875 But baseball didn't, and he had to work hard at it. 1522 01:08:37,000 --> 01:08:38,792 His journey takes him through stints 1523 01:08:38,875 --> 01:08:41,917 with the Milwaukee Brewers, the Cincinnati Reds, 1524 01:08:42,000 --> 01:08:44,083 and a return to the New York Giants, 1525 01:08:44,167 --> 01:08:47,292 until he's traded once more in 1919. 1526 01:08:47,375 --> 01:08:49,292 He's struggling for many years 1527 01:08:49,375 --> 01:08:53,792 until he finally gets his chance in Boston for the Boston Braves. 1528 01:08:53,875 --> 01:08:55,500 And for that one year, 1529 01:08:55,583 --> 01:08:57,500 he showed that he really did have baseball talent. 1530 01:08:57,583 --> 01:09:00,875 He led the National League in hitting for most of the year. 1531 01:09:00,958 --> 01:09:03,958 He was up there in the weekly scores of batting averages, 1532 01:09:04,042 --> 01:09:06,167 with Ty Cobb leading the American League. 1533 01:09:06,250 --> 01:09:08,292 [Williams] To put the last year of Jim's baseball career 1534 01:09:08,375 --> 01:09:11,792 in some context: Jim hit .327 that year. 1535 01:09:11,875 --> 01:09:14,625 Ken Griffey Jr., by contrast, who's considered to be 1536 01:09:14,708 --> 01:09:17,708 one of the greatest baseball players of all time, 1537 01:09:17,792 --> 01:09:21,542 the best batting average he had in any season: .327. 1538 01:09:21,667 --> 01:09:25,750 ♪♪ 1539 01:09:25,833 --> 01:09:28,833 So he becomes now known as the iron man of sports. 1540 01:09:28,958 --> 01:09:30,917 He can play anything. 1541 01:09:31,042 --> 01:09:33,375 All year long, he's playing both sports. 1542 01:09:33,458 --> 01:09:37,250 So now we give athletes a heck of a lot of praise 1543 01:09:37,375 --> 01:09:38,875 if they just play two sports. 1544 01:09:39,042 --> 01:09:40,958 Bo knows baseball. [rock music playing] 1545 01:09:41,042 --> 01:09:43,208 ♪♪ 1546 01:09:43,292 --> 01:09:45,333 Bo knows football. 1547 01:09:45,458 --> 01:09:47,333 Of course we remember Bo Jackson being 1548 01:09:47,417 --> 01:09:49,250 a hell of a football player, a hell of a baseball player. 1549 01:09:49,333 --> 01:09:53,500 Deion Sanders was really good at football and baseball. 1550 01:09:53,542 --> 01:09:56,000 I'm hard pressed to come up with too many more after that. 1551 01:09:56,083 --> 01:09:58,208 [Hill] And nine times out of ten, 1552 01:09:58,292 --> 01:09:59,833 if we're keeping it real, 1553 01:09:59,917 --> 01:10:02,000 they're not equally good at both of those sports. 1554 01:10:02,042 --> 01:10:03,500 [announcer] Here's Usain Bolt. 1555 01:10:03,583 --> 01:10:05,042 We'll get an early look at his speed. 1556 01:10:05,125 --> 01:10:07,125 It's usually one they're great at, 1557 01:10:07,208 --> 01:10:09,667 and the other one...all right. 1558 01:10:11,292 --> 01:10:15,167 But Jim, he excelled at football, baseball, and track. 1559 01:10:15,292 --> 01:10:17,417 He's not just a three-sport athlete. 1560 01:10:17,500 --> 01:10:19,167 You add up all the decathlon events, 1561 01:10:19,250 --> 01:10:21,333 Jim was a 12-sport athlete. 1562 01:10:21,375 --> 01:10:23,333 [Schefter] Jim Thorpe came as close 1563 01:10:23,417 --> 01:10:26,250 to mastering all his trades as anybody else ever has. 1564 01:10:26,333 --> 01:10:29,167 Literally we won't see a Jim Thorpe ever again. 1565 01:10:29,250 --> 01:10:31,000 There's never gonna be an athlete 1566 01:10:31,083 --> 01:10:33,417 who's gonna be good at that many things. 1567 01:10:33,542 --> 01:10:35,583 [narrator] Jim's talent and star power 1568 01:10:35,667 --> 01:10:39,292 make him the perfect figurehead to launch a new league. 1569 01:10:39,375 --> 01:10:42,833 Pro football in the early 1900s was the Wild West. 1570 01:10:42,833 --> 01:10:45,667 They knew that it's got to be regulated somehow. 1571 01:10:45,708 --> 01:10:49,542 So some of the owners get together in 1920 in Canton, 1572 01:10:49,625 --> 01:10:52,833 and they sit down in a Hupmobile auto showroom, 1573 01:10:52,875 --> 01:10:54,500 and they form a league 1574 01:10:54,583 --> 01:10:57,833 that will eventually be the National Football League. 1575 01:10:57,875 --> 01:11:01,333 And they unanimously elect Jim as the first president 1576 01:11:01,375 --> 01:11:05,083 of that brand-new league, knowing that his name means 1577 01:11:05,167 --> 01:11:07,167 that every newspaper in the country 1578 01:11:07,250 --> 01:11:09,167 will cover this new league 1579 01:11:09,208 --> 01:11:13,333 and thereby bring some respect and attention to this sport, 1580 01:11:13,417 --> 01:11:16,833 which is why the Pro Football Hall of Fame is in Canton. 1581 01:11:16,917 --> 01:11:19,708 [narrator] A shrine to the memory of the greats 1582 01:11:19,792 --> 01:11:21,833 of professional football is dedicated in Canton, Ohio. 1583 01:11:21,875 --> 01:11:24,208 It was here that the National Football League 1584 01:11:24,292 --> 01:11:25,833 was founded in 1920. 1585 01:11:25,917 --> 01:11:28,000 No man has ever touched the record of Jim Thorpe 1586 01:11:28,042 --> 01:11:29,750 as an all-around athlete. 1587 01:11:29,833 --> 01:11:32,167 [Eisenberg] It's a straight line from that meeting 1588 01:11:32,208 --> 01:11:38,292 to the multi-multibillion-dollar colossus that the NFL is today. 1589 01:11:38,375 --> 01:11:41,375 He really created that sport. 1590 01:11:41,375 --> 01:11:44,250 [crowd cheering] 1591 01:11:49,708 --> 01:11:53,333 [O'Brien] Jim Thorpe had spent a decade 1592 01:11:53,375 --> 01:11:54,583 performing at the highest levels of athletic achievement. 1593 01:11:54,708 --> 01:11:56,500 But that's a decade of no off days 1594 01:11:56,542 --> 01:11:58,625 and a decade of putting that punishment on your body. 1595 01:11:58,708 --> 01:12:02,583 [Eisenberg] He's in his 30s, and he has lost a step. 1596 01:12:02,667 --> 01:12:04,333 And he will continue to lose a step. 1597 01:12:04,375 --> 01:12:07,333 His decision to be a two-sport athlete 1598 01:12:07,417 --> 01:12:09,167 had a huge impact on his family life. 1599 01:12:09,208 --> 01:12:11,750 In baseball, you're gone for six months. 1600 01:12:11,833 --> 01:12:14,333 And then, his offseason, he's playing football. 1601 01:12:14,417 --> 01:12:15,833 Also gone. 1602 01:12:15,917 --> 01:12:17,208 He was rarely home. 1603 01:12:17,292 --> 01:12:18,667 Jim and Iva divorced, 1604 01:12:18,750 --> 01:12:21,000 and he then married Freeda Kirkpatrick, 1605 01:12:21,042 --> 01:12:23,417 and they had four boys. 1606 01:12:23,542 --> 01:12:26,333 It just gets harder and harder and harder. 1607 01:12:26,375 --> 01:12:28,542 [Proudfit] In an effort to provide for his family, 1608 01:12:28,625 --> 01:12:30,500 he started to be more and more absent. 1609 01:12:30,625 --> 01:12:32,708 [Eisenberg] He went from the Canton Bulldogs 1610 01:12:32,792 --> 01:12:34,875 to a team in Cleveland in 1921. 1611 01:12:34,958 --> 01:12:38,583 And then he coached an all-Indian team, Oorang Indians, 1612 01:12:38,708 --> 01:12:40,625 which was really an advertisement 1613 01:12:40,708 --> 01:12:42,750 for a guy that owned dogs. 1614 01:12:42,833 --> 01:12:44,625 [Thorpe] We traveled through Ohio, 1615 01:12:44,708 --> 01:12:47,125 picking up games at random without a schedule, 1616 01:12:47,208 --> 01:12:48,708 football gypsies. 1617 01:12:48,792 --> 01:12:50,625 I had traveled a long and windy road, 1618 01:12:50,708 --> 01:12:52,500 over hills and valleys. 1619 01:12:52,583 --> 01:12:55,167 It seemed in this era of my life, 1620 01:12:55,292 --> 01:12:57,000 I had slipped into the valley. 1621 01:12:57,042 --> 01:12:59,875 [Eisenberg] In 1925, the New York Giants brought him in. 1622 01:12:59,958 --> 01:13:01,667 They paid him by the half 1623 01:13:01,708 --> 01:13:03,833 because they weren't sure that he could finish a game. 1624 01:13:03,958 --> 01:13:06,667 And it didn't go well. They cut him after four games. 1625 01:13:06,750 --> 01:13:08,583 He was fading. 1626 01:13:08,708 --> 01:13:11,375 As Jim Thorpe's career was on the decline, 1627 01:13:11,458 --> 01:13:13,750 there was a star coming into the NFL. 1628 01:13:13,833 --> 01:13:15,542 [narrator] Red Grange , 1629 01:13:15,625 --> 01:13:17,000 the fabulous Galloping Ghost of Illinois. 1630 01:13:17,083 --> 01:13:19,000 [Eisenberg] He was just an incredible, fast, 1631 01:13:19,042 --> 01:13:22,667 elusive runner, and it just fascinated the football public. 1632 01:13:22,708 --> 01:13:26,667 [Grange] Now, I played one game against Jim Thorpe. 1633 01:13:26,708 --> 01:13:30,292 He was 40 years old, and you could still see 1634 01:13:30,375 --> 01:13:32,375 that he had been a great football player. 1635 01:13:32,500 --> 01:13:34,958 He was big, and he was strong, and he loved it. 1636 01:13:35,042 --> 01:13:36,792 He loved that contact. 1637 01:13:36,875 --> 01:13:39,500 He loved to run into people, and that's what it takes. 1638 01:13:39,625 --> 01:13:42,583 [Proudfit] Not only did Jim continue to play football, 1639 01:13:42,667 --> 01:13:45,792 but in an effort to recapture his name 1640 01:13:45,875 --> 01:13:48,208 and his significance in the sports world, 1641 01:13:48,292 --> 01:13:50,625 he started playing basketball. 1642 01:13:50,708 --> 01:13:52,583 [Thorpe] I organized teams, 1643 01:13:52,667 --> 01:13:56,208 played itinerant games, and eked out a living 1644 01:13:56,208 --> 01:13:59,167 from those who paid their admissions to see Thorpe 1645 01:13:59,208 --> 01:14:02,000 and his unheralded farewell tour. 1646 01:14:02,042 --> 01:14:05,500 ♪ 1647 01:14:05,542 --> 01:14:09,333 Every athlete's sports life comes to an end, 1648 01:14:09,458 --> 01:14:12,542 and Jim Thorpe's came to an end in 1928. 1649 01:14:13,708 --> 01:14:16,667 I was now 41 years old. 1650 01:14:16,708 --> 01:14:19,000 The years had put weight on my frame 1651 01:14:19,125 --> 01:14:20,833 and taken fire from my feet. 1652 01:14:21,708 --> 01:14:23,833 Football was my love. 1653 01:14:23,917 --> 01:14:27,792 And now was I saying goodbye to the game 1654 01:14:27,875 --> 01:14:30,625 of which I felt I had become a part? 1655 01:14:30,708 --> 01:14:33,500 Later, many sportswriters and commentators 1656 01:14:33,542 --> 01:14:36,458 would say that Jim had played too early, 1657 01:14:36,542 --> 01:14:40,167 before agents, testimonials, and money, 1658 01:14:40,208 --> 01:14:43,042 big-time money, enter into the world of sports. 1659 01:14:43,125 --> 01:14:45,500 ♪ 1660 01:14:45,625 --> 01:14:48,583 You have Babe Ruth. 1661 01:14:50,125 --> 01:14:52,708 You have Red Grange. 1662 01:14:54,042 --> 01:14:55,958 Jack Dempsey is a fighter. 1663 01:14:56,917 --> 01:15:00,208 The bonanza came after Jim's time. 1664 01:15:00,292 --> 01:15:02,292 Athletes made a lot of money. 1665 01:15:02,375 --> 01:15:04,708 ♪♪ 1666 01:15:04,792 --> 01:15:07,500 Jim Thorpe struggled monetarily after retirement. 1667 01:15:07,542 --> 01:15:09,583 No question about it. 1668 01:15:09,667 --> 01:15:12,333 [Buford] Ironically, the greatest athlete of all 1669 01:15:12,375 --> 01:15:14,500 couldn't benefit in the way that other athletes could benefit. 1670 01:15:14,583 --> 01:15:16,958 [Boykoff] There was a lot of anti-Indigenous racism 1671 01:15:17,042 --> 01:15:18,542 at that time. 1672 01:15:18,625 --> 01:15:20,917 It was difficult to find lucrative employment. 1673 01:15:21,042 --> 01:15:22,458 So there are 25 years 1674 01:15:22,542 --> 01:15:26,417 where he was constantly looking for a job. 1675 01:15:26,542 --> 01:15:31,167 He was a bar owner, a greeter at bars. 1676 01:15:31,292 --> 01:15:33,333 Jobs were scarce, 1677 01:15:33,417 --> 01:15:35,292 and I had made the mistake in my life 1678 01:15:35,375 --> 01:15:39,167 of devoting all my time to athletics, overlooking the fact 1679 01:15:39,292 --> 01:15:42,375 that someday I might need a business calling 1680 01:15:42,458 --> 01:15:45,750 upon which to lean in days such as these. 1681 01:15:46,958 --> 01:15:50,125 [Buford] In the 1930s -- this is the Depression -- 1682 01:15:50,208 --> 01:15:53,708 thousands of has-been athletes went out to Hollywood. 1683 01:15:53,792 --> 01:15:56,000 ♪ 1684 01:15:56,042 --> 01:15:58,708 It was seen as a place where they might work. 1685 01:15:58,833 --> 01:16:01,875 With the advent of the sound pictures, talkies, 1686 01:16:01,958 --> 01:16:04,542 the Western had come back into favor. 1687 01:16:04,625 --> 01:16:06,708 You could have the horses galloping 1688 01:16:06,792 --> 01:16:08,750 and the rifles crackling. 1689 01:16:08,833 --> 01:16:13,250 And so Jim, as well as hundreds if not thousands of Indians, 1690 01:16:13,333 --> 01:16:14,833 also went out to Hollywood. 1691 01:16:14,875 --> 01:16:17,833 He thought he could make his way as an actor. 1692 01:16:17,917 --> 01:16:19,667 ♪♪ 1693 01:16:19,750 --> 01:16:21,417 [Buford] When he first arrived in Hollywood, 1694 01:16:21,500 --> 01:16:25,333 he couldn't find any work, and he was just doing odd jobs. 1695 01:16:25,458 --> 01:16:27,292 I took a shovel and worked on the site 1696 01:16:27,375 --> 01:16:30,792 of the new county hospital, loading dirt into trucks. 1697 01:16:30,875 --> 01:16:33,458 I was paid $4 a day. 1698 01:16:33,542 --> 01:16:35,667 I had worked there only a few weeks 1699 01:16:35,708 --> 01:16:37,708 when newspaper reporters found me. 1700 01:16:37,792 --> 01:16:40,333 They posed me with a pick and shovel, 1701 01:16:40,417 --> 01:16:42,292 and the papers carried the picture. 1702 01:16:42,375 --> 01:16:45,708 You know, the famous Jim Thorpe is now digging ditches. 1703 01:16:45,792 --> 01:16:47,667 A far cry from the day 1704 01:16:47,792 --> 01:16:50,542 when I stood beside King Gustav of Sweden 1705 01:16:50,625 --> 01:16:52,917 with my arms loaded with trophies. 1706 01:16:53,000 --> 01:16:56,042 As soon as the word spread that Jim Thorpe was digging ditches, 1707 01:16:56,125 --> 01:17:00,083 it became this enormous symbolic event. 1708 01:17:00,208 --> 01:17:03,583 Photos went out to every newspaper in the country. 1709 01:17:03,667 --> 01:17:06,917 [Doyle] The sense was this man had fallen so far. 1710 01:17:07,000 --> 01:17:09,625 And I think it's easy to perceive it that way, 1711 01:17:09,708 --> 01:17:12,208 but I don't think that he saw it that way. 1712 01:17:12,333 --> 01:17:15,167 Jim Thorpe was not a person who felt sorry for himself. 1713 01:17:15,208 --> 01:17:16,833 He was a hardworking man, 1714 01:17:16,875 --> 01:17:20,625 and he saw work like that as an opportunity. 1715 01:17:20,708 --> 01:17:23,625 [Buford] And the studios heard about him, 1716 01:17:23,708 --> 01:17:26,667 and that's what started the studio career. 1717 01:17:26,750 --> 01:17:30,667 And he realized that his name had a certain currency 1718 01:17:30,750 --> 01:17:32,208 in the movies. 1719 01:17:32,333 --> 01:17:35,333 People could put "and also starring Jim Thorpe" 1720 01:17:35,375 --> 01:17:36,917 or "Jim Thorpe appearing." 1721 01:17:37,000 --> 01:17:40,292 He found that jobs came to him because of that. 1722 01:17:40,375 --> 01:17:42,625 ♪ 1723 01:17:42,708 --> 01:17:45,833 Jim's big-screen debut was in Battling Buffalo Bill, 1724 01:17:45,833 --> 01:17:47,667 where he played a Cheyenne warrior. 1725 01:17:47,750 --> 01:17:49,792 He was also a pirate in Captain Blood. 1726 01:17:49,875 --> 01:17:53,125 He played a native in King Kong, 1727 01:17:53,208 --> 01:17:55,000 and he was in Always Kickin', where he played himself. 1728 01:17:55,042 --> 01:17:56,542 Listen, boys. 1729 01:17:56,625 --> 01:17:58,833 If the laces are not up on receiving the ball 1730 01:17:58,875 --> 01:18:00,667 from the center, don't take too much time. 1731 01:18:00,708 --> 01:18:03,500 Adjust the ball on a step forward and kick. 1732 01:18:04,542 --> 01:18:09,667 But you had very limited roles for Native Americans who spoke, 1733 01:18:09,750 --> 01:18:13,875 so he was relegated to play generic characters 1734 01:18:13,958 --> 01:18:15,458 who had few lines, if any. 1735 01:18:15,542 --> 01:18:17,833 -No. More. -That's all you get. 1736 01:18:17,917 --> 01:18:19,375 Hudson Bay pay more. 1737 01:18:19,500 --> 01:18:20,958 [gunshot echoes] 1738 01:18:21,042 --> 01:18:23,375 [Proudfit] He was asked to wear a headdress, 1739 01:18:23,458 --> 01:18:28,458 speak in generic, stereotypical Hollywood Native speak. 1740 01:18:28,542 --> 01:18:31,458 In spring, Big Jim Foster's cabin burn. 1741 01:18:31,542 --> 01:18:32,833 Furs gone. 1742 01:18:32,875 --> 01:18:34,750 But he was also really frustrated 1743 01:18:34,833 --> 01:18:37,125 that most of the roles during this period of time 1744 01:18:37,208 --> 01:18:39,542 were going to non-Indians playing Indians. 1745 01:18:39,625 --> 01:18:42,833 These are non-Indigenous actors in war paint, 1746 01:18:42,917 --> 01:18:44,667 doing buffoonish characterizations 1747 01:18:44,750 --> 01:18:47,750 of what they thought Native Americans behaved like. 1748 01:18:47,833 --> 01:18:51,125 In 1926, a group called the War Paint Club was formed, 1749 01:18:51,208 --> 01:18:54,167 and its goal was to ensure that Hollywood would hire 1750 01:18:54,208 --> 01:18:57,875 Native actors to play Native people in films. 1751 01:18:57,958 --> 01:19:01,333 Jim lent his voice and celebrity to this cause. 1752 01:19:01,500 --> 01:19:06,125 Jim's advocacy for his fellow Indians was so strong and moving 1753 01:19:06,208 --> 01:19:10,667 that they called him ahkapanata, which was a Sac and Fox term 1754 01:19:10,750 --> 01:19:14,000 which essentially meant "caretaker." 1755 01:19:14,083 --> 01:19:15,792 [narrator] After years of advocating 1756 01:19:15,875 --> 01:19:18,208 on behalf of all Native Americans, 1757 01:19:18,292 --> 01:19:20,667 the final act of Jim Thorpe's life 1758 01:19:20,750 --> 01:19:23,167 finds him advocating for himself 1759 01:19:23,208 --> 01:19:27,083 as he fights to win back his Olympic medals. 1760 01:19:31,625 --> 01:19:34,917 [narrator] In Oklahoma, 1761 01:19:35,000 --> 01:19:36,792 members of 15 Indian tribes stage a colorful celebration 1762 01:19:36,875 --> 01:19:38,708 in honor of a famous Indian athlete, Jim Thorpe, 1763 01:19:38,833 --> 01:19:40,625 who joins the dances himself. 1764 01:19:40,708 --> 01:19:43,292 In 1950, The Associated Press took a poll of sportswriters 1765 01:19:43,375 --> 01:19:46,667 of the greatest athlete of the first half of the 20th century. 1766 01:19:46,708 --> 01:19:51,042 Jim Thorpe won by a mile over Jackie Robinson and Jesse Owens 1767 01:19:51,125 --> 01:19:53,833 and Babe Ruth and Ty Cobb and Jack Dempsey. 1768 01:19:53,917 --> 01:19:55,250 It was Jim Thorpe. 1769 01:19:55,333 --> 01:19:57,583 So he was back in the limelight again, 1770 01:19:57,708 --> 01:20:02,917 and it prompted the making of the Warner Bros. biopic in 1951, 1771 01:20:03,042 --> 01:20:05,375 Jim Thorpe: All-American. 1772 01:20:05,458 --> 01:20:07,958 [narrator] Jim Thorpe Week then reaches its climax in a parade. 1773 01:20:08,042 --> 01:20:10,292 Celebration lasts far into the night, 1774 01:20:10,375 --> 01:20:13,000 as Oklahoma hails the motion-picture life story 1775 01:20:13,083 --> 01:20:15,500 of the man recently voted the outstanding athlete 1776 01:20:15,583 --> 01:20:19,208 of the last half-century, Jim Thorpe: All-American. 1777 01:20:19,208 --> 01:20:23,583 The director was Michael Curtiz, who had directed Casablanca. 1778 01:20:23,667 --> 01:20:25,667 The star was Burt Lancaster, 1779 01:20:25,792 --> 01:20:28,500 a great movie star, a good athlete. 1780 01:20:28,542 --> 01:20:30,958 Sir, you are the greatest athlete in the world. 1781 01:20:31,042 --> 01:20:33,250 Thank you, Your Majesty. 1782 01:20:33,333 --> 01:20:35,667 [Maraniss] Very popular. It was on all the big screens 1783 01:20:35,750 --> 01:20:37,458 and the outdoor theaters around the country. 1784 01:20:37,542 --> 01:20:39,542 [Buford] Jim Thorpe was sort of plaintive, you know? 1785 01:20:39,542 --> 01:20:43,375 He said, "I get a funny feeling watching Burt play me." 1786 01:20:43,458 --> 01:20:45,833 He said, "I don't think I was ever as handsome 1787 01:20:45,958 --> 01:20:48,250 as Burt Lancaster." 1788 01:20:48,333 --> 01:20:51,083 [Jones] Even though Jim was back in the public eye, 1789 01:20:51,167 --> 01:20:54,000 the recognition that he really wanted was from the Olympics. 1790 01:20:54,083 --> 01:20:56,250 [narrator] In the later years of his life, 1791 01:20:56,375 --> 01:20:58,292 Jim works tirelessly, 1792 01:20:58,375 --> 01:21:01,167 petitioning to have his Olympic medals restored. 1793 01:21:01,167 --> 01:21:04,167 Contemporary account after contemporary account 1794 01:21:04,208 --> 01:21:07,417 talked about how Thorpe was totally disconsolate 1795 01:21:07,542 --> 01:21:09,083 by losing those medals. 1796 01:21:09,167 --> 01:21:11,542 He wanted them back more than anything. 1797 01:21:11,667 --> 01:21:14,708 In one plea to the president of the Amateur Athletic Union, 1798 01:21:14,833 --> 01:21:16,125 he writes... 1799 01:21:16,208 --> 01:21:18,000 [Thorpe] You will have the knowledge 1800 01:21:18,083 --> 01:21:21,042 that you made an old American Indian a happy man. 1801 01:21:21,125 --> 01:21:23,542 And when I go to the happy hunting ground, 1802 01:21:23,625 --> 01:21:25,833 my blessings will be upon you. 1803 01:21:25,917 --> 01:21:29,833 [narrator] However, he is rejected time and again. 1804 01:21:29,917 --> 01:21:32,625 [Hill] I mean, it was something that he never got over 1805 01:21:32,708 --> 01:21:36,125 and really loomed over him the rest of his life. 1806 01:21:37,958 --> 01:21:39,875 [Buford] Jim Thorpe did not have a good heart, 1807 01:21:40,000 --> 01:21:41,500 and he'd had heart attacks. 1808 01:21:41,625 --> 01:21:46,708 In 1953, Jim Thorpe had one last heart attack and died. 1809 01:21:46,833 --> 01:21:50,417 ♪♪ 1810 01:21:52,000 --> 01:21:54,958 His passing prompts an outpouring of support 1811 01:21:55,042 --> 01:21:58,708 from many, including former collegiate adversary 1812 01:21:58,708 --> 01:22:01,667 and newly elected president of the United States 1813 01:22:01,750 --> 01:22:03,667 Dwight Eisenhower. 1814 01:22:03,750 --> 01:22:07,500 "I learned with sorrow of the death of my old friend. 1815 01:22:07,500 --> 01:22:10,333 I personally feel that no other athlete 1816 01:22:10,417 --> 01:22:15,417 has possessed his all-round abilities in games and sports." 1817 01:22:15,542 --> 01:22:17,958 [Watson] In his death, there's a groundswell of support 1818 01:22:18,042 --> 01:22:20,250 from the public to return his medals. 1819 01:22:20,333 --> 01:22:23,958 People grabbed on to him almost like a folk hero 1820 01:22:24,042 --> 01:22:26,917 as the man wronged by the big guys. 1821 01:22:27,000 --> 01:22:30,000 They wanted some vindication for Jim. 1822 01:22:30,125 --> 01:22:32,500 [Maraniss] His family had fought for them over the years. 1823 01:22:32,625 --> 01:22:35,833 Various other athletes were pushing for it. 1824 01:22:35,958 --> 01:22:39,667 The campaign, which went on for decades and decades and decades, 1825 01:22:39,667 --> 01:22:43,583 was thwarted over and over again by Avery Brundage, 1826 01:22:43,708 --> 01:22:47,417 the competitor who had lost to Jim in the Olympics. 1827 01:22:47,500 --> 01:22:50,208 Over the years, Brundage had risen through the ranks 1828 01:22:50,292 --> 01:22:51,917 to become president 1829 01:22:52,042 --> 01:22:53,792 of the International Olympic Committee. 1830 01:22:53,875 --> 01:22:56,750 Throughout Brundage's tenure as a leader 1831 01:22:56,833 --> 01:22:58,333 within the Olympic movement, 1832 01:22:58,375 --> 01:23:02,750 he continued to not reinstate the honors 1833 01:23:02,833 --> 01:23:04,542 that Thorpe had earned. 1834 01:23:04,625 --> 01:23:07,625 As long as Avery Brundage was alive, it would not happen. 1835 01:23:07,708 --> 01:23:11,000 It chugs along like that until Avery Brundage is out. 1836 01:23:11,083 --> 01:23:12,875 He retires. He's gone. 1837 01:23:12,958 --> 01:23:16,000 With Thorpe's nemesis out of the way 1838 01:23:16,042 --> 01:23:18,458 and continued support for his cause, 1839 01:23:18,542 --> 01:23:21,833 including from President Gerald Ford, 1840 01:23:21,917 --> 01:23:24,625 justice ultimately prevails. 1841 01:23:24,708 --> 01:23:28,375 Jim's medals were restored to him 30 years after his death, 1842 01:23:28,500 --> 01:23:30,042 in 1982. 1843 01:23:30,208 --> 01:23:33,000 But Jim Thorpe is listed as co-winner 1844 01:23:33,042 --> 01:23:34,875 with the second-place finishers 1845 01:23:34,958 --> 01:23:36,958 in the pentathlon and decathlon, 1846 01:23:37,042 --> 01:23:41,000 an injustice that stands until 2022. 1847 01:23:41,125 --> 01:23:43,000 [Muir] Long considered one of the most 1848 01:23:43,042 --> 01:23:44,833 controversial decisions in sports... 1849 01:23:44,917 --> 01:23:46,917 A resolution in what some are calling 1850 01:23:47,000 --> 01:23:48,958 the first international sports scandal. 1851 01:23:49,042 --> 01:23:50,625 After more than 100 years, 1852 01:23:50,708 --> 01:23:53,333 Jim Thorpe has been reinstated as the sole winner 1853 01:23:53,375 --> 01:23:58,333 of the 1912 Olympic pentathlon and decathlon in Sweden. 1854 01:23:58,375 --> 01:24:02,167 This day has certainly been a long time coming for Jim Thorpe. 1855 01:24:02,208 --> 01:24:05,583 It took 110 years for justice to finally be done. 1856 01:24:05,667 --> 01:24:10,042 In 2024, nearly 80 years after his death, 1857 01:24:10,125 --> 01:24:12,500 Jim Thorpe is posthumously awarded 1858 01:24:12,542 --> 01:24:15,250 the Presidential Medal of Freedom... 1859 01:24:15,333 --> 01:24:17,375 Jim Thorpe, a one-of-a-kind champion. 1860 01:24:17,375 --> 01:24:18,833 Not just the greatest ballplayer. 1861 01:24:18,917 --> 01:24:20,500 The greatest athlete of all time. 1862 01:24:20,625 --> 01:24:23,000 ...the nation's highest civilian honor. 1863 01:24:24,792 --> 01:24:26,667 Jim Thorpe's legacy is astounding 1864 01:24:26,750 --> 01:24:28,208 when you look back on it. 1865 01:24:28,208 --> 01:24:30,292 No one has carved the path that he carved. 1866 01:24:30,375 --> 01:24:32,292 To be a dominant football player, 1867 01:24:32,375 --> 01:24:34,667 to be a Major League Baseball player, 1868 01:24:34,750 --> 01:24:36,500 to be an Olympic gold medalist: 1869 01:24:36,542 --> 01:24:40,333 To do all those things in one athlete's life, 1870 01:24:40,417 --> 01:24:41,958 he is in a category by himself. 1871 01:24:42,042 --> 01:24:43,833 No one has replicated that, 1872 01:24:43,958 --> 01:24:46,375 and I daresay we'll never see another. 1873 01:24:46,458 --> 01:24:49,042 [O'Brien] Jim Thorpe is a giant in the sport of track and field. 1874 01:24:49,125 --> 01:24:51,667 I was in the Olympics 80 years after Jim Thorpe, 1875 01:24:51,792 --> 01:24:54,875 and even though almost a century of history separates us, 1876 01:24:54,958 --> 01:24:56,542 he had a big impact on me. 1877 01:24:56,667 --> 01:24:59,375 [Doyle] This is an athlete that really dominated 1878 01:24:59,375 --> 01:25:01,417 the first half of the 20th century, 1879 01:25:01,500 --> 01:25:04,708 but also he represents so much more than just an athlete. 1880 01:25:04,792 --> 01:25:07,833 [Buford] He became an inspiration for any outsider. 1881 01:25:07,875 --> 01:25:11,292 Anyone who felt excluded from the American mainstream, 1882 01:25:11,375 --> 01:25:14,667 the American elite was keeping them out of sports, 1883 01:25:14,750 --> 01:25:16,333 Jim Thorpe became their man. 1884 01:25:16,458 --> 01:25:18,125 [Maraniss] Jim Thorpe was a survivor. 1885 01:25:18,208 --> 01:25:20,417 He endured all of the difficulties 1886 01:25:20,500 --> 01:25:22,083 that Native Americans endured 1887 01:25:22,167 --> 01:25:25,167 during the 19th and early 20th century. 1888 01:25:25,208 --> 01:25:28,083 What he represents is the perseverance 1889 01:25:28,167 --> 01:25:30,042 of Native peoples in this country. 1890 01:25:30,125 --> 01:25:31,500 He represents the very height, 1891 01:25:31,583 --> 01:25:34,167 the very top a person could achieve. 1892 01:25:34,292 --> 01:25:38,000 His legacy is that other Native people want their children 1893 01:25:38,042 --> 01:25:40,083 and future generations and even themselves, 1894 01:25:40,167 --> 01:25:42,750 their own generations, to match that. 1895 01:25:42,875 --> 01:25:46,292 [Proudfit] Perseverance was in everything that he did. 1896 01:25:46,292 --> 01:25:49,375 If you think about Jim Thorpe's life, 1897 01:25:49,500 --> 01:25:53,208 he's not just a tragic figure of American history. 1898 01:25:53,208 --> 01:25:55,667 He's not just another sad Indian. 1899 01:25:55,750 --> 01:25:58,833 He was the greatest athlete of all time 1900 01:25:58,875 --> 01:26:02,000 and one of the greatest Americans who ever lived. 1901 01:26:02,042 --> 01:26:04,875 ♪