Mildred Ella "Babe" Didrikson Zaharias presented with the AAU Gussie Crawford Lifetime Achievement Award

04/16/2019


Zaharias becomes third athlete honored for the AAU Gussie Crawford Lifetime Achievement Award in a ceremony at the New York Athletic Club

NEW YORK (April 16, 2019) – The multi-sport star Mildred Ella "Babe" Didrikson Zaharias was announced as the recipient of the 3rd AAU Gussie Crawford Lifetime Achievement Award in a ceremony on April 16 at the New York Athletic Club. W.L. Pate, President of Babe’s Foundation accepted the award on her behalf.
 
Babe’s life was encompassed by athletics. She was accomplished in just about every sport - basketball, track, golf, baseball, tennis, swimming, diving, boxing, volleyball, handball, bowling, billiards, skating and cycling. In 1932, Babe won the national women’s AAU/Olympic tryouts as an unattached athlete, with 30 points- eight points over the second place Illinois Women’s Athletic Club. It has been declared to be the greatest single achievement in a series of events in the history of athletics.
 
She was called “Wonder Girl” by Grantland Rice after her two gold and one silver medal performance in the 1932 Olympics. Babe eventually focused on golf, at Rice’s suggestion, and went on to be declared by inaugural AAU Sullivan Award Winner, Bobby Jones, as one of the ten best golfers of all time. Babe nearly was an AAU Sullivan Award winner herself, finishing as a finalist for the 3rd ever edition of the award in 1932. In her career, Babe won 82 golf tournaments, including amateur and professional. She was voted the World’s Greatest Woman Athlete of the First Half of the 20th Century by the Associated Press (AP), and the only athlete to be named Woman Athlete of the Year by the AP six times.
 
Babe was diagnosed with colon cancer in 1953 and became one of the first public figures to openly discuss her cancer in an attempt to spread awareness about the disease. After her passing, The Babe Didrikson Zaharias Foundation, along with her husband George Zaharias, raised money for a museum in Beaumont, Texas, which was completed in 1976.
 
The AAU Gussie Crawford Lifetime Achievement Award is presented annually at the AAU James E. Sullivan Award ceremony and was established to honor Gussie Crawford, voted the first female president of AAU, as a trailblazer in amateur sports. The award is intended to recognize those athletes whose efforts, both on and off their playing surface on the national or international stage, have paved the way for great change in amateur sports.

Visit aausullivan.org for more information.