Two-time Olympic figure skating gold medalist and acclaimed broadcaster Dick Button died Thursday. He was 95 years old.
Button was the first American figure skater to win an Olympic gold medal, finishing first in the men’s singles competition at the 1948 Winter Games in St. Moritz, Switzerland. During the competition, he also became the first skater to land a double axel jump. He eventually invented the flying camel spin, a maneuver in which a skater extends his or her free leg backward while holding the knee above hip level.
Four years later, Button won gold again at the 1952 Games in Oslo, becoming the first skater to land a triple jump —a triple loop — in competition. He was credited for bringing athleticism to a sport often defined by its grace and beauty.
U.S. Figure Skating mourns the loss of the legendary Dick Button. The two-time Olympic champion’s pioneering style & award-winning television commentary revolutionized figure skating. His legacy will live on forever. We extend our deepest condolences to his family & loved ones.
— U.S. Figure Skating (@USFigureSkating) January 31, 2025
In 1948 and 1952, Button also won a gold medal at the World Championships, among five he won for his career.
After retiring from active competition, Button attended Harvard Law School and earned a degree in 1956. Soon thereafter, he began broadcasting with the 1960 Winter Olympics. That began a career which lasted 50 years, providing analysis and commentary — or “narration,” as he called it — for CBS, ABC and NBC, and earned him an Emmy award.
as a tribute to dick button and to honor his legacy i would like to share arguably one of my favorite pieces of figure skating media ever. may he rest in peace ❤️ pic.twitter.com/UE0mizcByj
— cam (@loopcombos) January 30, 2025
Button taught generations about figure skating, breaking down the techniques and nuances involved in dances and jumps, much of which viewers could only notice on slow-motion replays. He was also known for critical commentary that was sometimes harsh. Button wasn’t afraid to call a routine boring (or even ugly) or state outright that a performance wasn’t good enough.
“I don’t think anybody wants to sit there and listen to somebody say, ‘Ooh, ooh, ooh, wasn’t that beautiful? Wasn’t that just too lovely for words?'” he told NPR’s Howard Berkes in 2010. “The heck with that.”
His last Olympic broadcasting assignment was for the 2010 Vancouver Games on NBC.
“Dick Button created an open and honest space in figure skating broadcasting where no topic or moment was off-limits,” NBC figure skating analyst Johnny Weir told the Associated Press.
“He told it like it was, even when his opinion wasn’t a popular one. His zingers were always in my mind when I would perform for him, and I wanted to make him as happy and proud as I would my coaches.”
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