School fetes judo champ

  • Article by: Her, oacute;n M and aacute;rquez Estrada , Star Tribune
  • Updated: October 20, 2007 - 12:10 AM

Watertown-Mayer High School honors an alumnus whose career is marked by U.S. boycott of Olympics in 1980.

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After Steve Seck was beaten up several times at the age of 9 in his hometown of Watertown, his parents thought he probably should learn how to defend himself.

"They enrolled me in judo classes in Minneapolis, and every week they would drive the 35 miles," Seck, 51, said recently.

It proved to be a good investment. Seck developed such a talent for the sport that he became the only Watertown athlete ever to make the U.S. Olympic team.

That was in 1980. Seck was not only the best judo athlete in the country, but quite possibly the world.

Unfortunately, that was also the year the United States boycotted the Summer Olympics in Moscow, and he never got a chance to win Olympic gold.

"I was at my peak," said Seck. But his Olympic dreams came to an abrupt end when President Jimmy Carter decided to boycott the Moscow games in order to punish the Soviet Union for its invasion of Afghanistan.

"We were all disappointed," said Owen Seck, his father. "We couldn't understand what [Carter] was doing, mixing sports and politics."

More than a quarter century after he was denied a chance at Olympic immortality, Steve Seck returned to Watertown earlier this month for induction into the Watertown-Mayer High School Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame, established three years ago, held the ceremony during halftime of the school's homecoming game on Oct. 5.

"It's an honor," Steve Seck said. "I graduated 33 years ago, and it's kind of nice that people still remember me. Although there were a lot of people who hadn't heard of me."

Although he doesn't dwell on the Olympic boycott, it still makes him angry when he reflects on it.

"I'm still bitter," said Seck, now a physical education teacher for the Los Angeles Unified School District and at two community colleges.

Carter "did it to increase his popularity and win re-election. The polls said the American public agreed with him, although history says now that obviously it was big mistake."

Seck, whose parents still live in Watertown, said he had no idea at that time what was going on in Afghanistan or the global politics involved in the invasion.

"It's easy to look back now and see what he was trying to do," Seck said. "At the time I thought, 'What is he doing?... He wants to use the Olympics for military purposes.'"

Owen Seck said he knew his son could be good in judo from the time he was 6 or 7.

"I'd come home and he'd be behind the door hiding and then he'd jump at me and say, 'Come on Dad, let's go,' and we'd start rolling around on the ground," Owen Seck said.

By age 12, Steve Seck was traveling to judo tournaments all over the country.

By junior high, he was an accomplished judo athlete. He used that expertise to become one of the state's best high school wrestlers.

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