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Norman May


Norman "Nugget" Alfred Vale May AM (14 February 1928 – 11 September 2016) was an Australian radio and television sports broadcaster famous in Australia for calling "GOLD, GOLD for Australia, GOLD" during the men's 4 × 100 metres medley final in the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games.

May was born in Melbourne on 14 February 1928. His family moved to Sydney when he was three and he was raised in Coogee, a southern suburb of Sydney. Despite losing an eye in an accident at the age of six, he was considered talented at cricket, rugby league and surfing. May got into some trouble as a youth, culminating in his arrest and week-long detention. He attended Sydney Boys' High School, where he made the school's cricket and rugby union teams, but left at the age of 14. May was given the nickname "Nugget" during his youth due to his stocky body type, a name he was known by throughout his life.

After leaving school May worked various jobs during World War II whilst continuing to play cricket, as well as being an active member of the Coogee Surf Life Saving Club. He moved to the suburb of North Curl Curl in Sydney's north with his mother in 1949, where he joined the Freshwater Surf Life Saving Club, before finally working as a clerk at an insurance company from his mid 20s.

In 1957 May was invited by his friend and ABC sports broadcaster Dick Healey to join him as a commentator of a surf lifesaving event. The following year he was employed by the ABC as a trainee broadcaster, where he remained as a full-time employee until 1984.

During the men's 4 × 100 metres medley final at the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games, May's commentary for 2UE culminated in the exclamation "GOLD, GOLD for Australia, GOLD". The feat was significant because it is the only time that the United States team, who boycotted the Olympics that year, has not won that Olympic event. It was also Australia's first gold medal in eight years, after not winning any at the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games, while the government wanted the Australian team to follow America's lead in boycotting the Games. May's call of the race was notable for not hiding his support for the Australian team, as opposed to objective commentary that was the norm of the time. In the time since the event, May has become better associated with the win than the four swimmers who competed, with the swimmers themselves describing May as the fifth member of the Quietly Confident Quartet.


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