On November 27, 1956, Al Oerter won the first of 4 consecutive men's discus gold medals. From the article:
"Al Oerter Bio, Stats, and Results
Al Oerter
Full name: Alfred Adolph "Al" Oerter, Jr.
Gender: Male
Height: 6-3.5 (192 cm)
Weight: 276 lbs (125 kg)
Born: September 19, 1936 in Astoria, New York, United States
Died: October 1, 2007 (Aged 71.012) in Fort Myers, Florida, United States
Affiliations: NYAC, New York (USA)
Country:
USA
United States
Sport: Athletics
Medals: 4 Gold (4 Total)
Biography
With four successive victories in one event, Al Oerter stands among the top of any pantheon of Olympic history. A superb competitor in major meets, he did not set his first world record until 1962, when he became the first man to throw beyond 200 feet with 200-5½ (61.10). He posted three more world records, but it was competition, not records, that motivated Al Oerter. He won the AAU title six times (1957, 1959-60, 1962, 1964, 1966), was NCAA champion in 1957, sharing that title in 1958, and won the Pan American Games in 1959. Oerter was favored only going into his 1960 Olympic victory, and he was never the world record holder going into the meet, nor did he ever win the U.S. Olympic Trials, but such was his competitive greatness that at three of the four meets he responded with the longest throw of his career to win the gold. He walked out of the record books into legend at Tokyo in 1964 when he threw with torn rib muscles and a pinched cervical nerve that required a neck brace. On his fifth throw, he almost had to be carried from the field because of the pain, but that throw gave him the gold medal. Oerter retired at the end of the 1969 season, but he made a comeback in 1977 and the following year set a personal best of 221-4 (67.46). Incredibly, in 1980 he placed fourth at the Olympic Trials, having earlier in the season, at the age of 43, raised his career best to 227-11 (69.47). Oerter was a systems analyst and computer engineer for an electronics firm on Long Island, and after graduation from Kansas, he competed for the New York AC."