NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Ed Temple, the former Tennessee State track and field coach whose Tigerbelles won 13 Olympic gold medals and helped break down racial and gender barriers in the sport, died Thursday night. He was 89.Temples daughter, Edwina, told Tennessee State officials that her father died after an illness. He celebrated his birthday Tuesday.Words cannot in any fashion or manner express how deeply saddened we are over the loss of our beloved Ed Temple, Tennessee State University President Glenda Glover said in a statement. The TSU family has truly lost a precious gem and contributor to the history and legacy that is TSU. Most importantly, our hearts go out to his family.Temple coached the womens track team at Tennessee State, formerly Tennessee A&I, from 1953 to 1994. He was head coach of the U.S. Olympics womens teams in 1960 and 1964 and assistant coach in 1980.One of the athletes he coached at TSU, Wilma Rudolph, became the first American woman to win three gold medals at a single Olympics, in Rome in 1960. She won the 100 and 200 meters and teamed with Martha Hudson, Lucinda Williams and Barbara Jones to win the 400 relay.Temple, whose other gold medalists from TSU included Edith McGuire and Wyomia Tyus, was inducted into nine halls of fame, including the Olympic Hall of Fame in 2012, where he was one of only four coaches to be inducted. He also served as a member of the U.S. Olympic Committee, the international Womens Track and Field Committee and the Nashville Sports Council.Temple coached the first U.S. womens teams to compete in the Soviet Union in 1958 and in China in 1975. But he was best known for leading the athletes at TSU, known as the Tigerbelles, during his 41 years as the universitys womens track coach.He coached his teams to more than 30 national titles and led 40 athletes to the Olympics.For many of the women on his teams, Temple was more than a coach.I always looked at Coach Temple as a father figure and a man of truth and wisdom, said TSU Olympian Chandra Cheeseborough-Guice, a former Tigerbelle who succeeded Temple as track and field coach. He really brought out the best in me. He made me realize my potential that had not been tapped.Former Tigerbelle Edith McGuire Duvall said Temple was there for her after she lost her father.This man treated us all like his kids, Duvall said. He impressed upon me to finish school. We were there to run track, but also to get an education and to be ladies.Temple began his career during a time when black female athletes were treated as second-class citizens, even by their male counterparts.At the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, the U.S. mens team refused to provide Temple with clothes for a female shot putter who didnt fit into the womens uniform. His runners had to practice with Japanese starting blocks because the mens team refused to turn over three blocks sent over for the women.Still, Temples team brought home the gold and silver in the 100 meters, gold in the 200 and a medal performance in the 400 relay.Those were the kind of things we had to battle, he said in June 1993 after retiring from coaching. It was unnecessary types of things. We, the women, were USA citizens representing the United States. Why did we have to go through all that kind of stuff? It just didnt make sense.In a 2007 interview with The Tennessean, Temple said Rudolph was the best female track and field athlete hed ever seen.She had it all, he said. She had the charisma, she had the athletic ability, she had everything. When I look back, she opened up the door for womens sports, period. Im not just talking about track and field.Temple said Rudolph took a nap just before winning the 1960 gold medal in the 100.I was out there all nervous, walking around the infield, he recalled. And Wilma was on the rub-down table, and she had fallen asleep. Fell asleep!Rudolph, who suffered from polio as a child, died of brain cancer in 1994.Temple was born in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and attended Tennessee A&I, where he received bachelors and masters degrees.The track at TSU is named for Temple. So is Ed Temple Boulevard in Nashville, adjacent to the TSU campus. Seminars on sports and society, held each year on TSUs campus, are named in his honor, and in 2015, a 9-foot bronze statue was unveiled in Temples likeness at First Tennessee Park in Nashville.Even the Bible says a prophet is seldom honored in his hometown, U.S. Congressman Jim Cooper said at the statues unveiling. But here we are honoring perhaps one of the greatest coaches in all of history.Temple took great pride in the success of his athletes, both on and off the field.They are an inspiration to everybody, he said late in life. It just shows what can be done. Where theres a will, theres a way. Fake Balenciaga Cheap . The next step is a better finish. Bae played bogey-free Friday on another gorgeous day at Riviera for a 5-under 66, giving him a one-shot lead over Aaron Baddeley and Robert Garrigus going into the weekend. Balenciaga Shoes Sale .S District Court against Major League Baseball, the Office of the Commissioner and his own union, the MLBPA. https://www.fakebalenciaga.com/ . Thats about all he can do right now, so hes trying not to think about when he might be able to play again for the Los Angeles Lakers. Cheap Balenciaga . -- James Young couldnt wait to apply those tweaks to his jump shot, and the first one he made against UT Arlington told him it could be a good night. Fake Balenciaga . Mickelson barely made the cut but had the best round of the day with nine birdies and an eagle coupled with two bogeys to sit two shots behind leader Craig Lee of Scotland. Lee shot a 69 for a 12-under 204 total. "I just love the fact I am in contention and have an opportunity in my first tournament of the year here in Abu Dhabi," Mickelson said. As the UFC closes in on its landmark UFC 200 card on July 9 in Las Vegas, its important to remember how it got here.?Looking back over the promotions 23 years, there are three factors to consider when creating a list of the most important numbered UFC events.The first is the entertainment factor. Which fights had you on the edge of your seat, producing the types of moments you had to discuss with your friends at work in the days that followed? The second is financial. Sometimes its the pay-per-view, attendance or live gate numbers alone that can make an event important. Finally, it needs to be an event that had a role in the development of both the UFC and mixed martial arts as a whole.?These are the events that helped get the sport to where it is today, creating superstars who became legends.10. UFC 40: Vendetta (Nov. 22, 2002)Venue: MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas Main event: Tito Ortiz TKO3 Ken Shamrock,?defends light heavyweight title Of note:?Set UFC mark with $1.54 million gate; the reported 150,000 PPV buys were the most since UFC 5Why it mattered: The bad blood between Ortiz and Shamrock had been building for years and boiled over in this grudge match. The rivalry garnered interest from mainstream media outlets such as ESPN, USA Today, and Fox Sports Nets Best Damn Sports Show Period, and the event went on to outsell its more recent UFC cards by a 3-to-1 margin on PPV. On the undercard, Chuck Liddell provided a sizzle-reel knockout of Renato Babalu Sobral by landing a head kick before finishing with punches. Seven total UFC champions (including Shamrocks SuperFight title) competed on the card. It also marked the debut of Joe Rogan on color commentary.9. UFC 31: Locked and Loaded (May 4, 2001)Venue: Trump Taj Mahal, Atlantic City, New Jersey Main event: Randy Couture UD Pedro Rizzo, defends heavyweight title Of note: First event with modern-day weight classesWhy it mattered: In the second event under Zuffa ownership, eight fighters who either had or would go on to hold UFC gold competed on this card. Couture-Rizzo was considered the fight of the year in 2001, Chuck Liddell recorded a first-round KO over Kevin Randleman,?and?UFC Hall of Famer B.J. Penn made his pro debut, beating Joey Gilbert via first-round TKO. Also of note, Shonie Carter?scored a highlight-reel spinning-back-fist KO of Matt Serra. The sport was growing up, and this event had a lot to do with it.8. UFC 194 (Dec. 12, 2015)Venue: MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas Main event: Conor McGregor KO1 Jose Aldo, unifies featherweight titles Of note: $10.1 million gate, 1.2 million PPV buysWhy it mattered: The night Mystic Mac became a living legend. During the week leading up to the main event, McGregor predicted exactly what would happen in his one-punch, 13-second KO of Aldo, who hadnt lost in a decade. The knockout snapped Aldos six-year title reign (including WEC) and elevated McGregor into the level of superstardom we see today (see McGregor-Mayweather hype). In the co-main event, Luke Rockhold took the middleweight belt from Chris Weidman with a fourth-round TKO.7. UFC 47: Its On! (April 2, 2004)Venue: Mandalay Bay Events Center, Las Vegas Main event: Chuck Liddell KO2 Tito Ortiz Of note: $1.4 million live gate, 105,000 PPV buysWhy it mattered: Immediately after the fight, Joe Rogan said, Ive never seen Chuck go at somebody with that kind of intensity. Fans clamored to see this one, but it took more than a year for the fight between the former training partners to materialize. Liddell made Ortiz feel his power at the end of the first round. In the second, Liddell threw a barrage of punches to earn the stoppage. The win, which followed a 2003 in which Liddell went 1-2, set up a legendary run for The Iceman. After coaching the first season of The Ultimate Fighter, he captured the light heavyweight title the following April from Randy Couture, part of a stretch in which he recorded seven straight wins by knockout, capped off by a second TKO win over Ortiz at UFC 66.6. UFC 71 (May 26, 2007)Venue: MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas Main event: Quinton Rampage Jackson KO1 Chuck Liddell, wins light heavyweight title Of note: $4.34 million gate, beginning of consistent mainstream coverageWhy it mattered: The end of the Liddell era, which set the foundation for the sports mainstream evolution. This was the event that proved to mainstream media that MMA and the UFC were here to stay, with Liddell gracing the cover of ESPN The Magazine during the buildup to the fight. It was notable for producing a SportsCenter debate between the UFCs Joe Rogan and boxing promoter Lou DiBella on the merits of the sport. Lets just call it a TKO win for Rogan. ESPNEWS covered the weigh-in live and provided additionall live coverage after the event.dddddddddddd The following week, Sports Illustrated ran a cover featuring the headline Ultimate Fighting: Too brutal or the future?5. UFC 196 (March 5, 2016)Venue: MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas Main event: Nate Diaz?SUB2 Conor McGregor Of note: $8.1 million gate,?1.5 million PPV buysWhy it mattered: Pandemonium! Originally set as a lightweight superfight between McGregor and 155-pound champion Rafael dos Anjos, RDA pulled out with a broken foot. On 11 days notice, Diaz stepped into the limelight. Never has more noise been made at a news conference held at a UFC gym than the madness produced at their first one in Torrance, California. The fun continued all the way to fight night, when Diaz did what seemed impossible: beating the seemingly infallible McGregor. Diaz burst into stardom after the fight, while McGregors wallet and profile didnt seem to take a major hit despite the defeat. Not to be forgotten, Miesha Tate pulled off one of the most dramatic submission victories in title fight history by choking?Holly Holm unconscious in the fifth round to capture the womens bantamweight title.4. UFC 129 (April 30, 2011)Venue: Rogers Centre, Toronto Main event: Georges St-Pierre UD Jake Shields, defends welterweight title Of note: 55,724 attendance, $12.075 million gateWhy it mattered: The first stadium show, with an attendance record that held until this past Novembers UFC 193 in Australia. The live-gate record still stands. In the UFCs first foray into Ontario, Canada, GSP owned the night in his native country with a unanimous decision victory over Shields. The card marked the final fight in the Hall of Fame career of Randy Couture, who was knocked out by Lyoto Machida with a jumping front kick. It also featured the UFC debuts of Jose Aldo and Benson Henderson, who came over from the WEC. The UFC has gone on to hold just three other events in stadiums (UFC on Fox: Gustafsson vs. Johnson in Sweden, UFC 193 in Australia and UFC 198 in Brazil).3. UFC 189 (July 11, 2015)Venue: MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas Main event: Conor McGregor TKO2 Chad Mendes, wins interim featherweight title Of note:?First event with Reebok kits, $7.2 million gateWhy it mattered: It was a magical night in Las Vegas, with amazing finishes in all five PPV bouts. Starting with Thomas Almeidas flying-knee KO of Brad Pickett, the momentum kept building through Gunnar Nelsons submission and Jeremy Stephens own flying-knee KO. In the co-main event, welterweight champion?Robbie Lawler and Rory MacDonald put on an all-time classic, with Lawler getting the stoppage in the fifth round while down on the cards. Before the main event, the atmosphere at the MGM Grand was electric, with Aaron Lewis and Sinead OConnor performing the walkout songs. McGregor rose from hyped contender to champion by knocking on Mendes, setting off a stream of Irish fans to celebrate in Vegas that night.2. UFC 1 (November 12, 1993)Venue: McNichols Arena, Denver Main event: Royce Gracie SUB Gerard Gordeau to win eight-man tournament Of note: The Gracie family reigned supremeWhy it mattered: From the very first bout of the night, with Gordeau kicking?Teila Tuli?square in the face 26 seconds in, combat sports changed forever. I think commentator and Pro Football Hall of Famer Jim Brown put it best in his analysis by saying, I think it was totally on the face. Awesome, awesome. Tooth came out. But the card is best remembered for putting Gracie Jiu-Jitsu and the UFC on the map. Gracie needed only 4:55 to submit three opponents (Art Jimmerson via mount, Ken Shamrock via rear-naked choke, Gordeau via choke) en route to winning three of the first four UFC tournaments.1. UFC 100 (July 11, 2009)Venue: Mandalay Bay Events Center, Las Vegas Main event: Brock Lesnar TKO2 Frank Mir, defends heavyweight title Of note: UFC-record 1.6 million PPV buysWhy it mattered: Capped by Lesnars mauling of Mir in their rematch and the legendary WWE heel promo he delivered after the main event, UFC 100 is still the card that media and fans look back to as the one. The main card started with Yoshihiro Akiyama defeating Alan Belcher and his massive Johnny Cash tattoo in the fight of the night. Dan Henderson then knocked Michael Bisping out with a hellacious punch that was so devastating, Henderson still sells shirts on his website with an outline of his body flying in the air about to level Bisping. Georges St-Pierre dominated Thiago Alves to defend his welterweight title. The card was so stacked that Jon Jones made his third appearance with the company on the undercard, submitting Jake OBrien. ' ' '