Irina Press (born March 10, 1939, Kharkov, Ukraine, U.S.S.R. [now Kharkiv, Ukraine]—died Feb. 22, 2004, Russia) was a Soviet athlete who won two track-and-field Olympic gold medals during a career in which she set 11 world records.
Press won a gold medal in the 1960 Olympics in Rome in the 80-meter hurdles, setting an Olympic record (10.6 sec) in the semifinals. Her sister Tamara Press also competed in Rome and won a gold medal in the shot put; in the process, they became the first sisters to win gold medals in the same Olympics.
At the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games, Press finished fourth in the 80-meter hurdles, but she won her second gold medal in the pentathlon. The pentathlon was a women’s event for the first time at the 1964 Games, but Press was no first-timer—she previously set world records in the event in 1959, 1960, and 1961. In Tokyo, she had the best time or distance in two of the five events, tallying 5,246 points and setting yet another world record.
With their wins at the 1960 Rome Olympic Games, Tamara and Irina Press became the first sisters to win gold medals at the same Olympics.
Throughout much of their careers, the Press sisters faced widespread speculation that they were either taking anabolic steroids or that they were genetically male. The sisters’ joint retirement in 1966 coincided with the International Amateur Athletic Federation (later called the International Association of Athletics Federations) announcement that it would conduct gender verification testing of athletes competing in the upcoming European championships (an invasive and demeaning practice that researchers say has caused psychological harm to female athletes and resulted in unfair disqualifications). Following retirement, Press earned a degree in physical education, coached, and worked for the Soviet (later Russian) State Committee of Physical Culture, Sports and Tourism and the Committee of Physical Culture and Sports of the Government of Moskva City.