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V 8 N. 7 David Bailey's Memories of that WR 1500 in 1967

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1967 Commonwealth vs USA Dual Meet 1500m: Reminiscences of One Competitor
By David Bailey (Canada)
David Bailey

Photo by MORRIS LAMONT, The London Free Press
June 16, 2016

As soon as I arrived in Los Angeles on the Wednesday before the Saturday race, I became acutely aware that there were high expectations for a 1500m world record.  The current record of 3:35.6 was then considered to be the “Best in the Books” held by the “Master”, Herb Elliott of Australia, that resulted from his dominating performance in the final of 1960 Rome Olympic Games.   Recently, Jim Ryun had achieved a new mile record (3:51.1) with an amazing front running solo effort at Bakersfield.  Moreover, Kip Keino of Kenya had just clocked a 3:55.2 mile at 6000-foot altitude.  So, the stage was set.
There was world-wide interest in this race.  I was told that it would be broadcast live throughout North America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand.  Because the Los Angeles Coliseum red clay track was not considered fast and would quickly get chewed up by spikes from previous races, the track would be extensively groomed.  Moreover, the race was scheduled to be second on the program after the men’s 100m which would not employ the use the inside lane.  
I was thrilled to be one of the three to represent the Commonwealth Team.  Kip Keino and Alan Simpson (Great Britain) were obvious worthy selections.  I was a bit of an unknown.  However, I had shown good early season form in a number of races including a win at the California Relays Mile (Modesto) in 4:01 at the end of May. On the other hand, I was the slowest miler in the field (3:59.1 at the time) by several seconds. Consequently, it was announced at the first Commonwealth team meeting that there may be a change, which was distressing to me but I understood the reasoning.  The British had also flown over my potential replacement, John Whetton (1964 Tokyo Olympics finalist), who certainly had the credentials to run in this race.  We were informed that the decision would be made soon.
Kip Keino approached me at the training facility the following day to inquire about my plans for the race. I think that there was considerable pressure on him to force the pace for a record.  However, he considered this primarily as a race for the win, as I think did Jim, and not a world record attempt. As far as I was concerned, I did not want this race to become a jog and sprint. My recent successes had come when I had controlled the race at a good pace. More importantly, I also thought that we should not miss this chance at a world record, regardless of whether Kip or Jim won.   So, I told Kip that I would take the pace if no one else wanted to lead.  However, I would not be the sacrificial rabbit and would not run much faster than 60 seconds per lap.  Later that day, it was announced at the next team meeting that I would be a race starter.  
Race day did not start promisingly.  It was going to be a hot sunny day.  The air temperature at the beginning of the meet was in the mid-80s degrees but it was much hotter on the floor of the Coliseum.  Someone said it was close to 100 degrees.  Although I was given the opportunity to be excused from the opening ceremonies march past of athletes, I chose to participate.  We walked in single files of the two teams through the huge arch and down the stairs to the track.  It had been explicitly stated that we were to turn left at the bottom and march in front of the large crowd at the home stretch.  Unfortunately, the persons at the front had not got or forgot this information and we turned right and wandered down the back stretch.  The schedule got further behind time with the men’s 100 m race.  After at least four false starts that involved the disqualification of two USA sprinters, they finally got the remaining four individuals off fairly.  
The 1500m was next.  We lined up on the back stretch and a television crew with a portable camera came out to get individual head shots.  Each athlete was absorbed in his own thoughts and when wished “Good Luck” by the TV crew gave no response.  I was on the outside and the last to be televised.  Typically Canadian, I gave a pre-conditioned “Thanks”.  
With the firing of the gun, we burst forward and I began looking inwards to see if anyone was going to take the pace.  I looked once and then repeatedly as we began to dawdle down the back stretch.  I finally assumed that I would be the one, took the lead at the end of the straightaway and accelerated to the speed that I thought was a sub-60 second lap pace. Partway down the home stretch for the first time, someone was yelling from the infield “You’re too slow! You’re too slow!”.   Such was the anticipation for a world record.
I was still leading as we approached the 400 m split timer, who shouted “60” just before I got there.  Shortly afterwards, Kip and Jim blew past me.  In a split second, I made a decision that would have a significant impact on my race.  Fearing that the rest of the field would also move past and force me to the back of the pack, I sprinted hard to stay in contact. I need not have worried. Although I was unaware, the others did not respond.  As a result, we quickly split into two groups separated by an ever-widening gap.  This faster pace initially felt comfortable and we passed the 800m in 1:57. It wasn’t until 500 m to go that I felt the heat and fatigue.  I had doubts and let them drift away from me.  I was now alone in “no man’s land”. I heard 2:57 as I passed 1200 m.  From there to the finish would just be a matter of trying to maintain rather than to increase the pace. As I reached the end of the back straight, I looked across the curve, saw Jim entering the home stretch and thought “He is really going well today!”
The last 100m was a blur. I felt that I would finish third a few metres from the finish line. However, a flash of white to my right told me I had been caught. It was Alan Simpson. Both of us were timed in 3:41.7. However, it was a new Canadian record for me.  Although I then collapsed on the grass, I managed to get up a few minutes later and to walk it off.  I was met by an excited Sir Arthur Gold of the British Athletic Association who came across the infield, shook my limp sweaty hand and said how proud they were to have me on the team representing the Commonwealth.  It was a genuine gesture that I sincerely appreciated.
The awards ceremony had to be delayed by more than 1 hour.  I don’t think anyone really realized how much the effort and heat had taken out of Jim Ryun.  They said it was a crashing headache.  However, it likely was more than that.  I was pleased that the first four got a sterling silver engraved bowl embossed with meet crest that differentiated your finishing placement by the color of the enamel on the interior.
That evening I paired up with Dave Wilborn who was feeling down from his performance in the race to go to a movie.  We got in a long line-up to see “The Dirty Dozen”, a popular WW II story starring Lee Marvin and a number of other big names.  While we were waiting, I heard someone in the crowd yell out, “Jim Ryun is here!”.  I turned around and saw him standing a number of individuals behind looking genuinely embarrassed for being singled out.  

On Sunday morning, I got up early and went for a jog around the USC campus.  I saw a man getting a Los Angeles Times from a newspaper dispenser and asked whether I could see if there was anything about the meet.  The front page of the Sports section had a photo from the 1500m with me trailing Kip and Jim.  He kindly gave me the section and I hurried back to the USC residence where I waited in the lobby.  When Kip and Jim came down from their rooms, I got their signatures on the photo.  It is a treasured souvenir remembering a great moment when I had the privilege to play a small role in a world record performance (see attached).    


 



V 8 N. 8 What Have You Found While Running? and America's Most Valuable Coin.

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Today I received the following email from Bruce Kritzler in Sea Island, GA.

"Last Sunday I was about a half mile into a long run of 10mi when I saw some paper money in the ditch. It was a $100 (Franklin). Folded it up, put it in key pocket, and figured it was play money or counterfeit, as I have no idea what a $100 is supposed to look like. Next day figured I might as well run by same spot and look for more. Yep, found another $100, but it was designed different, was 10 yrs older, and had a spot faded out white, so figured they were both worthless. Leslie took them by the bank, and they were both good ! Don't expect that to ever happen again. Maybe its just a function of living near Sea Island, or the Trump economy!"




For our Canadian readers you can probably relate to these two fine examples of $100 bills



My first thought after reading Bruce's email was, "I'd be out there tomorrow with a rake and shovel, and the hell with running."  Then I tried to remember what goodies I've found along my running routes over the past sixty-one years.  The only things I ever came up with were a big Crescent wrench, near Noranda, Quebec,  probably left along the road by a trucker putting on snow chains, and the other thing was a porn CD, on County Line Rd. in Beavercreek, Ohio,  maybe dropped by another trucker.  

My recommendation to Bruce is  to offer to sell the coordinates of his find to the public for a small fee.  With proceeds he might be able to buy a new pair of shoes at Ross Dress for Less.

This leads us to the question, "What have you, our readers, found over the years of running or hanging out at track meets?"  I know that some track writers like Kenny Moore and Dr. George Sheehan have mentioned that they got ideas for articles and books while on the run, but we're looking for the more intrinsic little goodies you've found on life's highways.  Send your answers to:   irathermediate@gmail.com 
or place them in the comments section at the bottom of this post.

Now while we are on the subjects of running and money this other story recently came our way from Ned Price a former U. of Chicago and UCTC team member.   He sent a photo of the University of Chicago track team from 1958 of which he was a member.  Also on that team were Gar Williams, Brooks Johnson, and Arnie Richards, some of whom you may well be aware.  In his letter he relates the story of Walter Perschke a member of that 1958 team.  


Walter a famous coin dealer died last year.

A fun guy ,he once asked about how much meal money he could use by saying   "What's the limit coach"  Ted Haydon said   "You are, Perschke"

He is the blond guy on the lower left. On his right is Gar Williams Further down the row wearing glasses is Arne Richards and in the center of the second row is future Stanford Coach Brooks Johnson.  I am  the third guy in second row This was indoor track 1958.


Perschke was written up in the 1980's in a running magazine Runner's World? or Running Times? after he got rich.
He was a working class guy who went to Lane Tech in Chicago, a good trade school. He ran about 1:57  for 880 at U of C. His parents did not want him to go to college.
Here is another picture of him taken at EMU in Ypsilanti on October 12,1957. Walter on the left and teammate Bill Krol on the right.


 Obituary (partial)

Walter "Bud" Perschke passed away on May 20, 2016 in Chicago, Illinois. Walter was born on February 25th, 1939 in McHenry, Illinois to Walter and Marie Perschke. He attended high school at Lane Tech and received his undergraduate degree from The University of Chicago, where he ran track and was the president of his fraternity, Psi Upsilon. He was an internationally-renowned numismatic expert and businessman, known for acquiring storied coins such as the Brasher Doubloon and the American Quint. He was a finance columnist for Chicago Daily News, had his own Emmy-nominated TV show, Ask an Expert, and appeared regularly on PBS's Wall Street Week. Later in life, he was the owner and publisher of Conscious Community Magazine and touched many lives with his energy and spiritual mission. 
Published in a Chicago Tribune Media Group Publication on May 29, 2016

Perschke, a journeyman half miler (1:57) became a famous numismatist and once owned the rarest and most valuable US coin ever minted the Brasher Doubloon.  There was even a Hollywood movie made about the coin.


   He also did a little federal time late in life when he got involved in an FBI sting operation where some corrupt FBI agents bought coins from him and Walter forgot to claim the sale on his income tax.  The whole story can be found in the links that follow.  Walter turned out to be a decent man and went on to found a spiritual center near Indianapolis,  Indiana.  

Coin World Article on Walter Perschke

Conviction 


Story from a Friend of Walter Perschke

Here is a video of Walter describing the Brasher Doubloon

Walter Perschke on the Brasher Doubloon


Walter Perschke
While Ned and I were discussing Walter Perschke I asked him what he had ever found along his running routes.  Here is what he wrote.


Finding stuff of value .
In the 1980's, my buddy and I would go out on the Boston Marathon course after the runners had passed and look for discarded sweats etc On cold days the runners would overdress and discard lots of stuff along the way in the first 5 miles  Found some great stuff eg t-shirts from European running clubs etc. Nowadays I have outgrown such activities and besides there are so many volunteers that anything nice is snapped up immediately.

That reminded me of a similar incident at the NCAA cross country meet in Madison, WI about 1978.  It was bitterly cold that day and many runners started the race wearing a pair of socks on their hands.  By the mile mark most of them were shedding the socks.  Dave Elger one of my fellow grad students at the Human Performance Lab at Ball State, began collecting and matching pairs he found along the course.  Alberto Salazar may have won the race, but Dave had a lifetime's worth of footwear by the end of the day.  He has put those socks to use by running a sub  three-hour marathon in every decade since the 1970s.  Not many people can claim that achievement.  He also filmed that race and posted it on youtube.  


1978 NCAA Cross Country, Madison WI   clik here



George,
     When I run around the OSU (Oregon State U.) campus area I’m always on the lookout for money.   Especially around the curbs.  And after a party night.   LOL!

Mike


George
Hey found a trashed Wendys cup that had coupon for free airline tickets. I ran with it home. You had to collect like 20 coupons mail in. Jason my son I started a comando operation every night we would raid Wendys dumpsters dig in trash bags find cups and bring home. We ended up with 7 round trip tickets anywhere usa. ......My wife was in charge of cutting coupons from dead cups. Mail in.
 They smell like pickels,mustard, ketchup, coke, piss....oops.   anyway Debbie has not eaten at wendys for years.   p.s. a wendys mgr. caught me one night and you can't do that. .....I said trash is free domain. ...She daid  no it is not....I said ok you win....but let me finish my frosty.....then i ran like a scalded dog.  PHil Scott

Phil, I'm not sure your example qualifies.  You did indeed run away when the manager confronted you, but were you on a run to go to the dumpster?  I'm not sure you were.  The committee will have to study this example and render a decision in a few days.  One question, do you need all those plane tickets and could you perhaps transfer a few to me?  This would go a long way in getting a positive judgement.   Ed. 

V 8 N. 9 A Mystery Solved or Why I Love This Blog!!

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Two days ago, my good friend and fellow blogger, John Cobley,  see   (RACING PAST)
sent me the picture just below with these words.



George: Did I ever send you this amazing photo?  Who? Where? When?  I know; can you deduce?  John

PS  It’s not the Tour de France!!!!!!!



How much drama can you find in one picture?  This one sure has a truckload.  Bicycles crashing.  A lone runner.
Is that the Arc de Triomphe? Look at the cinematographer standing on top of an old Peugeot!    John gives us his only clue, "It's not the Tour de France".  But he's telling us it is France. It possibly is the Arc de Triomphe in the background, the runner may be on the Champs Elysee.  What is the occasion?  It could be another bike race,  the Paris Roubaix  or the Paris Brest Paris.   Unless you absolutely recognize the runner from the get go, you can only speculate.  

I sent the photo out to a few friends who might have a clue.  Phil Scott, an avid track nut and cyclist looked right away and noted the absence of brakes on he bikes putting it into the 1920s or 30s.  The head lamp on the car to the left could go back to the early 20s.  I looked up the 1925 Bentley roadster, and it had big lights like the one on the left.  But the car holdihng the cinematographer looked much more modern, so I began checking out  pictues of Peugeots from the mid 1920s onward.  Only in the early 1930s did the windscreens start having a curved upper frame.  Before 1930 they were 90 degree corners on the top of the windscreens.  So we're into the 1930s.  Some of the cyclists are clearly in racing uniforms, but others are dressed more in civilian outfits.  But some of the early Tour de France cyclists did dress rather civilian.  But then there is at least one motorcyle in the peleton.  Are they chasing the runner, has he cut in front of them?  It's still not clear to me, and it won't become clear until I know more about the man and can identify the occasion.   It seems that this event is important enough that cinematography is being used to record it.  Therefore this guy is of great importance.  He sure as hell looks like a trained runner.  It is almost remeniscent of a chase scene in a Buster Keaton film.

I'm wondering if this is truly the Arc de Triomphe or some other lesser Arc in Paris or elsewhere in France.  Did Paris Roubaix start in Paris?  Today it starts out in the suburbs as did the 1924 Olympic marathon in Paris.  But checking back on the history of Paris Roubaix, from 1925 - 1937  the race started at Porte de Maillot which had an Arc.  Could this be the case?  I was beginning to run out of ideas.  I checked out some of the French runners of the 1930s but did not find this chap, although I should have.  It just didn't click.  How could an American know about all the French middle distance runners of the early 20th century?  I should have checked further and looked for French world record holders.

Among the folks I sent the picture to were Jerry McFadden and Jose Sant.

 Jerry wrote back:



George,
I do not have a clue on who the runner is, or the date or event, but I would bet even money the monument in the background is the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. Under my magnifying glass the sculpture looks like the "Le Départ of 1792" and the "Le Triomphe 1810." The roof of the arc has been cut off. They could not do this now-a-days as through traffic through the circle has been cut off.

But the event is big enough to be followed by cars & photographers & motorcyclists (on the right). with a large crowd of spectators. 

Would love to hear the final conclusion.

Jerry




Jose  sent this

Salut George , j’ai trouvé le nom du coureur Jules Ladoumègue dit " Julot  «  Année 1935  Il a couru suivi du peuple de Paris de la Porte Maillot à la place de la Concorde pour fêter une victoire en Russie . J'espère que cela répond à ta question.
"Hey, George, I found the name of the runner,  Jules Ladoumegue, called  "Julot".  The year 1935.  He ran followed by the people of Paris from la Porte Maillot to the Place de la Concorde to celebrate a victory in Russia.   I hope that answers your question.

The clip is over 8 minutes long.  Published by INA. France.  You can look at it but your time is limited to about 30 days on the site without paying a subscription.  If you browse on the site you'll find a lot of other rtrack films.
On the link above there are several sections
0:00-2;30  film of Ladoumegue running in the Bois de Boulogne in 1963
2:30-3:49  Ladoumegue in action in the 1920s or 30s.  Races look like they were paced.  
3:49-4:30  film of Ladoumegue running at the age of 56.  Still looking very fit.  Place is his home stadium Jean Bouin.
4:30-5:39  The run in the steets of Paris from the original photo that  started this quest.
5:29-8:30  Ladomegue at his job broadcasting and also working with street kids giving encouragement.

John Cobley has translated from Ladoumegue's biography Dans Ma Foulee

"In 1935, Ladoumègue ran what he called “the most beautiful race of my life.” (DMF, p. 173) The newspaper Paris-Soir arranged for him to make a ceremonial run down the Champs Elysee. “The citizens of Paris were invited to come and demonstrate against the bias of the [athletic] Federation and to show sympathy for my situation,” he wrote. (173) According to Ladoumègue there were 300,000 people lining the famous avenue; later reports all say there were 400,000. Ladoumègue himself found it a frightening experience as people swarmed around him and wanted to touch him."
The bias John refers to is the banning of Ladoumegue from amateur competion for having accepted fnancial support.  He was not even allowed to run on his club track during that banning, and he could not run in the 1932 Olympics where he would have been the favorite in the 1500 meters.
Compare this today with the outpouring by the citizens of Philadelphia for their Super Bowl Champions.  Ladoumegue was only one man.

Jerry then replied.

History: Jules Ladoumegue 
  • Silver Medal in 1500 in 1928 Amsterdam Olympics. 
  • 1930 - World record 1500 in 3:39.15 (1st to break 3:50 in 1500) + WR 1,000M in 2:23.06. 
  • World Record mile in 1931 in 4:09.2 + 2K WR in 5:21.8
  • The film: The French Sports Federation banned him for life for accepting payments for racing & the run was set in 1933 to honor him on a running tour through Paris. He was the only runner with a massive crowd lining & following the run.

Personal Anecdote  (Jerry's)

I actually trained  with Jules a coach in Paris for a few months in 1971. He was coaching at the sports club Stade Francais. He was in his early 50's at the time. His was still pencil thin but did not look like the young guy in the photo or film. I knew about his world records but knew nothing of the film or solo run way back when. He was a hard coach, fixated on fast intervals. He got pissed at me one time when I jumped over two hurdles in the second lane while running 300 repeats with the group - Told me that if I had the energy to hurdle while doing intervals I should be out front in the 1st lane pulling the group along.

Jules died in 1973.


Now that I had a name, I googled 'Jules Ledoumeque'.   This led me to a picture of Jules, and I immediately noticed that the picture was from an artcle on John Cobley's blog  Racing Past

Jules Ladoumegue clik here to read John's story about Ladoumegue.



So that's how the puzzle was solved.



Back Story

So how did these relationships between Jerry, Jose, John, and myself come to be?

1963  Jerry and I raced against each other several times when he was at U. of Missouri and I was at U. of Oklahoma.  He won both races easily.  He placed second at the Big 8 Conference in the mile in 4:05 that year.

1964  Jerry went on to the Peace Corps and served as a coach in Morocco.   It was there that he met Jose who was one of his students.

1965 Not knowing anything about Jerry's Peace Corps service, I too went in the Peace Corps in Tanzania.
We both met and married women with French backgrounds, his wife from France, my wife from Quebec.

1964-1974  We had both moved to our wives' countries and remained in the sport.    Jose had moved to Quebec where I was living and we met each other coaching Quebec athletes.  When Jose learned I had been in the Peace Corps he immediately asked if I knew Jerry McFadden.  By chance I did know of Jerry, but not his connection to the Peace Corps.   For the next 35 years or so, whenever we met, Jose would always pester me about where  Jerry might be.

2009  when we started this blog, I began learning of the power of the internet to connect people and did a search for Jerry and found a phone number  in Bethlehem, PA.  I called the number, and it was the Jerry I was looking for.  Right away I told him about Jose being in Montreal.  By that time Jose had risen through the ranks of coaching in Canada and was working with several of the top Canadian sprinters including Bruny Surin.
I was able to  connect the coach and his former runner, himself now a coach.

Jerry and I have had a great relationship ever since.  He's visited my family in Ohio.  He's always gone to the bookstalls on the banks of the Seine when he returns to France.  There he has found magazines and photos and supplied this blog.   Back in the 70s Jerry wrote several articles for Runners World in its early days. 


Jerry and some of his young athletes

Jerry leading a mile race

Jerry at the line, with Jose behind the flag
encouraging their friend Medhi Jaouhar who would
go to U. of Houston and then to Canada.

Recently this video of Jose and one of his current athletes Annie Leblanc was promoted in Canada by Petro Canada.  Annie is a former U. of Oregon runner, multi-time All American and member of the Canadian Olympic team.  Her mother Chantal Derosiers was also a Canadian Olympian in 1980.

Annie Leblanc and Jose Sant


George, John Cobley, and Geoff Williams in Vicotoria, BC

John Cobley comes into the picture, since I moved back to Canada in 2013.  We both live on Vancouver Island and have met and exchanged stories and books several times over the past five years.  Only two weeks ago we had dinner in Victoria with mutual friend Geoff Williams who has seen many of the great races in London back in the 1950s.  John is from Hastings in England and came to the US on a running scholarship at BYU.  While John was  there, Lasse Viren spent a semester, but quickly returned to Finland.   John found his was to British Columbia and for many years was chief chronicler for British Columbia Track and Field.  He was also a university English professor.  The Russian language is also high on John's agenda , and he still translates Russian poetry.  Besides his incedible track blog on distance running, John is also doing a blog on jazz. 


V8 N. 11 Dave Clark, 1960 Olympian R.I.P.

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Earl Young contacted me today to inform me of the passing of Dave Clark, his friend and former Olympic teammate and roommate.  I talked to Dave briefly and published this following paragraph. Our sympathies go out to Dave's family in the Dallas area and to Earl.

No other information is available at this date.   February 12, 2018  George Brose


Dave Clark


Dave Clark was the number three vaulter behind Bragg and Morriss on the US team.  He jumped for North Texas State University.   His personal best was 15' 3".  At Rome he tied for 18th place at 4.20 meters  13' 9".   I talked to Dave this morning about Rome and why he didn't hit his normal height which would have been good for a medal at 15'3".    During the event he had made the opening height when a sudden storm struck the event.   When the storm ceased he took a warm up jump on a runway that was parallel to the actual vaulting runway.  Part way through that jump he bailed out and instead of dropping into the pit, he was projected horizontally through the pit and slid across the grass and hit the concrete curbing of the track injuring his shoulder.  That pretty much ended his day.  He said he made friends with one of the Russian vaulters, Petrinka, but the KGB lads quashed their contacting each other in Rome.  Another interesting story includes the Russian who broke his ankle warming up.   When their poles were being inspected before the competition, Dave noticed that the Russian had put more layers of tape on his pole than were allowed and he called him on it.  The officials made him take the tape off and re-wrap it.  The Russian was infuriated about this and was raising a lot of hell with everybody.  Ufortunately for him his day was over quickly when he broke his ankle landing in the vault box.  Dave came home, got his masters , and was a teacher for 38 years in the Dallas area.  He still participates at clinics, and he has run five marathons.

V 8 N. 12 Pan Am Trials and Games 1967

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PAN AM TRIALS

    “That cat has had my number.” That's high hurdler Earl McCullough talking about Willie Davenport. Indeed that seems to be the case. Willie holds a 6-0 advantage. The end of that streak comes on Sunday, July 16 in the Pan Am Trials.          
Earl McCullough
    There is a false start charged to McCullough. This doesn't seem to lessen his explosiveness the next time. Earl, as quick as starter as God has put on this earth, is out well, though he comments later, “It was not a good start”. The writer of this story reports that “Davenport was gaining at the end”.
    If those facts are true, McCullough was doing some real good hurdling in between, for Earl the Pearl* wins by four yards and ties the world-record of 13.2 in the doing. Davenport is second at 13.6 and Ron Copeland third in 13.9.
Willie Davenport
Ron Copeland

    Many of you are undoubtedly wondering whether this is a metric or yard record....or is it both? This leads to the question which is longer, 110 meters or 120 yards and by how much? Thoroughness is the watchword at Once Upon a Time in the Vest. The research department on floors eight and nine here at the OUTV Building have been investigating this question for several days now. I have been assured that the answer will appear at the conclusion of this report.
    Other results are less spectacular as many of the top level guys are skipping the Pan Am Games in favor of the European tour. Notable marks are Ron Whitney's 49.6 400IH, Ed Caruthers' 7-2 HJ and John Carlos' 20.4 200.

PAN AMERICAN GAMES Winnipeg, Canada July 29 – August 5


    When roll is called, the missing include Jim Hines, Charlie Greene, Jim Ryun, Art Walker, Tommie Smith, Gerry Lindgren and Ed Burke. Still, our boys sweep 200, 400, 1500, 5000, steeplechase, both hurdles, high jump, long jump, shot put, javelin, discus and both relays. Of the 35 events in the men's and women's competition, the US takes 30 gold medals. Canada wins three and Cuba two. Spectators tire of hearing the Star Spangled Banner.  
Pan Am Medal


University of Manitoba stadium, home of the track meet
on the Plains


      Extra Credit:  Name the River flowing beside the Pan Am Games track.
      Answer at bottom of page.


Lee Evans
    Between 11,000 and 18,000 Winnipegians deserve medals for showing up each day and enduring weather which varies between heat and wind-blown rain with temps that vary 30 degrees.
Prince Philip, honorary Winnipegian , enduring the weather.
    The 400 is delayed 20 minutes by a flash storm, but wind and sun help dry the track and a pretty good race follows. Lee Evans and Vince Matthews are even coming into the straight where Evans pulls away for a 44.9 PR, two tenths up on Matthews. Canada's Don Domansky takes third in a PR equalling 45.1.
    Van Nelson is doing his St. Cloud State classmates proud. He spots Canada's Dave Ellis 25 yards in the last lap of the 10,000 but runs him down with a 59.8 finish to win in 29:17.4 in 85 degree weather. Four days later in the 5000 he is blessed with temps in the mid 50's. He follows Lou Scott's pace through two miles in 8:55 before moving away for an easy 13:47.4 win. Scott just edges Mexico's Juan Martinez for second, 13:54.0 for both. Scott arrived late for the meet and hasn't been training recently. Instead he has been staying inside, out of harm's way, specifically the riots in his hometown of Detroit. Okay, Lou, we'll let you slide this time.
    Bill Toomey wins the decathlon by 700 points with 8044, his third time over 8000.
Bill Toomey at Winnepeg
    The 400 relay has to present a moral dilemma for Earl McCullough. He is leading off a team composed of Jerry Bright, Ron Copeland and Willie Turner that had bettering the world record of 38.6 as its goal. Alright, go get 'em Earl. But wait a minute, that record was just set by McCullough's USC team of Fred Kuller, OJ Simpson and Lennox Miller. As Earl is settling into the blocks, he is facing the conundrum of erasing his buddies from the list of world record holders. These are the guys with whom he runs the Coliseum steps, has towel snapping exchanges in the locker room, trains with in the off season and jokes with on bus rides. The instant the gun is fired, Earl will be attempting to deprive his pals of their place at the top of the track and field world.
    Familial integrity be damned. Earl's start indicates that he hasn't been silently humming “Fight On” (for old SC) during the starter's commands. His pass to Bright is crisp but the second pass to Copeland is slow. Willie Turner holds off a surprising Cuban team 39.0 to 39.2. An awkward greeting when OJ picks Earl up at LAX has been averted.
Not the first time Jerome and Turner have met
    In the 100 Harry Jerome is out early but is caught at the tape by Willie Turner. The judges examine the Omega Phototimer for 20 minutes before declaring Jerome the winner by .001.

    John Carlos is out early in the 200 and breezes to a 20.5 win, four tenths ahead of Jerry Bright.

    Alert readers (we have no other kind) may be asking where the usual Caribbean sprint talent is. Wendell Motley and George Kerr have retired and Lennox Miller and Edwin Roberts have deemed summer school more important.  Oh really!  ed. 

    Now it is the high hurdles. McCullough false starts once, putting the first match with Willie Davenport since Earl's world record in doubt. The second time Earl is out early and leads by four feet at the fifth hurdle. Willie closes but Earl picks up the win 13.4 to 13.5.

    Ron Whitney is disappointed with his 50.7 in the intermediates. He thought he had broken 50 “but was misled by the springiness of the Tartan track” . Hey, we just report. We don't 'splain. Russ Rogers runs 51.3.

    The middle distances are tactical. Wade Bell holds off Bill Crothers in the 800 1:49.2 to 1:49.9. In the 1500, Canadian Dave Bailey, who ran a 3:57.7 mile just two weeks earlier, leads the field through two laps in 2:05.0. He picks up the pace to 3:04.7 but succumbs to the finish of Tom Von Ruden and Sam Bair who go 1-2 in 3:43.4 and 3:44.1 with Bailey eight tenths back.

    Big Eight rivals Chris McCubbins of Oklahoma State and Conrad Nightengale of Kansas State are the class of the steeplechase field. After a fast early pace, Nightengale succumbs to the heat and McCubbins pulls away to win in a PR and collegiate record of 8:38.2, a clocking that ranks him second in US history. Nightengale is 13 seconds behind.

Of note.   Chris McCubbins would meet the girl of his dreams, a Canadian by birth , and he too would become a Canadian and represent Canada at the next Pan Am meet and in Montreal in 1976. Today there is a cross country trail in Winnipeg bearing his name.  ed.



    Ed Caruthers outjumps Otis Burrell 7-2¼ to 7-1. Bob Seagren survives the hampering wind to vault 16-1. Ralph Boston scores his second 27 foot jump of the year by 2½ inches. Randy Matson and Neil Steinhauer place the expected first and second but their marks are sub-par (for them), 65-3¾ and 63-9¾. Charlie Craig rides an aiding wind to a 54-3¼ triple jump win. The wind also effects the discus but Gary Carlsen once again handles Rink Babka 188-7 to 187-7.

AMERICAS vs. EUROPE Montreal August 9-10
    As proved by the success of the USSR – USA series, if you want a crowd, you need a national rivalry enhanced by nuclear weapons. Americas versus Europe doesn't light the competitive fire in the Quebecois. Only 8000 attend the two days.

    Not to lessen Europe's 109-100 victory, but this is a meet best described as forgettable. Yes, there is some good competition but most of it is between teammates.

    Vince Matthews can finally hang Lee Evan's scalp from his belt. He is out well and leads by seven yards at the 200. Evans closes the margin to two yards as they enter the stretch. This time Matthews runs through the tape and wins by a tenth in 45.0.

    Earl McCullough's recent dominance of Willie Davenport ends at two meets. He doesn't get his usual rocket start and Davenport wins by a tenth in 13.6. Italy's Eddie Ottoz is third with 13.7 as well.

    US steeplechase duo of McCubbins and Nightengale faces a real test in Hungary's Istvan Joni and England's Maurice Harriott, both sub 8:33 guys. Not to worry as far as McCubbins is concerned. He leaves the Europeans 10 seconds in his wake in 8:44.8. Nightengale falls on a water jump and  finishes in 9:01.2 .
Roger Bambuck


    Roger Bambuck of France runs 10.2 to drop Willie Turner in the 100 but is handled easily in the 200 by John Carlos 20.5 to 20.8.

    This meet is one Ralph Boston won't forget for a long time. For the first time since 1961 he finishes worse than second. His 26-0 is bettered by Bob Beamon's 26-4½ and Lynn Davies' 26-3½ . Former world record holder Bob Seagren doesn't fair even that well. He misses three times at the opening height of 16-0¾. France's Herve D'Encausse wins at 17-0¾.
Herve D'Encausse
    Intense investigation by our crack team of researchers reveals the following: Jim Ryun's mom works at the Sears and Roebuck store in Wichita where she is often asked for her autograph........As long as we are on the subject, the world record holder whose name Ryun erased from the record book is doing quite well without track. Herb Elliot is only 29 but he has been busy since retiring. He is married with five children, is an oil company executive and confines his athletic endeavors to golf where he shoots in the low 90s.....At an all comers meet July 19 one entrant in the novice 880 drew good natured cat calls. Derision turned to amazement in two minutes and half a second, the time it took Bob Seagren to complete two laps. When asked if he had run before, Seagren replied, “Yes, I ran four miles this morning.” Is 2:00.5 the record for a pole vaulter? No. Jim Eshelman holds the PV/880 record of 1:59.8. The mentally acute among us are probably wondering whether Bob could have bettered Jim's time if he had skipped the morning run...…..We always try to have a tidbit for our technically inclined readers. This one is in the form of a question. The NCAA requires a two second interval between “set” and the firing of the gun. What is the prescribed interval in AAU and IAAF meets? You don't know? Don't feel bad. No one else does either. All either organization requires is that all athletes must be motionless before the gun is fired. Now you are armed in case this comes up at the dinner table tonight.

    Now to our question of the relative length of the 120 yard and 110 meter hurdles. Which is longer and by how much?.....Yes, you in the blue bathrobe sitting in the recliner with a cup of coffee......That's right, 110 meters is longer by 10¾ inches. Therefore McCullough's metric record also counts for yards.

Answer:  110 meters  = 120.297 yards      or 120 yards 10.7 inches

    Don't want to give anything away, but those tidbits just mentioned about the relative length of the hurdle races and the interval after “set” just might come up Friday in our meeting at the Dew Drop Inn. Six o'clock. Come prepared.

* And now re the McCullouch reference early in our report.
    Q: Has there ever been an Earl who wasn't referenced as Earl the Pearl?
    (Even the fat kid in the fourth grade was Earl the Pearl).

Geography Question:   River flowing through Winnipeg?        The Red River

V8 N. 13 August 1967

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SPAAU DECATHLON

      In keeping with our chronological format we need to report on an obscure meet in Southern California before addressing the US team's whirlwind tour of Europe. The Southern Pacific Association of the Amateur Athletic Union decathlon, held on Aug. 11-12 in Culver City, has produced the country's newest young multi-event star.                  
Anaheim HS


    UCLA pole vaulter Rick Sloan decides to take a shot at the decathlon and hits the bullseye with 7869 points to rank #5 in the world, #2 in the US and #5 on the all time US list. His 16-5 vault ties the best ever in a decathlon. He also high jumps 6-9½. As good as these marks are, it is his poorest event that is the most encouraging, a javelin throw of only 115-9, the result of an elbow injury. He has thrown 175 in practice. On today's scoring table that would represent a difference of 250 points. We'll keep an eye on Rick.

FYI
Rick Sloan was runner-up in the 1969 AAU decathlon. He competed for UCLA and the Southern Cal Striders. Sloan was the first UCLA athlete to clear 7-0 in the high jump and was also an All-American in the pole vault. He captained the Bruin track team as a senior and was the fourth American to surpass 8,000 points in the decathlon. He was ranked second in the United States in 1968 and 1969 in the decathlon, and ranked 10th in the world in 1969.
After college Sloan became a track coach, starting at the California Institute of Technology and Pasadena City College in 1972. He later coached at Mt. San Antonio Junior College (Mt. SAC) before moving to Washington State University in 1973 as an assistant coach. He was made associate head coach at WSU in 1982 and head coach of the men's team in 1994. In 1995, Sloan was named head coach of the men's and women's teams for the Cougars, holding those positions for almost 20 years, before retiring in 2014.  
Personal Bests: 100  10.7 (1967); 400  48.6 (1967); 110H 15.2 (1967); HJ  2.14 (7-0½) (1968); LJ 6.93 (22-9) (1967); PV 5.08 (16-8) (1967); DT  47.34 (155-4) (1967); JT  63.50 (208-4) (1969); Dec  7951 (1969).
Sports Reference

US vs. GREAT BRITAIN AUGUST 12

    On the day that Sloan is finishing his first decathlon, the US vs. Great Britain meet is taking place in London's famed White City Stadium. The crowd of 35,000, the largest to attend a track meet in England since 1958, witnesses the US administer the worst defeat ever suffered by a British national team, 130-84.* The severity is better emphasized by the Americans winning 19 of 21 events.

US v Great Britain 1967 and Emsley Carr Mile  Clik Here

    The feature event is the Emsley Carr Invitational Mile matching Jim Ryun and Kip Keino. This pairing produced a world record last month in Los Angeles. This time however, a slow early pace dooms any hope of a repeat. Recent evidence would indicate that Keino has no chance of out-kicking Ryun in a tactical race, yet the Kenyan appears to think otherwise, allowing the first lap to be run in 60.7. The second lap passes in 62.3 (2:03.0) with Ryun taking the lead. The pace picks up to 59.2 and three laps go by in 3:02.2. Entering the final lap Ryun leads. Britian's John Whetton is second with Keino a couple yards back. Keino moves up on Ryun's elbow on the backstretch but that is only the signal for the Kansan to take off, essentially ending the race. His 53.8 final lap produces a ten yard victory in 3:56.0. Keino is second in 3:57.4.

    Keino demonstrates naivete in his post race comments. “I had no plan. I didn't want to go to the front and was hoping to come through very fast, but I was a bit too far behind at the start of the last lap.” Don't feel bad, Kip, there is no plan that will beat Ryun.

Keino obviously went back to the drawing board and came up with a different plan at the altitude influenced Olympic Games the following year.  ed.

    The long jump matches world-record holder and Olympic champion Ralph Boston against Olympic champion Lynn Davies and the man who beat them both three days ago, Bob Beamon. The wind produces erratic results. Beamon has trouble getting his step and has only one legal jump, a 26-0¼. Davies opens with 26-2 which Boston immediately tops by half an inch. There things stand until the fifth round in which Boston adds an inch.  (see video above)

    The crowd exhorts Davies as the Welshman prepares for his final jump. Showing the resolve that earned Olympic gold, Davies pops a 26-7¼ to end his day in first place. Unfortunately for him and the majority of the crowd, Boston has one jump remaining. It is not wasted. Ralph hits the board perfectly and lands with a measurement of 26-10¾. Not that it matters this day, but now the Olympic champions' rivalry stands Boston 7, Davies 3. We look forward to their next get together.

    The 800 is a much anticipated race. Wade Bell has been dominant this year but he is up against European 880 record holder John Boulter. The pace dawdles early, resulting in a 55.5 400. Bell's m.o. this season has been a long kick home started midpoint on the backstretch. Today is no different. Once the Oregon Duck shifts gears it is all over. Boulter has no chance. Bell wins by half a second in 1:49.6.

    Steeplechaser Pat Traynor has developed an affinity for international competition. His competition this day is Olympic silver medalist Maurice Herriott. No knee knocking for Pat. He moves courageously on the penultimate lap to open a 50 yard gap and win easily in a PR of 8:38.2.
Maurice Herriott
Pat Traynor

Herriott and Basil Heatley


Herriott , a motor cycle fitter who had to fit in his three training sessions a day while working a 45-hour week was technically superb in his clearance of hurdles and the water jump. Consistency personified, he came very close to his UK record in 1966  and 1967. One record that has remained intact, and may for eternity, is his collection of eight AAA steeplechase titles between 1959 and 1967. He retired following the 1968 Olympics and has for many years lived on the beautiful Isle of Man.

What?  Herriott was assembling motorcycles and in his spare time worked out three times a day to be world class in the steeplechase?  Definitely not the playing fields of Eton.
    
Van Nelson continues to impress. His 57.2 last go round gives him a six second 10.000 victory over England's Mike Freary in a collegiate record 28:48.2. He is now #2 on the all time US list, trailing only Billy Mills. Tom Laris also PRs with 28:59.8 in third.
   
  Last month in Los Angeles Hans Joachim Walde handled Bill Toomey easily in the decathlon. Today Lee Evans felt a muscle twinge and is opting out of the 4 x 4. Who wants to volunteer? We can picture an “Oooh, oooh, pick me, pick me” moment as Toomey raises his hand and jumps up and down. His 46.7 lead off leg gives indication that Bill is ready for Hans when they meet in Dusseldorf four days hence. Stay tuned.
Toomey with Kurt Bendlin?

* The opening paragraph of this T&FNews report, written by Brit Mel Watman contains the following sentence. “A superb US squad rolled up 130 points against the hosts' 84, a whopping 55 point margin.” 130 - 84 = 55? Hmmm. Once again our research department is on the job. After a week of intensive study, they've nailed it. It's a British thing. If the following apply, loo = bathroom, bonnet = hood, lift = elevator, lorry = truck, solicitor = lawyer, windscreen = windshield, chips = french fries, telly = TV, then certainly 55 = 46. The director of research earned a generous bonus for his department's work.

We are not going to get into debating the merits of a British 'public' school education vs. an American public school education.  One must remember that Roy was for many years a middle school teacher and stickler for punctuality, precision, and the importance of the three R's.  His uncanny knowledge of track stats is to be admired and provides an insight into his passion for this blog. ed.

US vs. WEST GERMANY AUGUST 16-17

    Pat Traynor and Tom Laris ran impressive, but short lived, PRs against Great Britain only five days ago. No one expects another breakthrough in Dusseldorf.

    Not only does Traynor win and drop his PR again, he takes George Young's national record in the doing. Traynor is unpressed in winning the steeplechase in 8:32.8.
Tom Laris

    A lot is asked of Laris. His third place PR earlier in the week, gives no indication of today's 10K performance. As he toes the starting line, he has not won a major race all year. Twenty-eight minutes, thirty-three and four tenths seconds later this has changed. His remarkable 26.4 second improvement is too much for Gerry Lindgren who has to settle for clipping 8 seconds off Van Nelson's five day old collegiate record with a 28.40.2 effort. Laris and Lindgren are now #3 and #7 on this season's world list.

Dartmouth College  Tom Laris ’62 was IC4A and Heptagonal champion in track and cross country. In 1967 he was second in the Boston marathon, ranked ninth in the world in the 10,000 meters with the fourth fastest time. He was an Olympian in the 10,000 meters in the 1968 games. He majored in history and lives in Los Altos Hills, Calif. He is currently an independent licensed security broker and trader.

    Bill Toomey does indeed gain revenge from West German rival Hans Joachim Walde, winning the decathlon with 7939 points.
Ryun Leading Tummler



    Highly regarded Bodo Tummler is no match for Jim Ryun. The Kansas star leaves the pack behind at 800 and coasts to an unpressed 3:38.2 1500 win over Tummler 3:42.3, Harold Norpoth 3:42.5 and Jim Grelle 3:42.8.

    Vince Matthews' 400 win over Lee Evans can no longer be classified as an upset. Both run 45.3, Matthews' third in a row over Evans.

    Yes, there were upsets along the way. Russ Rogers ends teammate Ron Whitney's 11 meet win streak in the 400 hurdles, edging the national champ 50.5 to 50.6. Wade Bell has been unbeatable this season, but today when he shifts gears on the backstretch, instead of overdrive he finds neutral and finishes fourth in 1:48.8 well behind Franz-Josef Kemper's 1:46.2.
Kemper at another meet running 1:44.9
    New world record holder Earl McCullough has step troubles and “abandons the chase at the seventh barrier”. Willie Davenport wins in 13.6.

US vs ITALY AND SPAIN AUGUST 19-20

    The bright lights in the background are those of Viareggio, Italy. Our lads are winding up the European tour with a two day double duel with Italy and Spain.

    There are ups and downs. John Carlos experiences both, winning the 100 in a personal best of 10.2 then finishing last in the 200 in 22.3. The latter is an “oh, shit” moment for big John. He thinks Livio Berruti will be called back for a false start. He isn't. Belatedly Carlos takes off after the field but can only get fourth. Jerry Bright wins in 20.7.

    Conrad Nightengale PRs with a 8:40.0 steeplechase win but Pat Traynor has gone to the well once too often. After consecutive PRs, he drags in last in 9:10.8.

    The top field event mark belongs to Dick Railsback who vaults 17-0¾, only a quarter inch shy of his third place ranking on the world list.

    Randy Matson is firmly ensconced in the “down” category. He throws only 65-5¾ and is topped by three inches by teammate Neil Steinhauer. Determined to end the trip on a positive note, the next day he competes in the discus but his 186-1 falls two feet short of that of Italy's Silvano Simeon. Considering that he started the year at 213-9, Randy isn't likely to be in a jovial mood on the plane trip home.

Joining Pat and Randy in the down in the dumps club are Charlie Craig who can only triple jump 48-4¾ for last and Wade Bell who produces a disappointing 1:50.4 for fourth in the 800.
Ron Whitney (L)

    Two streaks end in the 400 hurdles. Ron Whitney puts the misery of his one meet losing streak behind him, defeating European champ Roberto Frinolli 49.6 to 50.7, thus terminating the Italian's three year winning streak.

    Jim Ryun sticks his toe in the 5000 meter water with mixed results. Tracy Smith beats him 13:41.0 to 13:44.8. The sting of losing his first race of the year is lessened by the fact that he is now #15 on the world list. Only seven Americans have run faster. Not bad for an initial effort.

    Oh, yeah, our boys win both meets, Italy 130-90 and Spain 136-76. How big those margins are in British score keeping we're not sure.
Gary Gubner

    The following gems have been gleaned from the last couple pages of this issue....Gary Gubner, now retired from shot putting to concentrate on weight lifting, has just set the American lifting record of 444 pounds. The detail left out by Dick Drake is the event.…...When he isn't busy being the world record holder in six events, Ron Clarke is a party animal. He works out three times a day and has an exercycle with an odometer and speedometer at home for those days he needs just a touch more. You know the feeling. If you are invited to a party at Ron's home, come well trained. Ron's idea of fun is breaking out the bike to see which guests ride the fastest. A couple more scotch & sodas, Ron, I'll have a go........There is no doubt Ralph Boston is a great long jumper but he isn't exactly on the JV squad in the other jumps where his bests are 13-9, 6-8½ and 52-1½ which, combined with his 27-4¾ LJ, make him the world's best all around jumper. Throw in a 9.6 100 and 13.7 hurdles marks and he could pretty much win a dual meet by himself.....Hum along with John Denver's “Thank God I'm a Country Boy” as you read the following comment by New Zealand discus thrower Les Mills.
Les Mills
“Gary Carlsen has country-boy strength". Country-boy strength is possessed by athletes like Jay Silvester and Randy Matson who are strong without lifting weights. Gary is liable to throw 220 feet next year........Russ Hodge provides an example of the dedication needed to compete at the world class level. On July 8 he underwent surgery to repair a ripped tendon below his right patella. Despite wearing a full length leg cast, he is swimming by early August. He plans to change his take off leg in the long jump and high jump from right to left and expects to compete next year.......Ron Clarke and his new best friend, Jim Ryun, have agreed to meet at a distance between their specialties. They will race at two miles in next year's Kansas Relays.....Speaking of Ron, he is the poster boy for genetic advantage. Older brother Jack gave indication that there might be some athletic talent in the Clarke family when, without training, he won the Victorian junior 880 in 2:00.1 in 1948. Oh, he was 14. Third in that race was 18 year old John Landy.


The next year Jack won the Victorian junior triple jump championship then never competed in track again. This is not to say he hung 'em up. He just found Australian rules football more to his liking. He enjoyed long playing and coaching careers and in 1996 was voted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame.........If Bill Toomey invites you to join him for breakfast or dinner, you might want to ask what's on the menu. It seems that Bill's every breakfast and many dinners are smoothies composed of liver tablets mixed up with eggs beaten up with skim milk, brewers yeast, bananas, salad oil and ice cream. Next time in Starbucks, ask for a Toomey.



V 8 N. 18 Orville Atkins, Canadian Running Legend R.I.P.

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Orville Atkins  (1937-2018)
Orville Atkins on left with Wilbur Williams and John Bork
David Bailey, Canada's first sub-four minute miler sent us a note today that his friend, Orville Atkins had passed away.   Would I please put some mention in our blog.  So here goes.



Orville Atkins was raised in the north of Ontario, not far from the taiga and tundra in a town called Timmons.  Not the best place to become a running legend and folk hero.  He eventually came south to study in Toronto and became  part of the pre running boom in the early 1960s as a member of the East York Track Club with fellow legends to be, Bruce Kidd, Bill Crothers, David Bailey and Coach Fred Foot being the most notable.  Orville was for awhile, Canada's best marathoner finishing high at Boston and winning the first Chicago marathon as well as the oldest race on the continent, the Round the Bay in Hamilton, Ontario.

I never met Orville, nor did I ever talk by phone, but we did correspond and trade stories on numerous occasions after this blog got underway.  I cannot remember how we first came in contact.  Orville wrote frequently on the Runners Lounge discussion group on Lets Run and also on a thread for Track and Field News.

In 1964 he and several friends moved to Los Angeles to train with the LA Track Club  and from there went on to watch the Tokyo Olympics.   I learned about this when a few years ago the chief statistician for the IAAF contacted us to see if we would provide him with the heat and lane assignments of all the runners in the 200 meters prelims.  I had no idea where that might be found, but I forwarded his request to Orville.  In no time, Orville came back with the information.  He had his program from the meet, and he had written down all that information as it occurred.  He also mentioned that as he was in the stands it looked like a heavy rain was about to fall and he recommended to the somewhat older lady sitting next to him that perhaps she would be wise to return to the hotel before the rain cut loose.   She replied that she could not.  She was waiting to see the finals of the 5000 meters as her son was running in that race.  She was Bob Schul's mother.

Orville once sent me copies of all of East York TC's workouts.  My computer crashed with that  information, and I was never able to retrieve it.  But in looking over several places on the internet today I began finding clues and traces of his writings and some of those workouts.  Below are a few links if you are willing to explore. 
Orville in the lead pack at Boston 1962

Here are some of the other tracks that Orville has left behind, and I hope that you all find some joy looking through them. 

Keep Running the Good Race, Orville,

George Brose

Orville Atkins views of the sport  This piece by Orville appeared in the blog Run Westchester by Joe Garland.

A few of Orville's commentaries on Lets Run

What Orville's friends are now saying about him on Lets Run 

Runner    This piece by the Canadian Film Board features the East York Track Club and specifically Bruce Kidd.  Orville can be seen only briefly at 5:04 min. in the film about third place on the curb in dark shorts.  The quality and clarity for the age are exceptional, and it can bring back the mystique of running in a group at practice.  The 2 mile race at the end is the least important and the commentary is off the rails not mentioning the lead runner for the first mile, but again you can almost feel the heat and the dry cinders in your shoes and see a race almost sixty years ago in North America surrounded on all sides by spectators intently interested.  Not a smart phone in site.
This is where Orville appears briefly in the film 'Runner'  dark shorts on curb


An old clipping of one of Orville's many wins


John Bork mentioned Orville today on FB
My great friend & marathoner, Orville Atkins , passed away on Sunday 2/25/18 . I was able to be with him here in Camarillo just an hour before his passing. Orville was one time Canadian Marathon Champion with East York Track Club & 5th place in the 1962 Boston Marathon. Winner of the very first Chicago Marathon. Orville completed over 40 Marathons. I had the pleasure of coaching Orville to his best times in 1966-1968 after we both left the LA Track Club. In recent years Orville & I had many enjoyable lunches together at Coogies Resturant in Santa Monica!

This morning, David Bailey sent this remembrance.
Hi George,
It is the middle of the night and I cannot sleep thinking about Orville.
So, I got up and wrote something for your blog.
I tried to add it to the comments section but am not certain it will get posted.
So, I thought that I would also send it to you to be certain that it would be.
Thanks so much for the great piece that you did on Orville with such short notice.
All the best,
David


I have known Orville since the summer of 1961 at my first workout with the East York Track Club.  Back then I was a somewhat overweight 16-year-old trying to fit in.  He was kind and encouraging.  I was sad when he decided to move to Los Angeles to train under Mikeal Igloi a few years later.  Yet, we stayed in touch.  I remember how genuinely pleased and excited he was for me when I ran my first sub-4 mile.   Years later beginning in the mid-1980s, we would get together when he would be in my home town of London, Ontario to visit his sister.  We would pick up as if our running days were yesterday.  My son Scott, who was in high school at the time, commented on our comradery and expressed how he hoped to find this kind of friendship in his life.  If there is one thing that I remember about Orville, it would be his infectious laugh.  It would usually be the result of stories about himself.  These included how he would be training so hard that he would have to go to the washroom at work to take a nap sitting on the toilet.  Another one was the time that Igloi told Orville that he was the only person that he had ever seen with no running talent.  That may be true but he made up for it with heart and extraordinary work habits.  How else do you end up finishing 5th in the Boston Marathon. Thank you for being in my life.  You are well remembered.

David Bailey



Dear John and George:

I was really sorry to hear about Orville's passing.

Although I did not know him on a personal basis, we had corresponded by email and I remember seeing him win that first Chicago Marathon.  I always found him to be a friendly and knowledgeable gentleman.

Good men are hard to find.  It is extra sad when we lose one.

Take care,

Tom Coyne




   You can tell from the comments about Orville Atkins that he was truly a good and decent person.  Also a superior runner even if Igloi said he had no talent.  I suspect he had talent in his unseen muscles and capillaries.     Bill

V8 N. 19 Sir Roger Bannister R.I.P.

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Sir Roger Bannister (1929-2018) R.I.P.


March 4, 2018

On May 6, 1954, Roger Bannister, an English medical student, with the help of two of his training partners, Chistopher Chattaway and Christopher Brasher, and their advisor/coach Franz Stampl,  an Austrian who had been interned in England during World War II, pulled off  the single most significant event in our sport or any sport for that matter in our lifetime.  

In today's New York Times  Frank Litsky and Bruce Weber make a good attempt, with the help of a Sports Illustrated quote, to describe Roger Bannister in a short paragraph. 


Tall and lanky with a long, forceful stride and a blond head that usually bobbed above his competitors’ in a race, Bannister was a gentleman athlete with a philosophical turn of mind. He was a quiet, unassuming champion, a character of a type that has seemingly vanished in the modern era of sports celebrity. Sports Illustrated called him “among the most private of public men, inexhaustibly polite, cheerfully distant, open and complex.”

At the age of 88, Sir Roger's health had clearly been in decline.  As a neurologist, he knew well what he faced with Parkinson's Disease, just as he knew well what he faced in attempting to run the first sub-four minute mile.  

His fame might have been fleeting, with John Landy breaking his record only a few weeks later, but he would soon show his strength.  His seeming failure in not medalling in the 1952 Helsinki Olympics, when a nation's hopes were on his shoulders, was followed by three  highly significant races, the first sub-four minute mile, the European Championship 1500, and the Miracle Mile against  Landy in the Empire and Commonwealth Games in Vancouver.  Clearly Roger Bannister  demonstrated his tenacity and courage behind that pleasant persona that he always conveyed.

In my own history, I recall vividly in 1954 when it was announced on the Today Show that the first four minute mile had been run.  I knew nothing about track and field, but it seemed that something of importance had indeed occurred.  Then about a year later a documentary film of that race at Iffley Road, Oxford, was shown at our school.  (See Below) The fact that the race was filmed from start to finish at a seemingly insignificant meeting says that certain people knew well what was about to happen.  I can remember too the close up of Bannister when he took off passing Chattaway, and his image filled the screen in close up for the last three hundred yards.  The speed seemed impossible, and I couldn't conceive of how someone could sustain such a physical effort for so long.  Although I still had dreams of becoming a basketball player, new information was filed in my brain, and when I failed at basketball, I still had uncharted paths to explore.   Though a four minute mile was never in my repetoire, I have Sir Roger Bannister to thank for setting me off in a new direction.  

Thank you , Sir Roger

George Brose

The First Four Minute Mile  Clik Here


I expected this.  Another link to the past is gone.  One that provides me with many memories from watching him run in London in 1952 to meeting him ( and Landy) in Victoria at the 1994 Commonwealth Games.  He probably had an influence on every person involved in track from that seminal day in 1954 until today.  Regards.  Geoff


thanks, George, a pleasant memory.  funny that of the 3 Bannister was the only one who did not get an olympic medal.  Dick Trace



Great job, George.  I remember it the same way.  Something significant, something seemingly impossible, something that crossed a magical barrier happened that day  but I was in no position to appreciate the full impact.  Roy



George,
   I had the honor of speaking with him in 1976 at the T&F News hospitality room near the stadium.  He was very British but walked with a limp the result of a traffic accident.  He certainly took the time with an insignificant track fan just as one might expect of him.     Bill


George:

Well penned tribute to Sir Roger Bannister.  I remember when he beat Landy in Vancouver, and both ran under 4 minutes.
The Seattle Times had a photo taken at or near the finish line and I recall Landy looked over his left shoulder as Bannister passed him on the right.
  
Hope life is treating you well this winter.  I can’t wait for Spring and Summer and warmer weather.

Regards,

Jim Allen

V 8 N. 20 September , 1967

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    The party is pretty much over for US athletes this year. With the end of the European tour, all that remains is our minimal participation in the World Student Games in Tokyo August 30 - September 4.
Tommy Smith
    Ron Whitney completes a marvelous season in the 400 hurdles with his 16th win in 17 meets. His 49.8 gives him the gold by four tenths over England's John Cooper.
Ron Whitney

John Cooper
(Cooper was killed in the Turkish Airlines Flight 981 crash outside of ParisFrance on March 3, 1974.)

Gaoussou Kone

 Gary Carlsen's 196-4 discus throw puts him 15 feet up on the competition. Tommie Smith loses the 100 to Gaoussou Kone of the Ivory Coast but returns to win the 200 in 20.7. Neil Steinhauer wins the shot at 62-11½ and takes third in the discus at 174-5. Van Nelson leads the 5000 and 10,000 until the final straight where he is out-sprinted by home town hero Keisuke Sawaki both times. An injured left arch leaves Wade Bell in sixth (1:48.9) far behind Australian Ralph Doubell's 1:46.7.
Ralph Doubell
Ron Copeland takes second to Italy's Eddy Ottoz in the hurdles 13.9 to 14.0. This has been a season of ups and downs for vaulter Bob Seagren (bad pun intended). A world record 17-7 crowned his early season, but this meet ends it at 15-9.
    The lack of emphasis the US has placed on this meet is evident in the the 400 relay where a makeshift team of Smith, Whitney, Copeland and....wait for it......Seagren places fifth in 40.7.
Ralph Boston
Randy Matson
    On the other side of the world, Ralph Boston, Dick Railsback and Randy Matson are going through the motions in Sweden. In a 15 day period Matson wins nine competitions with marks between 63-11¼ and 65-4¼, a far cry from his world record 71-5½ earlier in the year. Railsback wins five meets with a best vault of 16-6¾. Boston doesn't do as well. Competing with an unspecified injury, he wins only four of seven meets with a best of 24-4¼.
    This is not to say there isn't competition at home. Most of it is of the all comers variety. Surprisingly, shot putter Dave Davis has returned from retirement and, without benefit of significant competition, has posted a lifetime best of 64-8 ½. Good to see you back, Dave.
    In our last report we told you of Rick Sloan's amazing decathlon debut. His 7869 points place him sixth in the world this year and sixteenth on the all time list. Now we have further details. The August issue of T&FN had the meet in Culver City. The correct location is the track at venerable Mt. San Antonio College. We can forgive this error because, on July 14-15 in the SPAAU Championships in Culver City, he got through the first day in impressive fashion before dropping out with an elbow injury which kept him from throwing the javelin. His 7869 came four weeks later on August 11-12 in the SPAAU Invitational. His marks this day in smoggy, 95 degree conditions are 10.7, 22-5, 44-0½, 6-9½, 48.6 and 15.2, 155-4½, 16-5, 115-9, 4:28.6. The 20 year old UCLA junior works with assistant coach Ken Shannon in field events and head coach Jim Bush in running events.



Payton Jordan

    Bits and pieces: Stanford head coach Payton Jordan has been selected as the head coach for the US Olympic team next year.....You have to love Bill Toomey. In an unreported meet in London he won the 400 in 47.4 then returned to place second in the intermediates in 53.2. 
Bill Toomey
Reports that he helped the maintenance crew sweep up after the meet are not true......All fifty states contest the traditional 100, 200, high jump, etc, but some events are not conducted in state meets nationally. If you attend the state meet in Indiana or Michigan with hopes of seeing the discus, you will be disappointed. The javelin is contested in 19 states and the triple jump in 10. The event with the greatest growth is the 2 mile which is included in 23 state meets. Six years ago it was run in only two states. If you can guess who these innovators are, you are really, really good. We'll let you ponder this until the end of this report....
Dyrol Burleson


Several readers have asked about the picture of Dyrol Burleson.  It was taken last year in Turner, OR at Cascade HS when he addressed some to the Cascade students.  The article is from the Statesman Journal electronic news.  Written by Jusin Much.  
Dyrol Burleson Article    Clik here.   There are some glaring innacurracies which any of our older readers will catch.  We choose not to go into them.   Ed.

Is Dyrol Burleson back in the game? Maybe. The ex-Oregon great has been maintaining fitness on a 50 mile per week regimen but is now doubling that in preparation for an attempt at making the Olympic team.....George Young is also on the 100m/wk plan in preparation for the Olympics, a quest dependent on whether a bleeding ulcer remains dormant. He says he was in top shape in April when the ulcer kicked up and forced him to curtail training.........
Morgan Groth
Half miler Morgan Groth has nine months left in the Marines. Having been assured he will not be going to Viet Nam, he is considering reenlisting if he will be assigned to the west coast so that he can train under the guidance of his Oregon State coach, Sam Bell, now the head man at Cal.....



Sam Bell
.Want to catch up on track in Louisiana? You can do so by requesting a free copy of “Louisiana Track and Field”. The address: 1525 Lowerline Street, New Orleans, LA 70118......And now the answer you have been waiting for. The two states that had the two mile in their state meet in 1961 are Georgia and Maine. But then you probably already knew that. 

This just in from Tom Trumpler:  He has added additional information about that quiz on how many states ran the 2 mile back in the day.  I am adding Roy's name to his letter.

George (and Roy), another state was California, which first contested the two mile run at the state track & field championships in 1965.

- Ralph Gamez of Berkeley H.S. had the honor of being the first 2-mile champ, and he also repeated in 1966.
- The attached JPG pic of the results (from Bill Peck's great book on the history of the Cal State T&F meets 1915-2006) notes that the temperature was 90+ degrees.
  That is true, but on the track the temperature was 100+ degrees, and driving around Bakersfield that afternoon, all the temperature displays at commercial    buildings were hovering at 103-104 degrees.
- A second footnote declares -- "Mike Ryan (Wilcox H.S., CC) ran 8:57.8 on November 7, 1964 for an all-time California HS best."
 - Because of the November date, with a 2-mile run on a track, this most likely was recorded during the 5-man 2-mile time trial for T&F News "Postal National Cross Championship."
  - So, George (and Roy)  are asking  "Why didn't young Mr. Ryan run the 2-mile?"
     - In the 1960's, California state rules did not allow an athlete to run 2 distance races in the same meet.  Athletes like Mike Ryan and Tim Danielson may well have excelled in two races, even at the state meet, but they had to choose one of three races: the 880, mile or 2 mile.
   -  So, then, George asks "Well, which event did Tim Danielson and Mike Ryan run in 1965?"
     - On this same hot Bakersfield track, Tim Danielson (junior from Chula Vista) became the 1965 state mile champ with Mike Ryan finishing second.

George (and Roy) a second attached JPG file shows the results from that same meet for the 880 -- a phenomenal battle on a sizzling hot track between Richard Joyce and hometown favorite Clark Mitchell, with Joyce prevailing in a then National HS Record of 1:48.8, and Mitchell taking the silver medal in 1:49.3. It was the greatest HS 880 race ever run.

- Also included for fun is a video summary of the 1965 Cal state two mile:
http://lynbrooksports.prepcaltrack.com/ATHLETICS/TRACK/1966_B4/65_2mi.mov

Thanks again for allowing us to relive these classic memories!
Tom Trumpler
Camarillo, CA
Hey Bucko,

Wonderful response Tom.    I too got caught up in your answer, and then when I reread Roy's question,  I noted that he referred to the number of states having the two mile in (1961) not 1967, the year of this particular replay.  While California started running the two mile in 1965, the question was about 1961.  This  was indeed confusing to all of us, except Roy.   George

Then from John Bork:
Trump:

Good stuff ....

And in that great  1965 - 880 Race won by Richard Joyce,  Greg Hall from Aviation didn't even
make the final.  What a great group of HS 880 men!

Didn't Rich Joyce contract "Gout" at USC which dramatically curtailed his running?

Also, worth noting than none of those outstanding 880 State Meet finalists went on to better things in college?

Sadly.

Buck

Aka: John Bork

Response from Tom Trumpler:

880 1965 Calif State Final:
- Greg Hall of Aviation HS did run in the 880 state final.
- See footnotes with prelims heat results at the bottom of the 880 JPG file.
- Greg Hall of Aviation placed 3rd in heat 1 with the same time (1:54.3) as Richard Joyce to qualify for the final.
- Greg ran slower than 1:53.6 in the final, so he just wasn't listed. The problem for Greg was that he went out with the leaders running a 54 second first lap (Joyce ran 54.0, 54.8). Then trying to hang with the leaders, in 100 degree heat, he fell back in the pack.
- Buck, interesting that you and I now live approx 750 feet from each other (on a direct line down the hill), and that Greg Hall now lives four miles from us on Blanchard Road off of Santa Rosa Road.

P.S. to George: One year later, John Bork became the cross country and track coach at Aviation High School, Redondo Beach, CA

*********



V 8 N. 21 October, 1967

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OCTOBER 1967

    The Pre-Olympic meet in Mexico City allowed those who participated to get a feel for competition at altitude. Combine 7349 feet with the end of season blahs and, while there were competitive races, only one significant mark was produced. That was a 27-4¾ long jump by Russia's Igor Ter-Ovanesyan which gave him a share of Ralph Boston's world-record. This wasn't entirely unexpected as he had a 27-6¾ practice jump on a previous day. He opened with a 27-4 before tying the record. Olympic champion Lynn Davies jumped 26-8, within two inches of his personal best. France's Jack Pani improved his career best by half an inch, taking third at 26-4¼ to edge US's Phil Shinnick, who tied his PR at 26-3½.
Igor Ter Ovanesyan
Lynn Davies and Ralph Boston

Jack Pani

Bob Beamon and Ter Ovanesyan

Phil Shinnick
    Does the altitude make a difference? Three PRs and an oh, so close, hmmm. Is a 28 footer possible next year? Okay, that is unlikely, but a high 27s could be in the books.
    Whereas jumpers were enthusiastic about competing at altitude, distance runners were in an experimental mode. The effect of the elevation had to be in the thoughts of every 10,000 entrant. The six non-altitude trained world class runners placing in the top seven were 1:52 to 2:31 slower than their bests. Tunisa's Mohamed Gammoudi held off East Germany's Jurgen Hasse by two tenths in 30:16.0.
Juergen Haase





Roelants in action

Mohammed Gammoudi

That race in Mexico City
Unidentified Mexican runner followed by
Haase and Gammoudi
For third place finisher Gaston Roelants of Belgium, this is the first of a challenging triple. The next day he returned to win the steeplechase in 8:57.8, the fastest ever at an altitude above 5000'.
    Here comes the part that may raise on eyebrow or two. What is supposed to be a 30K road race “reportedly” is a full marathon, yes, 26 miles 385 yards. Roelants wins in a surprising 2:19:37 to better the previous best at over 5000' by nearly 11 minutes. So far we are all buying this, right? Okay, here comes a tidal wave of doubt. Late in the race Gaston “claims” he walked for two kilometers. “Claims”? No one follows the runners throughout the race? He still wins by almost 2 ½ minutes.
Gaston Roelants
    No matter the distance, Gaston is one tough dude. Dick Drake writes, “He smashed out a front tooth when he slammed a bottle of soda water to his lips minutes before the race.” You are standing on the starting line holding a front tooth in your hand. What do you do with it? Being the tough guy that he is, we can only imagine he dropped it in his jock for safe keeping.
    One would think that the end of Randy Matson's season was met with rejoicing by the big guy. This was his 34th competition of the year so we can forgive him for a less than Matsonesque 65-2¼ considering that he won by 8 feet. Likely this meet wasn't high on his weekly to-do list. He flew down the night before the competition and left immediately after throwing, not waiting to pick up his medal. Something about attending classes.
Edmund Piatkowski
    The discus produced an interesting note. Poland's Emund Piatkowski won easily at 193-8, but it was second place finisher Namakoro Niare of Mali who set the record. His 186-4 was “the all time Negro record”.
Namakoro Niare
    How casual was this meet? In order to supply competition for the Polish 4x4 team, Ron Whitney and Bill Toomey teamed up with Canadian Brian McLaren and Italian HH winner Eddy Ottoz to form a feel good international bonding experience. The Poles won in 3:05.5 but Whitney and Toomey had splits of 45.5 and 45.3.
    As the rest of this issue is devoted to “HIGH SCHOOL WHERE ARE THEY GOING”, “JUNIOR COLLEGE WHERE ARE THEY GOING”, “PACING TRENDS IN THE 800”, “ELIGIBILITY CHANGES”, “ALL TIME DECATHLON LISTS”, “ATHLETES PREDICT U.S. TEAM” and “ALL TIME ALTITUDE RECORDS”, leaving us to fill the rest of this with tidbits and gossip.
    Hal Connolly, Perry O'Brien and Mike Larrabee are giving up the comfort of retirement for one last shot at the Olympics......Off the top of your head, who were the 5000 and 10,000 gold medal winners in the last Olympic Games (Tokyo)? That's right, Bob Schul and Billy Mills. Yep, they are back in training also.....Ever wonder how fast Kip Keino can run the 400? Fret no more.
Kip Keino cranking one
In the Zambian Championship last month, Kip won in 49.9 an hour before his 3:38.1 1500. No mention of why. Maybe just something to fill the time......
Five name athletes have competed for Verne Wolfe at North Phoenix HS. According to this issue of the magazine they are”Dallas Long, Tom Laris, Jim Brewer, Miles Lister and Miles Lister”. Okay, Miles Lister was good discus thrower, but one mention is enough. No idea who they left off. Here's an idea, let's check Wikipedia to see if Verne's page mentions them. I can only hope that you are sitting down. There is no Verne Wolfe page on Wikipedia. How can this be?
Vern Wolfe
Are we in a previously unknown alternative universe? Alert readers, the challenge is before you. Justice must be done. Who will wear the armor of knowledge to do battle with the forces of ignorance by writing Verne's page?.....There is a profile on Terry Thompson, Oregon State's half miler who placed second in this year's NCAA race. Terry takes three months off from training every summer to engage in a guilty pleasure, thereby missing prime opportunities to compete in major meets. He will skip training for next year's Olympic Games because of this indulgence. What is it? Drugs? Alcohol? Women? No, salmon. Terry is a commercial fisherman who owns his own boat.
Counselor Thompson


Terry Thompson
He is seldom on dry land during the summer. Terry grew up in Newport, Oregon where he attended Newport High his sophomore year before the family moved to Salem where he finished his last two years at South Salem. He attended the University of Missouri but the call of the sea was too much and he returned to complete his education at Oregon State. He has owned eight fishing boats and has been politically active on many boards, as a state representative and a Lincoln County supervisor.…....Don't know about the neighborhoods in which you have lived, dear reader, but your reporter has never run in areas where the following from the On Your Marks column was a significant problem. “Several British long distance runners who use a commons in southern London for training have complained about being approached by prostitutes. Says miler John Simpson 'I have been stopped several times and many of my friends have had their time trials completely ruined.'” Guess this depends on how you define “ruined”.

I just cannot visualize a working girl in high heels running as fast as a miler.  Ed.

V8 N. 22 Book Review on "The Complete History of Cross-Country Running, From the 19th Century to the Present Day"

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A Perfect Score: The Complete History of Cross Country Running


Book Review


By Paul O’Shea


Roberto Quercetani is one of track and field’s most respected figures.  Now ninety-five
years of age, in l950 the historian and journalist was a founding member of the
Association of Track and Field Statisticians, meticulous caretakers of the sport’s metrics.
Over a long career Quercetani wrote a number of books. Perhaps the most acclaimed is
Athletics: A World History of Modern Track and Field Athletics. The Italian author’s
other track and field titles focused on sprinting, the middle distances, milers, long
distance running, hurdles, and the throwing events. Roberto Quercetani never wrote a
history of cross country.


Now, an impressive new work by American author Andrew Boyd Hutchinson fills the
need: The Complete History of Cross-Country Running, From the Nineteenth Century to
the Present Day. (Amazon, 294 pages, $40)  published by Carrel Books. Hutchinson’s
book is a sweeping record, tracing the growth of the sport, decade by decade, from its
emergence in the early nineteenth century to the present.


“This is the first time a complete account of the sport of cross-country has been
compiled in one volume,” Hutchinson points out.  “Many other club histories,
anthologies, news reports and magazine articles contributed to the story, but this
attempt was definitive.”


Andrew Boyd Hutchinson grew up in San Francisco’s Bay Area, graduated from Lake
Forest College with a degree in philosophy, and later studied at Stanford University.  He
competed collegiately for Lake Forest and now runs in the USATF’s Cross Country
Grand Prix series. His personal best over eight kilometers cross country is 27:06. He
coached high school cross country in California, and is now a professional coach
affiliated with the Educated Running Network.  In addition to this, his first book, he has
written for Track and Field News and Meter Magazine.  


Beautifully designed and printed, the handsome hardcover could grace a coffee table.  
But you’d make a serious misjudgment to think The Complete History is all glamour,
and meager substance. Beginning in early1800 England, Hutchinson covers the
subsequent years fortified by thesis-like research (the bibliography alone consumes a
dozen pages).


Seasoned readers will reconnect with familiar names and races.  Others will benefit from
his ambitious, deep dive into more recent history.  He begins with the obscure but
perfectly named W.C. Cross, who won the 1867 Thames Handicap Steeplechase. At the
other bookend is Kenenisa Bekele, whose modern day record will not soon be surpassed.
Not meant for binge reading, the best reading plan is to dip into The Complete History at
intervals, sampling a decade or so at a sitting.
 
The book opens with a foreword by Craig Virgin, winner of the l980 and l981 IAAF
international cross country crowns, who takes his rightful place among the legends.  
Virgin himself was the subject of a recent biography by Randy Sharer: Virgin Territory:
The Story of Craig Virgin, America’s Renaissance Runner, also highly recommended.
Virgin calls Hutchinson’s The Complete History of Cross-Country Running“an incredible
compilation of sport-specific history.  The fact that he traces cross-country back to its
infant days in the early to mid-l800s in England is fascinating….To better understand the
past makes for a deeper appreciation of the present, and a wiser plan for the future of the
sport as well.”


“The first recorded evidence of cross-country running as a sport appeared at the dawn of
the Victorian Age,” Hutchinson points out.  “In the northwest Midlands of England,
rolling fields, and wet, marshy grassland cultured a schoolboy’s game that would
transform from a rebellious, spirited undertaking into one of the world’s most accessible
pastimes.”  
 
At an English academy as early as 1819 the lads took up a chase called Hare and
Hounds. These informal pursuits grew into more organized events and running clubs
formed.  Oxford University took part in its first interschool cross country race in 1850.

In the United States the first amateur cross country championship was held in 1883 when
nineteen runners started a 4.25-mile race in New York City. A thousand spectators
watched as sixteen men finished.
T.C. Hooks winning a university cross country race, England 1923
from 'Sportscape, The Evolution of Sports Photography" Phaidon Press 2000


From the mid-nineteenth to the turn of the twentieth century the sport grew in Ireland,
Scotland, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.  In the United States fourteen running
clubs established the Amateur Athletic Association. The first intercollegiate competition
took place between the Universities of Pennsylvania and Cornell.  By the end of the
1890s high school runners were taking to the straights and hills.


The inaugural Dipsea trail race in California took place in 1904 over a “suggested” but
not mandatory racecourse.  Slower runners were granted a head start. In the East the first
race at what would become the Mecca of venues, Van Cortlandt Park, presented the 1912
New York state high school championship. Mounted on horses two New York City
policemen served as pace cars.


That year the Olympic Games introduced its first and still only cross country race.
Hannes Kolehmainen was the gold medalist in Stockholm over twelve kilometers.  
Foreshadowing what Emil Zatopek was to achieve in l952 when he won the Games’
five- and ten-thousand meters and the marathon, Kolehmainen won the five and the ten in
addition to cross in 1912. That was the final year medals made of solid gold were awarded
to the victors.
Hannes Kolehmainen

In the early 1930s American Don Lash, who like Craig Virgin grew up on a midwestern
farm, won seven consecutive national cross country titles. Lash led the l936 University of
Indiana team to a perfect score. Years later Sports Illustrated would call the Hoosier
“possibly the best U.S. cross country runner ever.”
Don Lash



Before World War II the leading Americans were Fred Wilt and Bob Black. Wilt captured
one NCAA, one Big Ten and three national cross titles.  Black was a nationals winner
twice.
Fred Wilt


Southern Counties Women's Championships 1932 England  Clik here for video.

Fourteen-year-old Maria Mulder won the first U.S. women’s cross country championship
in 1964.
Maria Mulder (left)
 Three years later Doris Brown Heritage triumphed in the first women’s

international cross country race, the first of her five consecutive victories.
Doris Brown Heritage

From England
emerged one of the era’s leading performers, Nick Rose, who captured the NCAA title in
l974. He earned a bronze medal at the l980 IAAF.
 In the United States the foremost
harrier was Pat Porter with eight U.S. titles from l982 to l989, plus three victories in the
World cross trials. In the U.S. the dominant women’s cross country figure was Lynn
Jennings who won three consecutive IAAF international and nine national titles.
Pat Porter and Lynn Jennings


On the international scene the Kenyans contributed John Ngugi who won five world titles.
Perhaps the most successful of the Kenyan competitors was Paul Tergat
(“The Gentleman”), who captured five consecutive Worlds beginning in l995.
John Ngugi


Kenenisa Bekele

Paul Tergat
No one
threatens the record of Ethiopian Kenenisa Bekele who won eleven long- and short-course
Worlds races over a six-year period. All of these internationalists forged championship
achievements on the track as well, at theOlympics, Worlds, Diamond League and NCAAs
and their own national events.  





In the l970s Hutchinson describes the sport exploding in the United States.  One catalyst
was Steve Prefontaine, with contributions from John Ngeno, Nick Rose and Frank Shorter.
For girls and boys there was first the Kinney and later, FootLocker and Nike Cross
Nationals that gave the sport national high school attention. It was a golden era for those
who competed on the grass, powered up the hills and toured the trails.

Frank Shorter leading and eventually winning 1973 AAU at Gainesville
Virgin (1st)  Rose (2nd) Ngeno (3rd)  1975 NCAA at Penn St.
Hutchinson pauses throughout the text with breakouts he calls Event Spotlight.  In
greater detail he delves into some twenty or so memorable competitions such as the first
international cross country championship, held in Scotland in 1903.
Four countries
Alfred Shrubb
"Sportscape The Evolution of Sports Photography" Phaidon Press 2000
participated with England winning the team and Alfred Shrubb the individual title over
eight miles.  

Another Spotlight choice is the l954 Cross de L’Humanite battle between
Chromik, Kutz, and Zatopek on the podium 1956
from Gerald Bloncourt collection
Zatopek finishing 3rd in 1956
Emil Zatopek, Vladimir Kuts and Jerzy Chromik. Seventy thousand spectators were on
hand at a Paris horseracing track. For the second consecutive year the Czech
Locomotive was first to pull into the station.

1956 Cross de l'Humanite, 19th edition Clik here
We could not find footage of the 1954 Cross de l'Humanite but here is a remarkable video from
two years later when Kutz won with Chromik second and Zatopek third. Note the outriders on
motorcycles zipping around nearly interfering with the runners during the race much like we still see
in the Tour de France cycling race. Also in the trophy presentation in the stands after the podium shots,
sharp eyes will notice Alain Mimoun
standing behind Zatopek. The big names begin appearing at the 2 minute mark of the film. Ed.






Lasse Viren getting some off track training

Later, Hutchinson writes about other noteworthy races such as the 1992 IAAF World
cross meeting at Boston’s Franklin Park where the city spent a half-million dollars to
create a more traditional racing course.  Long course winners were Kenya’s John Ngugi
and Lynn Jennings of the United States.


In segments he calls Cultural Spotlight, he investigates larger issues.  In “Women In
Cross County Running” he tells us that by 1918 France presented the first national
women’s event with a race over 2,400 meters. That country also was home to the first
international event, which took place in l931. Gladys Lunn of England won that first international
over 3Km in 11:12. She competed and got third place in the javelin in the 1938 Empire Games
in Sydney, Australia. The 220 was the longest race for women in those games. Gladys was later a
survivor of a tragic factory fire in Huddlesfield, England in 1941 in which 49 workers died. Ed.
Gladys 'Sally' Lunn of the Birchfield Harriers


In “Kit, Equipment and Technology,” he
describes how attire, footwear, timing and media interest and presentation contributed to
the sport’s progress.


A third series are his Did You Know? short takes.  One of particular interest is his
recounting of how the Ethiopian team traveled to the 1995 World cross meet in the
United Kingdom.  “Visa and financial problems saw the Ethiopians lose access to their
passports for security reasons, and they were forced to pack several to a room in an
Athens hotel on Thursday night.  Then, they pooled what they had to pay the bill, but
could afford no food. Having been in transit since Wednesday, the team finally arrived
in London on Friday. No flights were available to Newcastle, so they made the
seven-hour, 300-mile trip by public bus, arriving at midnight, less than twelve hours
before the first race.”


The book’s only weakness perhaps, is a dearth of photos. Still, there are two exceptional
images beginning with Jeff Johnson’s book jacket cover. Steve Prefontaine, Nick Rose
and Henry Rono are in the lead pack at the l973 NCAA championship in Spokane. That
one photo joins the three who among them won seven NCAA cross country
championships. Another memorable photo immortalizes Pre and Lindgren at the tape of
the 1969 NCAA race, the Duck slivering ahead to victory, both receiving the same time.
Between them they won NCAA cross six times.


As a coda Hutchinson sums up where the sport is today, and where he believes it is
headed.  No hometown cheerleader, he notes the decline in the number of countries
sending teams to the IAAF championship, bi-annual scheduling, the selection of remote
and down market venues for the event, and the domination of African athletes.  In
addition there is the absence of cross country from the Olympic Games schedule. IAAF
CEO Sebastian Coe is pushing for the reintroduction of the event but there is a good deal
of uncertainty about whether that will come to pass.

Why is The Complete History a treasure?  First, the book is a massive and successful
undertaking.  Second, it’s as if Hutchinson were writing history as he reports
contemporaneously. His writing style is crisp, sometimes lyrical.


This series of photos shows the PAC 8 finish between Pre and Lindgren when
thery were both freshmen.



This is how he views Lindgren at the first PAC-8 cross country championship in 1969: “He
was an unassuming combatant: pencil-thin, pale, and nerdy—but with ripped thighs that were
unable to completely hide his prowess.  He was 120 pounds of Clark Kent masking super
hero ability.” Prefontaine at the same race was “shining bright like the sun. Only the
brave had the courage to cast more than two or three glances at the sensational freshman.


Finally, Andrew Boyd Hutchinson’s love for the sport is deep and infectious.
“Cross-country running globally is seeing a low-ebb professionally, but a growth in the
youth market.  I believe the pendulum will swing back and that the sport is primed for a
global comeback. Inclusion into either the summer or winter Olympic Games will help
(the IAAF is working on this), and a more diverse offering into the IAAF Cross Country
Permit Series of invitationals,” he emphasizes.


“In the future, cross-country may take new directions, from inclusion in the Olympics to
new markets and new venues.  There’s hope that Coe’s call will be heard, and that
cross-country running will continue to make history for years to come.”


Hutchinson’s Complete History is a singular performance.  A perfect score.
-------------------

Paul O’Shea developed great respect for cross country when introduced to the sport at
Chicago’s St. Ignatius High School. Years later, following a corporate career in
communications, he coached the sport at Oak Knoll School in Summit, New Jersey, and
wrote extensively for Cross Country Journal. He now contributes to Once Upon a Time
in the Vest, lives in Northern Virginia and can be reached at Poshea17@aol.com.  


V 8 N. 23 Mel Rosen, USTAF Hall of Fame Coach, R.I.P.

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from USATF website
Hall of Fame coach Mel Rosen, who served as the head coach for Team USATF at the 1987 IAAF World Championships and Team USA at the 1992 Olympic Games, died Sunday in Auburn, Alabama, at age 90.

A legend in the collegiate ranks after serving for 36 years at Auburn University, including 28 years at the helm of the program, Rosen led one of the most successful U.S. teams in modern Olympic history at Barcelona in 1992. Team USA's men won 20 medals, eight of them gold, and saw world record performances by Kevin Young in the 400m hurdles, and by the 4x100m and 4x400m relay teams.

At Rome in 1987, the U.S. men won 14 medals, seven of them gold, and swept the relays.

Born on March 24, 1928, in the Bronx, New York, Rosen graduated from Abraham Lincoln High School in 1946, and was a captain of the school's track and field team. He ran track at the University of Iowa, earning a bachelor's degree in physical education in 1950, and a master's in P.E. in 1951 while serving as a graduate assistant coach.

Following a stint in the U.S. Army, Rosen was hired at Auburn in 1955 by head coach Wilbur Hutsell, a 1975 USATF Hall of Fame inductee. Upon Hutsell's retirement in 1963, Rosen took over the program. 

From 1977-80, the Tigers won four straight SEC indoor team championships, and also won the school's first SEC outdoor team title in 1979. Auburn placed fourth in the NCAA outdoor team standings in '79, and Rosen was named NCAA Coach of the Year.

During his storied career, Rosen coached seven Olympians, eight NCAA champions, 143 NCAA All-Americans, and 63 SEC champions. He was regarded as one of the top sprint coaches in the world, and was selected as an assistant coach for Team USA at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games.

Active in USATF for many years, Rosen served as chair of the Men's Track and Field committee, and in 1994 was honored with the Robert Giegengack Award for outstanding service to the sport. The following year, in 1995, he was inducted into USATF National Track & Field Hall of Fame. He was president of the collegiate track coaches association in 1978-79, and was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 1993. In 2006, Auburn named its new facility the Hutsell-Rosen Track in his honor.

Rosen and his wife, Joan, who died in 2014, were married for 57 years and had two daughters, Laurie and Karen. Jeffcoat Trant Funeral Home in Opelika are handling arrangements. Information on services will be forthcoming.

V 8 N. 24 "His Own Man The Biography of Otto Peltzer" by Tim Johnston and Donald Macgregor, a book review

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His Own Man, the Biography of Otto Peltzer, Champion Athlete, Nazi Victim, Indian Hero
                                        by  Tim Johnston and Donald Macgregor
                                               Publisher:  Pitch Publishing
                                                     Worthing, Sussex, UK
                                                                256 Pages

Peltzer?  Otto Peltzer?  You may be asking this question as did I when the existence of this remarkable book was brought to my attention.  Very few of us can recognize names of famous athletes whose histories extend more than sixty or seventy years into the past.  In Otto Peltzer's case his internationally competitive period goes back over 90 years to the mid 1920s.  Name a few athletes in any sport ninety years ago who are truly remembered today by the man on the street.  Jim Thorpe, Red Grange, Eric Liddell, Babe Ruth, Charley Paddock, Paavo Nurmi? How bout Jackson Pollack or Abel Kiviat? Who was president or prime minster in the 1920s?  Go on, name some more without consulting a reference book.  That gives Seb Coe, Usain Bolt, and Wayde van Niekerk until the year 2100 to be remembered without consulting a Smartphone.

Tim Johnston and Donald Macgregor have chosen a man well worth remembering.  Otto Peltzer was a world record holder in long sprints and middle distances of 500 meters, 800 meters, 880 yards, 1000 meters, and 1500 meters.  Incidentally only one of those records was set on his home turf, Germany.  He was an innovator and student of training methods, physiologist, psychologist, and nutritionist.  He knew gamesmanship before a big race.   He loved to delay a start by being late to the line and then throwing in a false start for good measure to unnerve the competition

Peltzer's fall from grace in his homeland came due to his outspokeness and his homosexuality and the change in political environment in the 1930s.  He was condemned to spending the last four  years of World War II in a Nazi concentration camp, Mauthausen, one of the toughest, and he carried forty pound rocks out of a quarry for most of those years.  He suffered numerous beatings, was fed starvation rations, and endured constant humilitations at the hands of the Kapos.  Like Louis Zamperini, he was forced to run against the new, still healthy inmates being brought into the camp, even against relay teams, and he managed to beat most of them, which led to more beatings.  And yet by luck and will power he survived.  Three months after his liberation at the age of 45, he recovered and was  able to run a 5000 meters in 17 minutes 52 seconds.  Ask any 30 years old newcomer to running today if they could even consider running that fast.

So who was this man Otto Peltzer?  What drove him?  Who were his influences?  Who were his detractors?  Who persecuted him?   Who enabled him to find redemption in the later years of his life?   There are still mysteries surrounding Peltzer.   He was a prolific writer and lecturer on sport and training and health.  Yet many of his papers disappeared during the war.  Tim Johnston and Donald Macgegor have done remarkable work reviving Peltzer's life, so that we may read and learn about those times and how they affected one of the world's best athletes.  He was a favorite of the German public. Yet Peltzer had failures on the track as well as huge triumphs.  One of those areas where he failed was the Olympics.  Johnston and Macgregor have produced some fascinating information about the 1932 Los Angeles Games and how they were perceived by the German officialdom.  Carl Diem the head of the German Olympic team was no fan of Peltzer.  Indeed he hounded Peltzer through most of Peltzer's life.  Peltzer was not afraid to speak truth to power, and it got him in a lot of trouble with authority in the shape of politicians.  He was fortunate to have family money behind him which enabled him to train in times when there was little or no compensation to athletes, and they were constantly on the verge of being judged to be professional and thus banned from amateur competition.  It happened to Paavo Nurmi, Jules Ladoumegue, Gunder Haag and others.
Peltzer and Paavo Nurmi
This training session is described in the book.

If you are a student of history as well as sport you will be doubly rewarded by taking up this book.  If you are by chance a Germanophile, you will be even more rewarded.  The research that went into this work  must have been exhausting.  I was constantly struck by the depth to which Johnston and Macgregor  have dug during the writing of this book.  As mentioned before, Peltzer left six books behind him, but they did not begin to uncover all aspects of his life.  I had heard of Eric Liddell, the Scots missionary to China, who was one of the heroes of the film Chariots of Fire having still run a few races in China after his 1924 victory and world record in the 400 meters in Paris.   But I didn't know that he had run against Peltzer in Tianjin, China when Peltzer was on a Far East tour.  Liddell was able to beat Peltzer  at 400 meters,    49.1 to 49.3.   Sounds slow, but consider, the race was run on a less than well conditioned track, in November in 25 degree F weather.  The track was too frozen to allow spikes, so they ran in flats.  Four hundred meters, 25 degrees, November, flats, are you kidding?  They doubled back that day in the 800, and Peltzer took that race in 2:02.3 to Liddell's 2:03.1.   It is also noted that Liddell had continued to train in China after his 1924 victory and in the next Olympic year, in China had produced better times that what were made in the Amsterdam Olympics.  He had a 21.8 200 and a 47.8 400, but by then was all but forgotten by his countrymen.  Peltzer continued on with his tour and ran in Australia and New Zealand before heading home with stopovers in Maylaya, Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and India where he became fascinated with that country and its potential.

After the war was over, Peltzer found that he was still not very welcome in the new Bundesrepublik and headed out to India to find a place to coach.  During 11 years he trained some of India's best athletes and is still remembered there for his work.

With health failing, friends still in Germany brought him home to spend his final years.  All his family had died in the war. and property had been confiscated by the new regime in the East.    In India he had lived in a wooden shack near a training ground.  But he fimally had a home in Malente in Northern Germany.   He died on his way back to that  home after coaching some of his atheltes at a nearby track meet in August, 1970.  His stopwatch was still around his neck when he was found.  Ironically I was in Malente in September of 1970 never having heard of the man.   I wish now that I had.

If Louis Zamperini's story had not recently been made into a film, Otto Peltzer's life might well have been the subject of a film.  If only a young Jeremy Irons were available for the making of it.

Though I have covered a few details of Peltzer's life  in this review, I have not begun to scratch the surface of this fascinating book.  I highly recommend it and promise that you will truly enjoy the time spent reading it.  Furthermore there is a wonderful collection of photos of Peltzer, his competitors and his enemies including a picture of Heinrich Himmler working out. 

If the names of Tim Johnston and Donald Macgregor ring some rusty bell in your memory, you realize that they write of what they know.   Johnston finished 8th in the marathon at Mexico City in 1968 in 2hr 28 min. 4.4 sec.    He was just behind Derek Clayton, but ahead of Gaston Roelants, Kenny Moore, George Young, Naftali Temu, and Ron Daws.     Donald Macgregor competed in the next Olympic marathon in 1972 finishing 7th in 2 hrs. 16 min. 34.4 sec. one place behind Ron Hill and ahead of Jack Foster, Jack Bacheler, and Derek Clayton.

George Brose

V 8 N. 25 Jon Hendershott, A Friend and Colleague, R.I.P.

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Jon Hendershott  1946-2018  R.I.P.
A Friend to Track and Field,
A Friend and Mentor to Me
by George Brose
Harry Marra and Jon Hendershott

April 11, 2018

Yesterday, I was informed of the passing of Jon Hendershott in Salem, Oregon.  Most of you reading this obituary have read Jon's work for the past 50 years in the pages of Track & Field News   You  read his poignant interviews with the greats of the sport, you are aware of  his incredible observation and analysis of all track and field events, his steadfastness, and his wit when the time was right.  I will miss this man whom I never met, but who I was privileged to get to know in a brief and memorable  passing.

When Jon 'retired' in 2015, he still needed an outlet for his craft.  He continued to do work for T&FN and the IAAF as well.  But somehow he also managed to find this blog on the recommendations of a another track writer and historian  Paul O'Shea.  Paul mentioned that we might have a place to put some of Jon's post retirement work where the public might see it.  And so a relationship was born.



Despite our working together via email, I had so much wanted to meet Jon and just hear some of his stories face to face and share a few of mine. If there had only  been time....   I was hoping that meeting would happen in Eugene next month at the Prefontaine Classic.  

Jon shared with me that one  of his first big indoor meets was  in Seattle or  Portland in 1963.   I can't remember if he was hurdling or spectating with his dad.  C.K Yang had broken the PV record when it was going up every weekend.   C.K. competed in the meet Jon attended.   The next weekend I was on my first college indoor road trip  in Lubbock, TX where Yang was vaulting and didn't break the record again but still held it when he went to bed that night.  The next morning I saw C.K. at the coffee shop and also picked up the paper noticing that John Uelses or someone had broken his world record Saturday night somewhere.  So I handed C.K.  the sports page.   He was a little disappointed but didn't throw anything at me for being the bearer of bad tidings.

Jon and I had some wonderful email correspondence.  I was really honored to put the first pieces of his post retirement work on our blog.  He was a stickler with form and format and I learned a lot about writing for the public in the short time last year that we worked together.

His knowledge was much, much greater than mine will ever be.  His recall was phenomenal.  He caught me when I made mistakes and gently reminded me when those transgressions occurred. He once noted a spelling error on a lesser known German name Lutz Philipp (I used to 'l's)  that I had posted.  Though he was a few years younger, he was definitely a mentor to me.

When Jon asked us about the possibility of placing some of his work on our site, we were stunned that he would even consider us.  Of course we accepted.  The following links are to those pieces he sent  us covering his favorite races at all distances and field events plus a piece about Harry Marra, Ashton Eaton's coach.    Here are the links to those articles.  We are also selecting a beautiful story that Paul O'Shea wrote about Jon at the time of his retirement

Harry Marra and Ashton Eaton

Hommage from Paul O'Shea

Here is the list of Jon's most memorable events by gender and event

Womens' Relays

Men's Relays

Women's Throws and Heptathlon

Men's Throws and Decathlon

Women's Jumps

Men's Jumps

Women's Distance and Marathon

Men's Distance and Marathon

Women's Middle Distance

Men's Middle Distance

Women's Sprints and Hurdles

Men's Sprints and Hurdles

George: I was saddened by the news of Jon's passing. This type of news is hard to take, and the knowledge in his brain is left without a response. We who love this sport will miss him. To replace such a individual as Jon probably not possible. Us track enthusiasts may never touch the surface of Jon's passion for the sport.  
Phil Scott

That's really sad news about Jon Hendershott, one of the great T&F writers of all time.  Although ours is a small community of avid but underpaid workers, Jon was at the top of a group of people devoted to the sport and dripping with accuracy.  His articles always got to the heart of the subject, were beautifully written, and told us all things we never would have known had it not been for him.  This is truly a loss for his immediate family and his T&F family as well.
   Bill Schnier

Please note that ownership of these pieces is not ours, but I would assume belong to Jon's estate unless he had made other arrangements.  ed.














V 8 N. 26 Two Hot Photos from Today's Boston Marathon

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Taken at 7.8 miles just before West Natick train station.     39 degrees.   Linden and Kawauchi.

with permission from Ned Price, former UCTC runner and occasional contributor to this blog. Great job, Ned.


Desiree Linden  Black Shoes (Brooks?) and green sleeves  third from right.

Yuki Kawauchi in his 4th marathon this year.  Went out hard from get go, came back, went out again, and destroyed leader with four Km to go.


When she took the lead today, Linden seemed so focused almost in a trance.  Never looked around or smiled until her last three strides.  Afterward interviewed in the cold she seemed very fragile almost uncelebratory. She has taken the big names off the leaderboard.  Hail the new queen of American distance running.  

Kawauchi was just the opposite in post race.  Even said he loved today's weather conditions.  What is not to like about 39 degrees, rain, and gale force headwinds for 26 miles.  He's run 76 marathons under 2hr 20 min., this is his fourth one this year. Yuki was carrying some cajones the others left on the kitchen table.  He's broken many of the rules and yet maxed his effort right on schedule.  

Once again the networks teamed a knowledgeable commentator with a novice and the result was something synchronous to  me commenting on the Ballet Russe alongside Misty Copeland.  

George Brose


V 8 N. 27 Patrick Warburton Track Man? Not So!!!!

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Yesterday as editor of the now infamous track blog  Once Upon a Time in the Vest  I got pranked by one of my partners, Roy Mason,  a man who over the years I've come to trust like I trust like the crack dealer at the end of my block.  Roy sent me the information below about the athletic prowess of Patrick Warburton seen below.  I published it without verification and the most important bits of the story turned out to be untrue.  Roy knew this and I suppose was testing me for bigger and better things.  I failed the test.  Below is his tell tale lie and the follow up from friends who read the article. Roy can rest assured that there will be middle of the night visits to his domocile with what cast upon his roof I yet do not know.  George

This note came in from my co-conspirator Roy Mason who is a close friend of Eric Tweit longtime coach at Newport Harbor HS.    Surely you all know Patrick Warburton.  He's the easily recognizable face of National Car Rental Commercials. 

As he is currently on TV in National Car Rental Commercials, I thought it proper to bring you up to speed on Patrick Warburton's connection to our email group.  Patrick is better known as David Puddy, Elaine's boyfriend in Seinfeld.  Though born in New Jersey, he grew up in Orange County where he attended Servite HS in Anaheim before transferring to Newport Harbor High where he ran 1:54.8 for Eric.  You can check this out on Wikipedia.  It is a small world and we are all connected.  You will never view a National Car Rental commercial the same way again.  Roy



Patrick Wharbuton  National Car Rental Commercial


Early this morning my former friend and co-conspirator sent this missive to deconsecrate what is printed above.   My apologies if you have lost money and face by passing on this false information. Lesson learned:

The claim of "fake news" is everywhere but we have finally created news of indisputable fakery.  The email I sent re Patrick Warburton had only a drop of truth in the whole cup.  Patrick W. did attend Newport Harbor and likely did run for Eric.....but it would have been in a PE class.  I was hoping for an "Oh, my God, really" response to which I would have fessed up.  Everyone would have slapped their knee and said, "That Roy, he's such a joker".  Not even Eric replied.  (I'd asked Eric this a couple years ago.  He didn't remember the guy.)  

Instead, as it was a slow news day at OUTV, you ran with it.  As editor, you are now faced with the conundrum of admitting our error or allowing it to ride.  If you take the second course, there is a chance that our slight deviation from the truth will go unnoticed thereby reflecting the size and/or interest of our readership but also creating a cloud of guilt that will hang over your head the rest of your life.

Here are some of the comments that poured in after the cat was let out of the bag.

   Don't worry about that Patrick Warburton misinformation.  Just tweet it out again and half the US will willingly accept it as gospel.  Put your fears aside, the plan has proven to work thousands of times this past year.     Bill

Dear Roy & George:
I ran a 2:02.2 in H.S.! - And, that's a fact!
Can I get in a rental car commerical? 
Maybe they have a new Senior Discount Program?
John Bork

PS: Roy, Are You running for President now?
John neglects to mention that he also won the NCAA 880 in 1:48 for Western Michigan in 1961  with that 2:02.2 as a base in high school.   Ed.

It is not generally known that Miley Cyrus threw the discus 193' 7" in middle school.  Ned Price

Years ago there was a newsletter I subscribed to about college FB recruiting. The guy who did all the leg work was a mailman, but he knew recruiting down pat. So much so that competing services began to copy his picks. So he created a phony left tackle who 6’8”/310 and ran the 40 in 4.7. He was a straight A student and had a 36” vertical jump. They all fell for it and copied his fictional HS kid, and one of them even made this guy HS AA. After that the problem was solved.  Pete Brown

HAHAHA! He fooled me as well! Lol. Too funny.  Jeff Allen

Tch  Tch     Richard Trace





V8 N. 28 Dick Held, World Renowned Javelin Maker R.I.P.

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Here is a fascinating story of brotherly love about a javelin maker and a javelin
thrower.  How many of you have picked up one their javelins just to admire the
design and wonder how the heck you are supposed to compete in this event without
destroying your elbow?  The intelligence and intellect of these two men is close to
the best nature or the creator could produce.  I wish there were more like them in
all sport and the world.   George Brose 

Note:  Please excuse the gaps in this post.  It is neigh impossible to close them where
once there was some advertising.

From the San Diego Times  March 21, 2018
By Ken Stone

 March 21, 2018

Dick and Bud Held

Dick Held, the javelin-maker whose name was synonymous with the track and field event, died Sunday after several years battling Alzheimer’s disease, his family said Tuesday.

x


Dick Held, in undated photo, designed and built javelins used by world-record holders and Olympic champions
Dick Held, in undated photo, designed and built javelins used by world-record holders and Olympic champions. Photo via Bud HeldHe was 91, and passed at a care center four miles from his only child — 66-year-old son Forrest in Lafayette, Indiana. Funeral plans weren’t immediately known.

Held was the world’s No. 1 javelin expert, said Juris Terauds,his friend of 50 years, declaring: “There’s no one else that comes close.”
In the early 1950s, Dick’s younger brother and lone sibling, Franklin “Bud” Held, engineered his own hollow javelins at Stanford and set world records in 1953 and 1955. He shared some of his wooden javelins with rivals such as Bill Miller and 1952 Olympic champion Cy Young.
But amateur rules at the time barred Bud, a 1952 Olympian, from selling his spears, so he asked Dick: Would you be interested in making javelins?
“And he said, ‘Well, yeah. Why not?'” Bud recalled Tuesday from his home in Del Mar. “At that time he was an electrician. … I honestly did not expect him to be that successful.”
But while Bud never thought Dick was that good mechanically, “it turns out he was. He produced the best javelins in the world for many years,” Bud said.
“Dick was always the best brother I could ever imagine. He always supported me. He admired me and my abilities. He complimented me and told people about me. He’d exaggerate. Just a wonderful brother.”
Held’s javelins spanned the era of wood, steel, aluminum, Fiberglass and carbon-fiber materials. Elite models were named after him, and many were used to set world records and win Olympic tiles — outdistancing rival implements made in Sweden and elsewhere.
“All of [the rival models] are based mainly on Dick’s javelin,” said Terauds, 80, a one-time Canadian record-holder in the event who became a biomechanics professor and consultant to Held — even building a javelin cannon called a Jav-A-Gun for testing.


Memoriam by Bud Held and Ron Johnson for Dick Held
Memoriam by Bud Held and Ron Johnson for Dick Held (PDF)

“They tried to copy Dick’s javelin,” Terauds said from his home in Olivenhain.
Tom Petranoff, whose javelin career began at Palomar College in San Marcos, recalls meeting Held at Cal State Northridge in the early 1980s, when he was training with the likes of the late Bob Roggy, the world’s top-ranked javelin thrower in 1982.
“Dick was the first one to give me javelins,” Petranoff, 59, said from Vista. Driving eight hours from his home in Carson City, Nevada, Held would sit on a hill and study throwers at Northridge — “take notes on our [throwing] angles and all the other types of stuff that he saw.”
The next week, he’d return with another set of javelins.
“He became like a father figure to me,” said Petranoff, whose parents divorced when he was 11 or 12. “Someone who believed in me and told me that I was going to throw far. He gave me that little bit of belief — that was important to me. Dick was an amazing guy.”
Held also made the best javelins in the world, said Petranoff, who now produces a safe youth javelin called the TurboJav (made of Polyethelene; 42,000 sold last year). [The current world record, set in 1996 by Jan Železný, also was a Dick Held javelin.]
Bud Held, 90, wrote a 1,000-word “memoriam” with Ron Johnson — who was 19 when he met Dick at an AMF Pacer factory in 1982 and went on to start his own company.
Bud recalled: “During a period of 25 years after Dick started making javelins, every world record javelin throw was made with a ‘Dick Held’ javelin.”


A two-part history of the hollow wooden javelin by Bud and Dick Held (PDF)
A two-part history of the hollow wooden javelin by Bud and Dick Held (PDF)

Speaking from his home in Winston, Oregon, Johnson (whose website is thejavelinman.com) said Dick Held designed and he [Johnson] built the javelin that Petranoff and Germany’s Uwe Hohn used to set world records in 1983 and 1984 (327 feet 2 inches and 343-9¾).
Partly out of fear that javelins were flying too far — and could impale fans in the stands — the IAAF changed specifications to shorten flight distances. The world governing body moved the 8-foot spears’ center of balance forward 4 centimeters, forcing the sticks to drop sooner (and land point-first into grass, rather than flat).
Held rolled with the changes, perfecting the “new spec” javelin and also introducing the “High Moment” discus, his brother said.
“It took a few years, but the heavy rim weight discus eventually became the discus of choice among world class discus throwers,” Bud wrote. “In the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games, the 2-kilogram OTE High Moment discus was thrown for the gold medal.”
Dick and Bud Held — who grew up in Los Angeles County and San Diego County’s Lakeside area — wrote a short history of their javelin collaboration.
At one point, during his production years, Dick recalled receiving a letter from an irate father.
“He had ordered a sixty-meter [rated] javelin for his daughter, but when she threw it, it only traveled forty meters,” Held wrote. “He threatened to sue me. I asked what his daughter’s best throw previous to receiving the Held javelin was, and he said, ‘About 38 meters, but this javelin says sixty meters on the shaft and it should fly sixty meters!'”
After working for several companies, and moving from place to place, Held retired in 1999 after a company called OTE was sold to Gill Athletics.
When Held’s wife, Betty, died about 2011, he fell into a serious funk.
“He came and stayed at my place many times,” Terauds told Times of San Diego, “especially after his wife died. He was down and really feeling lousy.”
So Terauds phoned his old partner and said: “Dick, what you really need to do is make a new javelin. So we did. … That was what pulled him out of the doldrums because he was working on something.”
Even so, “Betty was always there. He would always mention [her]. We’d be eating something and he would drift off to [think of] Betty. A huge part of his life.”
When Held was living in a Sun City care facility, losing his memory, Terauds called him every Sunday.
Any time they’d talk javelin, Held’s memory “would perk right up,” he said. “‘Remember, Dick, when we tried putting holes in the tail?’ Then everything starts clicking together [in his mind].”
The last time Petranoff saw Held was a little over a year ago, visiting for three or four hours and having lunch at his dementia center in the Phoenix area.
“He wanted to talk javelin, and him and Juris were involved in a carbon javelin that they were trying to build. Juris did it to keep his mind going,” Petranoff confirmed.
Richard Anthony Held was born June 17, 1926, in Los Angeles to Anthony Rutherford Held and Geneva Jane Held.
“Dick and I spent our early years in Agua Dulce, near Vasquez Rocks (a favorite scene of many old cowboy movies),” Bud said. “Our family moved to Lakeside in 1932 when Dad took over grandpa Dean’s (Mom’s father) lemon ranch.”
Held graduated from Grossmont Union High School in 1944.
“Dad was told by the principal that Dick had the highest entry IQ test of any student who had ever been tested at Grossmont High,” Bud said.
After two years in the military, the Held brothers drove together to Long Beach to take the Stanford entrance exam — two two-hour sessions.
“After 40 minutes of the first session, Dick got up, turned in his paper and left the building,” said Bud, who labored the full two hours. At lunch break, Bud found Dick outside and asked him: “Why did you leave?”
Dick replied: “I finished.”
The same happened at the afternoon testing. Stanford accepted him automatically, and “after that, I never doubted Dick’s academic ability.”
Bud graduated from Stanford cum laude with an engineering degree. Dick left Stanford during his first year largely because Stanford declared him ineligible for baseball as a result of some courses he had taken at San Diego State, Bud said.
Dick later earned a degree at San Diego State.
Dick and Betty were married in May 1948 — and their marriage lasted more than 60 years.
Terauds was asked what he enjoyed about Held.


June 1962 story in The San Diego Union about Held family javelin business in Lakeside.
June 1962 story in The San Diego Union about Held family javelin business in Lakeside. (PDF)

“The main thing is Dick is a really good person,” said Terauds, who went on to invent the stair-stepper machine used in gyms worldwide. “He was a real friend of mine … because he was always honest. I could rely on him 100 percent.”
For Held, “it was never a case of this is good enough. It had to be perfect,” Terauds said in a phone interview. “The last project we were doing was before his memory started slipping away. … The javelin would fly approximately 4 meters further than anything out there right now. I still have those javelins.”
Said Petranoff: “Dick was the real deal. He was a man’s man. Didn’t have a big personality or anything. Kind of a quiet guy. But get a couple beers in him and he’ll loosen up a little bit.”
The world silver medalist — who paid Betty and Dick Held’s way to attend the 1983 IAAF championships in Helsinki — said “we really met at the right time at the right place. … It’s a sad day, but I’m relieved because I know it was not pretty where he was. … He deserves a lot more credit than he’s ever got.”
For Johnson, who angled his way into Held’s javelin department after working in the pole-vault section of the factory, Held “was a great man, really. … He was a fantastic engineer. He was a mentor. He was a man of integrity. He loved his wife. He was a perfect example of what a man should be.”
Forrest Held notified Johnson via email.
“We had a great summer together,” said the son. “He didn’t know who I was, but he knew when I showed up we were headed for his favorite ice cream place. I got to see more of him in the past few months than I did in the last four years.”
In his memoriam, Bud Held said: “Dick was a brilliant, fiercely independent, intensely honest, highly competitive and stubbornly self-confident man. He never took advantage of a friend, a worker or a competitor. He never cheated on his taxes or on his customers.”
Held, said his brother, was not afraid of death.
“After a stroke in his early 80s, Dick said ‘I faced death and I was not afraid. It was actually a pleasant and comfortable experience,’” Bud wrote.
“Dick never made a lot of money. It was not in his life plan. He followed his heart and desires and adjusted to wherever that took him. He had a satisfying life.”
Bud concluded: “I am proud of my brother. He is now gone, but am still here and proud of who he was, what he did and what he stood for.

V 8 N. 29 A Bit of Track And Field Humour, 1937 Style

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John Cobley creator of the running blog  Racing Past  (www.racingpast.ca) sent me this 1937 report of the British A.A.A. championships written in a non athletic journal  Night and Day   which copied the style and layout of The New Yorker.   Written by T.O. Beachcroft in a literary and humourous style, it conveys the time and the sentiment of the day.  Foreign athletes were frequently participating in British Championships and may still be welcome for all I know, even though several had serious difficulties securing visas to compete in the recent indoor world championships held in England this past winter.  We've looked for photos of some of the participants and added them below the article.

John's comments on this article were: 

 Thought you might enjoy this. It comes from Night and Day, a British journal that tried to copy the New Yorker in 1937 and lasted only six months. It nevertheless had some brilliant writers—Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh, Elizabeth Bowen. I have the book of all the editions.

Thomas Owen Beachcroft was a short story writer of some repute. I am not sure what he did as a runner. He is covered by Wikipedia.

For George: The “neat throw to cover point” is an allusion to cricket. The attempt at humour in the relevant paragraph is pretty poor. 

I find the German undercurrent the most interesting aspect here. Good insight into attutudes of 1937.

Enloy……………..John

PS Note the drawing at the start. Now that is funny. I count ten sports there, but no athletics!.


Here are a few bits and pieces we've found about the personalities mentioned in this article

Sydney Wooderson
PRs  440 49.4 (1938)
800 m 1:48.4 (1938)
1500m 3:48.4
Mile 4:04.2 (1945)
5000 m 14:08.6 (1945)

Karl Hein and Erwin Blask  German gold and
silver Berlin 1936   HT.   Hein won on his last put in Berlin.





Willy Schroeder    Discus thrower Willy Schröder set a world record in 1935 with 53.10, and won the 1938 European title. In 1936 and 1937 he was German Champion and in 1938 German Police Champion. At the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games Schröder placed fifth. By profession he was a policeman.
Personal Best: DT – 53.10 (1935).  Sport Reference and Getty Images
Myron's Discobolus

Townley Discobolus  with incorrectly restored
head.   British Museum





R.L. Howland  (upper left) and Lord Burghley (lower left) 1934
Arthur Collyer nipping Frank Handley in the
aformentioned 880 yards in 1:53.3



Stelios Kyriakidis

Stelios Kyriakidis was born on Cyprus and won several distance running titles at the 1932 Pan-Cyprian Games. Later that year he won the Greek national marathon title, and was soon chosen to compete for Greece in the marathon at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, where he finished 11th. Kyriakidis was a 14-time winner at the Pan-Cyprian Games and an 11-time Greek National Champion. He also competed at the 1948 London Olympics.
Kyriakidis joined the Greek resistance during World War II, and during the Nazi occupation of his homeland, he twice evaded execution when he was recognized by his Nazi tormenters as an Olympic athlete. After the war, he was emaciated, having lost much weight, and sold his furniture to buy a ticket to the United States to run in the 1946 Boston Marathon, although he was also supported by Greek-Americans Giorgios and Spyros Demeter. His goal in running was not just to try to win the marathon, but to persuade Americans to help send food and supplies to his war-torn nation. Near the end of the 1946 Boston Marathon Kyriakidis was running alongside his close friend [Johnny Kelley], when an older Greek-American in the crowd yelled out, “For Greece, for your children.” Inspired, Kyriakidis pulled away to win the race, considered perhaps the most emotional victory ever at the Boston Marathon.
Kyriakidis was successful in his other goal, as his efforts helped raise over 25,000 tons of supplies for his homeland. When he returned to Greece, over 1,000,000 Greeks lined the streets of Athina to greet him, a ceremony was held in his honor at the Temple of Zeus, and the Acropolis was illuminated in his honor, the first such lighting after World War II. He was later given the Grand Cross of the Phoenix by the Greek King. In 2004 a statue of Kyriakidis was placed one mile beyond the Hopkinton starting line of the Boston Marathon, entitled “The Spirit of the Marathon.” A copy of the same statue was also placed in Marathon, Greece.
Personal Best: Mar – 2-29:27 (1946).  from Sports Reference


Statue in Boston of Kyriakidis and Spiridon Louis


Kyriakidis


Donald McNab Robertson and Dunky Wright lead the Fiery Cross Relay from Edinburgh Castle
Hans Woellke mentioned as 1936 Olympic shot put champion would later be known infamously as a former SS officer in WWII

Woellke winning in Berlin 1936
Woellke as a police lieutenant


Early Adidas shoe worn by Woellke.  Shot was thrown from a cinder surface to account for the spikes

Shot putter Hans Woellke finished third in the 1938 European Championships, while at the 1934 Europeans he came in eighth. His greatest moment came at the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games when he won gold. This was the first ever male German Olympic title in athletics events, a feat which was recorded in the Leni Riefenstahl Olympic film “Olympia.” In 1937 Woellke set an indoor world record. He was German Champion 1934-38 and 1941-42.
As a policeman Woellke was promoted to lieutenant for his Olympic triumph by Nazi leaders Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler. Woellke served as guard in prison camps. He was killed in action in 1943 on the Eastern front as a police captain in a Waffen SS Police Regiment. Khatyn was a normal, peaceful Belarusian village of 26 households. On the morning of 22 March 1943 partisans fired at a German convoy from 6 km away, and Woellke was killed in a shootout. Soon after that, German soldiers surrounded Khatyn, herding the citizens, including the elderly, women, and children, into a barn, where they were locked up and burned. The fire killed 149 people including 75 children. Woellke is buried in a cemetery in Minsk.  Sport Reference




Excellent post, George and John. 'Night and Day', under the editorship of author Graham Greene, was the leading literary magazine of its time. Its short life was due to the law-suit for libel provoked by an article by Greene alleging that one of the reasons for the success of the films of child-star Shirley Temple (later Ambassador Shirley Temple Gray) was their appeal to paedophiles. Of course he was right (check out e.g. clips from 'The Good Ship Lollipop'), but the Judge didn't see it that way. The plaintiffs (20th Century Fox) were awarded heavy damages and Greene was threatened with a prison sentence. 'Night and Day' closed down.

Cheers,

Tim Johnston   

editor's note:  Tim Johnston is the author of the excellent book His Own Man, The Biography of  Otto Peltzer reviewed in this blog:
Book review

V 8 N. 30 The National AAU Championships 1953

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Courtenay, BC  May 17, 2018

While visiting my hometown of Dayton, Ohio for two weeks in late April and early May, I was able to visit two libraries containing some great resources on our sport.  Wright State University  has been given custody of the archives of the Dayton Daily News which contain innumerable photos including hard copies and originals that were sent to the paper from various wire services over the years.  One just has to ask the archivist (not to be confused with  the more common term 'librarian')  for access to anything they have on the name you give them.  Last year I asked for Glenn Davis, Buddy Davis, Bobby Morrow, Dave Sime, Wes Santee, Ira Murchison and a number other former greats, and the archivist brought out whatever they had in the files.   Here's one I've never seen of Gene Cole and Jack Davis at Helsinki in 1952.   Cole was seventh in the 400 in prelims, but they only took six to the finals in 1952.  Davis was second to Harrison Dillard in the 110HH. 

Note the error on Davis' event.
 I was amazed at what was in those files.  You cannot go searching on your own in the stacks, but they are very cooperative in bringing those stories and pictures to you.   In addition to the old track photos, they also have a case of medals that were awarded to the Wright Brothers by organizations around the world for their achievements in the field of aviation.  Most of these medals would put to shame, the best track medals you have ever seen.  And they were each one of a kind.   At the price of gold in those days of the early 20th century, I would be surprised if some of them were not solid gold.  

Here are a few of the Wright Brothers' awards.




Phil Scott and Bill Schnier with the Brothers. Phil was former
indoor Heptathlon champ back in the 70s.  His son Jason an NAIA  PV
champ at 17'8".  Bill was over thirty years the head coach at U. of Cincinnati.

Wright Flyer replica in the atrium of the Wright State Library

My second library was the new downtown Dayton Public Library which has microfiche files of all past issues of the local Dayton papers going back into the 19th century.  In those files I searched for the stories of the 1953 and 1957 National AAU track and field championships, because they were held in Dayton in those two years  post Olympic years.  They have never come back to Dayton, not for poor attendance or lack of interest, but because the local officials made a lot of mistakes when measuring staggers for the races run round the curve.  They had a 220 yard chute which normally was put into use at local meets, but the AAU wanted the 220 and 220 hurdles and the 440 run in lanes, and a number of competitors ended up running incorrect distances.  What some of the other shortcomings there were from an organizational standpoint I am not aware, but I've heard that there were a number of other miscues.  There was no circle for the hammer.  They painted one in the parking lot and threw into a vacant field.  Little things like that cost them a third championship.  None of this was mentioned in the local accounts of the meet.  However there was a lot written in the run up to the meet and somewhat less about the actual meet.    Below you will see a bit about the NCAA Meet held in Lincoln, NE the week prior, then the build up of articles all written  by Bruce Pluckhahn who was no longer with the Dayton Daily News when I got to high school and began running track.  Bruce was probably told by the sports editor Si Burick to get his young cub reporter's butt out there and get some stories.  He seems to have done a bang up job.  Si sat back and hobnobbed with the AAU bigwigs like Dan Ferris and name dropped his way through a few columns which I have chosen to leave out of this post.  

Research tells us that at 39 years, Pluckhahn was no spring chicken.  He probably never wrote another piece on track as he left the Dayton Daily News the following year and went to work for the World Bowling Congress and retired as a member of their Hall of Fame.  He died in 2008.   Ed. 

 I must confess that even though I lived about two miles from the stadium I did not see either meet.  My family was more interested in baseball and sprint car and Indianapolis racing in those days, and travelled around the Midwest for that type of entertainment.   I had to discover track a few years later on my own when my dreams of baseball and basketball began to fade.  A number of us have written about that transition from the national pastime to the sport of track and field.  We'll share some of those comments in the future.  
The new Dayton Public Library

Sorry, I had to add the jello section of  MCL Cafeteria in Dayton.
Known affectionately as Medicare Lounge.
Fine Midwest Cuisine.  I think the blue is Gatorade.

So start off with the account of the NCAA meet and follow through to the AAU.  One other major national and international event occurred in that two week period.  I've included the front page of the paper on that day as you will find as you scroll through this post.  Apologies for the amateurish cut and paste that has been necessary to get all of these clippings to a readable size.
George

















More on things to expect at the big meet













In the days running up to the meet, other things were happening in the world.  I  was  ten years old at the time.  Didn't really understand what was going on.  A father  of one of my
classmates went to prison that year for a six year term for having been a Communist and denying it on a sworn statement.



By Friday night the Rosenbergs were forgotten to most of the track world.
Roger Bannister ran a 4:02 the same day in England.  Hoping to 
break 4 minutes before Wes Santee.







Results of Friday night below























V 8 N. 31 Tom Von Ruden Oklahoma State Olympian R.I.P.

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We received the sad news from several sources today that Tom Von Ruden passed away yesterday under care of hospice in Phoenix, AZ.  It grieves me personally, because I was able to watch him develop in his early years at Oklahoma State University while I was a year or so ahead of him at the University of Oklahoma.  I usually did my watching from behind while eating cinders he was kicking up.   We were huge rivals as teams and there was little love lost between the programs.

I remember coming back from my time in the army in 1971 and seeing him on Wide World of Sports running in a meet in Scandanavia with long hair and beard and wondering what might have been had I stayed with it a few more years.  I think he was also drafted but got to Ft. MacArthur with the Army track program, where his former coach Ralph Higgins had turned up after retiring from OSU.  That program attracted some pretty good runners.  Apparently you could talk your way to the program if you were already in the army, but Coach Higgins could tell pretty quickly if you were bluffing about your abilities.  If you were lieing, you would be on the next plane to Southeast Asia.

I remember in 1964 OSU first showed well on the indoor cicuit in Albequerque with Dave and John Perry, Jim Metcalf, and Tom.  We lined up against them in the 2 Mile Relay and were in the race for about a leg until Tom got the baton, and he had a major break through with a 1:51 or so on that lightning fast 10 lap high banked track painted bright red.  That same night Adolph Plummer ran the 440 and the tight, high banking produced so much centrifugal force, his legs collapsed in the middle of the turn.  He took out most of the field when he went down.  He was able to laugh about it afterward.

From that time the OSU Cowboys were on a roll that would carry them to the World Record in the 2 mile relay.   OSU also picked up a great long distance runner that year in Chris McCubbins who would go on to represent both the US and Canada in international competition winning the Pan American Games Steeplechase.   Later that season I was able to finish 3rd to Robin Lingle of Missouri  and Tom in the Big 8 Indoor 1000 yards.  That was one of the highlights of my college running career.  Not many people got around those two.  Robin, Tom, and Chris are all gone now.

George Brose


Below is a personal account from Darryl Taylor that I received this morning about Tom and the 2 mile relay careers of the Cowboys and also Tom's national and international racing history.  Darryl ran for Long Beach State and then joined the 49er Club with Tom and John Perry out in California.


From Darryl Taylor

Dear Friends, George, Roy and Steve,
Here is some sad news that I felt I should share with you, especially in the position you hold for us old timers who
still love the sport in general and the middle-distance/distance events in particular.I guess this is the place I (we)
are in now as we all reach this tender old age, some in better shape than others. I received a troubling message
last night from John Perry, a former 49er TC team mate. The message contained a note that another 49er TC
member and team mate, Tom Von Ruden was in hospice care at a Phoenix hospital, the result of brain cancer
that had metastasized. 

I was introduced to Tom Von Ruden on a sunny afternoon in Albuquerque, NM, January 27th, 1967. The newly
formed 49er Track Club was in the midst of a world class recruiting spree, Tom Jennings having already secured
the services of Harry McCalla (Stanford), Preston Davis (Texas), Jim Kemp (Kentucky) and Tom's Oklahoma
team mates Dave and John Perry. Coming down the ramp to the tarmac I met a trio of middle-distance runners
that included Harry McCalla, Tom and Preston. When they greeted me and introduced me to Tom it came with
the admonition that the following evening, Saturday the 28th, in Tingley Arena, the four of us would be attempting
to better the world indoor record for the 2-Mile Relay. I can understand their concern as four sub-4:00 milers
were looking at a middle of the road half-miler to pull his weight in this attempt. Try as I might to get some sleep,
I spent a restless night trying to convince myself that I would not be the cause of failure and disappointment to
this stellar cast.

The next night our warm-up went well and we stepped to the line for the attempt at history. My running log entry
after the race follows:

"Harry led off and did a good job, considering that he is not a true half-miler. When I got the baton I was
right where I wanted to be, about five yards back from the team from Texas Southern. The Texan took
off and I followed as that big red track just flew by. As we went into one of the turns, T.J. was yelling
51-52-53 as we passed the quarter post in 53.0.  My boy kept leading and before I knew it we had just one
lap to go. I sensed that he was slowing so I went by as hard as I could on the backstretch. All I did from
there was use my arms and pump. Soon there was Tom Von Ruden waiting to take the baton. All he did
was blast a 1:49.2 and put our team out of reach of the competition.  His huge lead as he passed to
Preston Davis made it as easy win, Preston's 1:52.1 anchor just as beautiful as Tom's 3rd leg. Our final
time of 7:25.6, according to T&F News, was a new record for indoor tracks of 10 laps to a mile or less.
After my second leg, it was a solo effort as Texas Southern finished almost a full lap behind at 7:40.4 "

When splits were announced I felt I had contributed my best for the team.  Harry led off with 1:53.1, my 1:51.2
turned out to be my life-time best indoor relay leg, Tom at 1:49.2 and Preston at 1:52.1. For me, it was as
exciting an experience as any I ever had as a runner.  Later in the year, we won the New York AC games and
the National AAU Indoor Championships in Oakland. Tom would go on to represent the USA at the 1968 Olympic
Games in Mexico City and when given the chance to put the club’s best four middle-distance runners together
outdoors, they chased the outdoor 2MR record and the DMR record also. Tom set world records, if memory
serves, at 880 and 1000 yards indoors.

Those events took place 50 years ago, but the memories are still fresh in my mind. I will always treasure my
opportunity to be teamed with these incredible runners who fueled my desire to emulate their achievements,
something I was never able to match. God Bless you Tom Von Ruden for what you contributed to the world of
Track and Field and to the imagination of this middle distance runner.

Hope all is well with all of you.

Darryl Taylor


Being long retired now, I did a day long search of my Track and Field News editions to try and find when Tom
first made an appearance as a runner for Oklahoma State. I found no mention of his name on the collegiate
front during the 1963 season, but in 1964 he began a stellar career that saw world records and an Olympic Final
appearance at 1500 meters.

1964: The June T&FN edition listed Tom as 40th nationally for his 1:51.2 880 and 27th for his 4:06.7 mile. He
represented OSU at the NCAAs with a 9th place finish in the 1500 at 3:45.1, roughly equivalent to a 4:02 mile.
Meanwhile, his team mate twins, Dave and John Perry, were also making news under Coach Ralph Higgins.
Dave Perry placed 7th in the NCAA 800 final at 1:50.1 with a best time of 1:49.6  while John ran 1:50.3 for 880 in
a dual meet against Missouri.

1965: Tom lowered his mile time to 4:04.3 while placing 4th in his heat of the NCAAs and not making the final. On
the 880 list, Tom found himself as the 4th fastest at Oklahoma, his 1:50.7 at the Oklahoma Federation meet far
behind teammates Dave Perry at 1:47.7, John Perry  and fast improving Jim Metcalfe both clocking 1:48.5, John
in the Southern Federation meet and Jim in the Semi-Final of the NCAAs. It was certainly obvious that the recipe
for a very, very fast 2-Mile Relay was on the books. It didn’t take long for Coach Higgins to pick a major West
Coast Relay event to put it into practice. The Fresno Relays provided the perfect venue. Jim Metcalfe led off at
1:50.6 while John Perry’s 1:47.5 was the fastest split. Tom Von Ruden recorded his first sub-1:50 here with a
1:49.3 carry before Dave Perry soloed 1:51.0 to establish a new World Record of 7:18.4. Coach Higgins was
quoted as follows:

“We’ve been trying all year to find some competition for 2-Mile relay team.  It’s too bad UCLA chose the
distance medley relay tonight. And we can’t come to the Coliseum. I told the boys this was their last
chance. They ran well. But they could do better with some real competition, and with anchorman Dave
Perry in full health.”


OKLAHOMA STATE WORLD RECORD 2-MILE RELAY 7:18.4



USTFF 2-MILE RELAY IN PREPARATION FOR THE  WEST COAST RELAYS THAT SAW THE WORLD RECORD GO DOWN
C:\Users\Daryl\Pictures\2018 OKLAHOMA 2MR VON RUDEN\Top-001.jpg

1966: The indoor season had the Oklahoma boys mostly missing in action as they focused on the upcoming
outdoor challenges.  They bid farewell to Dave Perry with a 2nd place showing in the Millrose Games at 7:35.6
but were later disqualified. They reached 7:36.6 at the USTFF, missing the services of Dave Perry with
replacement Droke running 1:56.4 in lead-off position before John Perry took over in 1:52.6 which was enough
to secure the win with Jim Metcalfe’s sub-par 1:56.2 and Tom Von Ruden’s anchor leg of 1:51.4. Dave Perry
was off to the west, winning the 600 in the LA Times Games in 1:11.1 over the Strider’s Ron Whitney. This
would be Dave’s final race under Oklahoma colors as he joined the ever more powerful 49er Track Club in time
for the National AAU Indoor Championships in Albuquerque, NM.  Dave joined Dave Kemp, Darryl Taylor and
Dave Mellady to establish a meet record and the world’s fastest time for 1966 at 7:27.4. All at 5,000 feet of
elevation. Dave Kemp, former Marine and LA State runner led off with 1:51.6. Darryl Taylor, former Long Beach
Stater, pulled even with New Mexico’s John Baker with his 1:51.7erasing a 5 yard deficit passing to Dave
Mellady, former Chicago TC ace who hit 1:54.0 before passing to the newest addition to the club, Dave Perry.
After the race Dave explained that he had not been able to train much this past winter and was disappointed
that his goal of going under 1:50 was missed with his 1:50.1 anchor. Back on the home front Tom Von Ruden
posted a 2:10.2 1000 while John Perry clocked 1:52.1 in the Big 8 indoor finals.  






NATIONAL AAU INDOOR 2-MILE RELAY CHAMPS AT 7:27.4
Dave Perry’s first race as a 49er saw him anchoring a fast 1:50.1
Dave Perry-1:50.1   Dave Mellady-1:54.0  Darryl Taylor-1:51.7  Dave Kemp-1:51.6
Tom finally got his 880 legs going during 1966. He placed 2nd in the USTFF in 1:47.9 while his mile time
matured with a solid 4:01.1 for 2nd place in the Big 8 Final. Nationally these marks represented 10th and 14th.
His team mates were lighting up the track also, John Perry’s 1:47.7 just edging Jim Metcalfe’s 1:47.8 at the
Big 8 Championship. Dave Perry, now competing for the 49er Track Club, checked in with a solid 1:48.2 in the
AAU Championships for 3rd place in his heat.  
C:\Users\Daryl\Pictures\2018 OKLAHOMA\Top-008.jpg
John Perry at 1:47.7 Metcalfe 1:47.8     Dave Perry’s Final Race for OSU
1967:  How would 1967, a Pre-Olympic year, stack up against a stellar 1966?  A major change was in the wind for the Oklahoma boys as they left a dedicated college coach to pursue Olympic dreams on the west coast of Southern California. Tom Von Ruden and John Perry joined former Oklahoman Dave Perry as members of the 49er Track Club of Long Beach, California.  That transition from college dorms to living on their own as expected, took some getting used to.

INDOOR SEASON:  Preparing the the high stakes environment of international and Olympic competition, Tom
set about to establish himself as a runner to reckon with.  Setting the table for a stellar indoor campaign, a late
January trip to Albuquerque saw his third leg 1:49.2 880 help erase the fastest 10 lap per mile world mark for
the 49er Track Club to 7:25.6.  Joining him in the record run were Harry McCalla, former Stanford star , leading
off in 1:53.1, Darryl Taylor-1:51.2 and Preston Davis, former Texas star anchoring in 1:52.1. That 1:49.2 split
was one of the fastest ever recorded indoors and the 7:25.6 winning effort was the 3rd fastest ever indoors on
any sized track. Barely taking a deep breath, a short week later, on February 4th in San Diego, it was the
American record for 1000 yards that fell, his 2:06.8 following splits of 53.7 and 1:51.0.  
C:\Users\Daryl\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\INetCache\Content.Word\Top - Copy.jpg
   TOM VON RUDEN   DAVE PERRY PRESTON DAVIS   DARRYL TAYLOR
2-MILE RELAY WINNERS 7:36.9
A NATIONAL AAU 2-MILE RELAY VICTORY SENT TOM OUTDOORS
An  early attempt at the one mile distance produced his best indoor clocking. The LA Invitational saw him
chasing Jim Ryun to the line in 4:03.3 to Ryun’s 4:02.3 but besting Dyrol Burleson’s 4:03.8.   A two-week break
and Tom was busy again, hitting 4:02.6 in a mass finish at the New York AC Games while his 49er TC mates
won the 2-mile Relay in 7:29.8 (McCalla-1:53.4 Taylor-1:53.3 J. Perry-1:53.0 and anchor Preston Davis-1:50.1).
Oregon and Fordham fell with good times of 7:30.2 and 7:31.8.Tom was in action again in Louisville for the
Mason-Dixon Games and cemented his stellar credentials with yet another World Record at 880 yards. This
was accomplished on an oversized 220 yard track with wildly differing negative splits. Passing 440 in 56.5 Tom
ripped 52.5 for his 1:49.0 World Record.  Tom’s quote after the race: “The early pace was a little slow. You
usually set records with a faster first quarter.”  Tom wrapped up his indoor season with a National AAU
Indoor Championship 2-Mile victory. Hosted in the Oakland Arena, the officials miss-marked the passing zones
but adjusted splits to fairly accurate times. Darryl Taylor’s 1:55.2 was enough for a 10 yard lead over NYAC’s
1:56.7. John Perry split 1:54.6 while a flu weakened Tom Von Ruden just held off NYAC’s Bryne’s 1:53.1.
Preston Davis, reporting to the Army in San Pedro, California the next Tuesday, anchored in 1:52.5 for a short
stride victory as  the 49ers went 7:36.9 and NYAC clocked 7:37.0.


 

Von Ruden’s 2:06.8 American Record and 3:56.9 AAU Effort

he US list for outdoor performances in 1967 showed the results of this new independence.  Tom Von Ruden
now a 49er, ran 1:48.7 for 800 meters at the World Games for 3rd place in June.  In March, John Perry’s 1:48.1
was decidedly faster when translated into 800 meters, a PR of 1:47.4.  Dave Perry’s 1:49.6 for 880 translates to
1:48.9 for meters in a tri-meet at Occidental in May. Von Ruden’s 1:49.6, although slightly inferior to his World
Games mark, still ranked even with Dave Perry’s ’67 best. Former team mate Jim Metcalfe, still at Oklahoma,
made the top 20 for the year with a solid 1:49.0 for 880 good for 1:48.3 meters.  

One explanation for the relative “ordinary” 800 mark for Von Ruden was his apparent focus on the 1500/mile
events as his chosen shot at making the Olympic team in Mexico City in 1968.  In pursuit of that dream, it looks
like the 800/880 was an afterthought, perhaps a way to work on his leg speed for the Olympic Trials. And here,
Tom had a stellar season. Tom and future team mate Sam Bair made the most of their National AAU race in the
night air of Bakersfield, California, on June22-23. Tom followed Jim Ryun in his heat, both hitting 4:07.5.  Ryun
had stated a goal of going under 3:50 but the early pace, 59.0/1:58.9 negated that goal. 2:57.4 at 1320 set up a
sprinter’s finish, Ryun lowering his world record to 3:51.1 while towing the field to one of history’s deepest sub-4
results. Tom’s first open mile under 4:00 was stellar at 3:56.9 in 4th place, a strong indicator for the Trials some
months later.  On a roll, Tom continued his quest for the Oly Trials, winning  the PAM TRIALS in July as he won
a crazy 1500 by inches at 3:49.7 ahead of Sam Bair-3:49.7, Jim Grelle-3:49.8 and Dave Wilborn-3:49.9.  Tom
also won the Pam Am Games 1500 in a slow (2:05/3:04) pace mad dash to the finish line, hitting 3:43.3 over
Sam Bair’s 3:44.1. Extending the season even longer, Tom lowered his 1500 best to 3:41.0 while winning the
America vs Europe race over Arne Kvalheim , Jean Wadoux and Sam Bair. It was beginning to look like that
mostly idle indoor season was paying off. T&F News’ World List for August now found Von Ruden occupying #8
at 1500 and #5 in the  mile.


Von Ruden Chases Ryun in 4:03.3 and Downs Dyrol Burleson

Finds International success in America vs Europe with 3:41.0
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