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V 6 N. 35 Some new/old pictures

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As mentioned earlier this month , I came across a lot of old pictures some not seen very often in the Wright State University Library Special Collections.


Here are the ones of Bobby Morrow.    Please note these are used through the courtesy of Wright State University and not for commercial reproduction.










Probably from Sports Illustrated sportsman of the year awards








Here's a foray into the 440 at Drake Relays finishing behind Glenn Davis and Dave Mills and ahead of Willie Atterbury

From Bill Schnier:
Real good photos of Bobby Morrow.  It's fun to see an as-is sprinter with minimal, if any, weightlifting and no steroids or supplements other than a steak and a hamburger.  Very different from the supermen of today.  Also nice to see a picture of Dave Mills.  I ran a 100 against him at the Kettering Holiday at Home and he nosed me out, the only older person ever to beat me in a 100.  When I found out who he was I felt better.      BIll

Great pictures of Morrow, Mills, Davis. I think I remember Davis was hurt hurdling and concentrated on flat races for awhile.


Phil  Scott

V 6 N. 36 Jose Luis Munoz Olympic Games Volunteer seeking assistance to attend the Games in Rio

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Jose Luis Munoz comes to us highly recommended by one of our readers, Mike Solomon.  Jose was selected to be a volunteer by the USOC in Rio to provide assistance to US Olympic athletes at the US Olympic House during the Games.   Jose is graduating this week (Masters Degree) from the University of Kansas.  See the Go Fund Me Link below to learn more about Jose's efforts to go to Rio.   Jose came to the University of Kansas on a track scholarship but was injured with several serious stress fractures that terminated his competitive running career.   In the gofundme site there are several pictures of Jose in a USA uniform.  These were publicity photos done by the USOC for another purpose, so these are merely modeling picutres of the uniform, not team participation photos.




Thank you so much!
I am trying to collect as much money as I can before June 1st so I can start booking my flight and hotel. Below is the link and a little intro.

My name is Jose Luis Munoz Jr. and a dream of mine since I was young has been to make it to the Olympics. I hope this open letter finds you well as I am excited to update you on a great opportunity I have before me. Currently, I am finishing graduate school at the University of Kansas in Higher Education Administration this May. In addition to my schooling I serve as a graduate assistant for the student-athlete development and leadership program at KU Athletics. To be the first in my family to attend graduate school is one of the most gratifying things I have ever experienced.  This experience has deeply impacted every area of my life. My first year as a Jayhawk, I had high goals of winning races and breaking records. I never imagined my competitive running would end before my eligibility did when I was announced medically disqualified to compete. Though my competitive dreams were no longer in reach God helped me to see that there is still great value and purpose in my life. Back then, the dream was to be an Olympic Distance runner and bring home a medal. Two years ago, I have had the opportunity to intern with the USA Track and Field governing body and was incredible experience. Please help me on making this opportunity become reality. Thank you.

José Luis Muñoz Jr.
KU Leads
Student-Athlete Development and Leadership
Allen Fieldhouse
1651 Naismith Dr.
Lawrence, KS 66045

V 6 N. 37 Book Recommendation and a Mike Larrabee Story

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For some history of research in distance running you can  open the following link coming to us from
Phillip Sparling  via Dr. David Costill.   A synopsis of several compendiums of research on running and recommendations of several other books you may have already read.   How many of the runners in the picture taken with Kenneth Cooper and Michael Pollock can you identify?  Some are household names, others a bit less known.  All are studs from the 70s who participated in a major research project.


http://blogs.bmj.com/bjsm/2016/05/07/distance-running-part-ii-landmark-research-projects-and-science-based-books/




On another subject we received this link to a story on Mike Larrabee,  1964 Olympic 400 meter champion from the L.A. Times.   Imagine winning an Olympic Gold medal today and returning to the classroom teaching math.

Mike Larrabee

The story came to us from Larry Loveridge who wrote the following:


Greetings From North Hollywood--
You have a great Blog. I left the following comment there, but was unable to post the photo I had wished to share. Here is the comment and I have attached  the photo and an LA Times article about Mike Larrabee..

Thank you for this blogger site... I attended and ran cross country and track (hurdles, sprints, jumps) 1962-1965 at James Monroe High in what is now called North Hills, CA. All my shoes were purchased through Cliff at his store at 10436 Magnolia in North Hollywood. And Mike Larrabee was our math teacher at Monroe in 1964 and he'd come out and run fartleks with us for workouts before he went over to Tokyo. Literally, he WAS a man among us boys. We even made him an honorary Letterman of our track team. I later keyed my events to the Triple Jump and Intermediates and toured the US representing the US Navy and then as a member of the All Military CISM team to Ireland and Europe. My teammates were the likes of Charlie Greene, Mel Pender, Jim Kemp, Geoff Vanderstock, Tracy Smith, Kenny Moore, Neal Steinhauer, Les Tipton, and our coach was Ralph Higgins. I still have my original Adidas and also the TJ shoes I jumped in from that era.
Thanks again for you diligent work with the site.

Larry Loveridge
North Hollywood CA


   
It was the Viking track team he joined Monday — his first day of classes after his return trip from Olympic competition in Tokyo. The student body cheered at a noon rally as Larrabee became an honorary varsity letterman.
Here I am with those original shoes... In 1964 (Note the Riddells on the left.)

V 6 N. 38 Mamie Rallins R.I.P.

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Mamie Rallins,  Olympian (1968 and 1972) and the first women's track and field coach at Ohio State University died tragically in an automobile accident recently in Ohio.

Below are two pieces about Mamie Rallins.



Rob Oller commentary | Ohio State women's track: Mamie Rallins won hearts with tough love

Stephanie Hightower arrived at Ohio State in 1976 a track and field diva. She left it four years later as one of Mamie Rallins’ little girls.
“That’s what she called us, her little girls. She never married and never had kids. We were her kids,” Hightower said Tuesday.
Those kids are heartbroken today, pained by the death of Rallins, the first African-American woman to coach at Ohio State. The Chicago native was killed Monday afternoon in a four-car collision near Fremont while driving from Columbus to her home in Port Clinton. Her car drifted left of center and struck two semis before colliding with a four-door sedan, according to a Ohio Highway Patrol release. She was 74.
I knew Rallins only from a distance — a distance I chose to keep, because she intimidated me. That look. Eyes narrowing. Voice snapping. Below a crusty exterior, however, was a nurturing caretaker who was fiercely loyal to her athletes.
“Once she loved you, you became hers,” Hightower said.
But first came the tough stuff.
“For the first three months at Ohio State she made me run cross country,” said Hightower, who was stunned by having to run something with more than two turns. For context, asking a sprinter to run anything more than a city block is like requiring a Derby horse to plow fields.
“She would drop us off in Upper Arlington and tell us to run back with the cross country team,” Hightower continued. “I was a sprinter and a prima donna. I had to figure out how I was going to deal with this woman.”
Unbeknownst to Hightower, Rallins already had figured how best to deal with her fastest athlete. Mixing tough love with reverse psychology, Rallins helped turn Hightower into the nation’s top women’s hurdler by telling her what she could not do.
“I was competitive, and that got me revved up to prove her wrong,” Hightower said.
Unfortunately, any chance for the Buckeyes’ hurdler to prove she was best in the world was quashed when the United States boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics, after Hightower already had made the team.
For Rallins, it was the third time getting caught in the middle of political turmoil. A world-class hurdler at Tennessee State, she competed in the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, where U.S. sprinters John Carlos and Tommie Smith made their Black Power Salute during the medal ceremony. She also participated in the 1972 Munich Games, when Palestinian terrorists murdered 11 members of the Israeli team.
Rallins discussed that Olympic history with her OSU athletes, but not to push a political agenda.
“I didn’t see Mamie as an activist,” said Hightower, who is President and CEO of the Columbus Urban League. “For her it was just being a purist as it related to sports. It was about the purity of the Olympic movement. She did talk about the tragedy of the ’72 Olympics, but more about how devastating it was and why anyone would do something like that. For her it was about how athletes from different countries bonded and how people made lifelong friends.”
Rallins also made clear she did not need the Olympics to create lifelong friendships. She was brought to OSU in 1976 to birth the track and field and cross country programs as varsity sports, and she kept in touch with the former athletes she coached during her 18 years at OSU, a career that saw her coach 60 indoor and outdoor Big Ten champions and 24 All-Americans. She also served the past seven years as a volunteer assistant under Karen Dennis, director of Ohio State track and cross country.
“She was a nurturing soul,” Hightower said. “We’re all heartbroken. She was just good people.”
Rob Oller is a sports reporter for The 

Jan. 17, 2016
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Former women's track and field head coach Mamie Rallins received the Phyllis Bailey Career Achievement award at the women's basketball game against Purdue on Sunday.

Rallins, a two-time Olympic hurdler, helped start the women's track and field and cross country programs at Ohio State when she became head women’s coach in 1976. The first African-American woman to ever coach at Ohio State, she she coached 60 Big Ten indoor/outdoor champions, 24 All Americans, nine Olympic trial qualifiers and one Olympian during an 18-year career. She also served as assistant athletic director for three years.

Rallins also coached elite athletes, serving as the head coach of the U.S. indoor world championship team in 1987 and assistant coach of the USA Olympic team in 1996. She was the Olympic head manager for the USA women’s track team at the 2000 Sydney Games.

Rallins remains very involved with the Buckeyes, volunteering as a statistician for the track and field program.

I liked Mamie. When I went to Moscow in 74' with the US team, Mamie was on the team and sorta " showed me the ropes" as it was my first international meet and she had been on many such trips. At the outdoor track meets, she became friends with Judy and took an interest in our schnauzer. In later years I knew her as the coach of OSU and would visit with her on occasion. She always called me "old man" and reading this news report, I find she actually was older than me. She as a great hurdler and a great coach. 

Steve Price

Mamie took the lessons from Ed Temple and applied it to the more advantaged Ohio State.  Like Steve, I enjoyed her and she was always nice to me.  Over the years there has been so much drama at OSU with the T&F programs, but Mamie was able to do her thing.  She was a hard-nosed coach, much like her mentor.
   Bill Schnier


Report on Accident

V 6 N. 39 Photo Collection

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While researching for another article, I came across a number old track pictures that might interest many of our readers.  I'm sure there are many, many stories in these pictures that will never be written.  Some of you may have some interesting comments on what you see here.  Do not hesitate to write in your comments at the bottom of this page.  We'll censor them and allow them to appear at the bottom of the post.   Don't ask why I put those last two pictures in,  I just felt like it.
George







Dickie Browning, U. of Illinois, Jan., 1954 a national tumbling champion going over 6; 8".  I remember reading something about this guy in Scholastic Coach.  His approach to the HJ bar was
a series of back handsprings that took him over the bar and into what looks like the side of a pole vault pit.  The practice was outlawed as he took off from two feet.  But definitely a precursor of the Fosbury Flop, and by the looks of it quite risky.  The pictures appeared in Life Magazine.





Eulace Peacock, he beat Jesse Owens five times in 1935 but was injured and on the sidelines or running way below par
in 1936.

George Spitz  6' 8 1/4" for NYU  at Penn 1933

Jack Keller Ohio State demonstrating hurdle form at Penn  1934

Jesse Owens beating Sam Stoller (Michigan)   in a 10.5  100 meters at Penn in 1935

Wilt Chamberlain throwing high school shot at Penn Relays in
the late 1950's about 46 feet.  One step across the circle?

Wilt's high school running form.  Early version of compression socks?  I recall
he always wore knee pads like that playing basketball.  Looks like a total crap
playground track.  Weeds in lane one.   He was a Philadelphia native.

Tracy Smith,  Pre,  and Sid Sink
photographer unknown, nice job

Guys who beat Pre while winning their race.  You can click on the photo to enlarge it and read the captions

Lewis Tekaninawa, teammate of Jim Thorpe at Carlisle Indian School and Olympic teammate

Tempe, AZ, looks like the location of the old track back in the 1960s when it was in  the old
football stadium

Calvin Coolidge US President with Paavo Nurmi (rt.)

Ed Cook,  1908 co-gold Medalist Pole Vault London.
Taught and coached in Oakwood, OH for many years

Jessie Owens, Fanny Blankers Koen,  Emil Zatopek

Dave Sime
Wright St. Archives Photo
There are a lot of publicity fotos of this nature when Duke was turning
him into the golden boy in 1956.   Recent Sports Illustrated article has
put a little tarnish on his image.

John Davies, Joseph Odlozil, Peter Snell

Horace Ashenfelter and his Russian twin Helsinki 1952



Horace Ashenfelter about 2014 lacing them up for his 2-3 miles every other day run.
Thanks to David Baskwill and the Penn St Track Alum and Golf Blog

Brooklyn Marathon, 1909.  Runners look contemporary, crowd a bit antiquated

Mark Wright,  WR  June 8, 1912

Fanny Rosenfeld   Canadian Sprinter ,  1920s



Nazi Track
Guy in military uniform doing a little dance

Nazi track.  Check those haircuts and spikes

Canadian Phil Edwards   only man to win 4 bronze olympic medals 1928,1932, 1936

Highway marker noting Jesse Owens' birth place in Lawrence County,  Alabama, courtesy of Pete Brown






Irish American Club of New York after setting a World Record 1200 yard relay at Celtic Park NYC  July 26, 1913 with 3 Olympians

1939 USC  two mile relay team with Louis Zampirini on left


The Ira Murchison and Walter Buddy Davis photos below are courtesy of
Wright State University special collections

Ira Muchison with some of his winnings.  No idea on the date
but you can ask Ira what time it is.

Add caption
1952 Olympic Champion Walter Buddy Davis, at the National AAU meet in 
in Dayton, Ohio 1953.  Photo by Homer Hacker Dayton Daily News staff photographer

Walter Davis  in Dayton, OH,
Homer Hacker photog

Photographer's stamp on back of the Davis Photos





Walter Davis receiving 'Most Courageous' award from Ed Pollock of the
Philadelphia Sportswriters Association 1954.   Davis had polio for six years
as a child. overcame to become Olympic High Jump champion in 1952.  He
retired from track in 1953 and signed a contract to play in the NBA.  He had
been a two sport letterman at Texas A&M.  Babe Dietrickson won the same award
for women that year.  AP wirephoto



Archie San Romani beats Glenn Cunningham at Kansas Relays



Can you name this guy?  He's not a trackster, but a houshold
name nonetheless?  See at bottom of page

A long time TV dunce?  See below.  This photo from 1951  Philadelphia







The mystery men

John Madden

Ed McMahon




V 6 N. 40 All Time Performance List Italy

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Jose Sant in Montreal sent me a website that included information about Italian track nuts who are doing some interesting work to preserve memories of the sport.  In that website were all time performance lists for Italian Men and Women.   This shows that we are not alone in the track world of trying to preserve the history of this great sport.   I'll also include the website as well if you are interested.   To get a translation in English, open the website, then right click on your mouse and a box will open.  Click on the instruction , " translate to English" and a computer generated translation will open, proving once again that the computer is not quite up to where the human brain is regarding  nuance in language.  George

Italian Men's All Time Performance List


Italian Women's All Time Performance List


Italian Historical Archive Site

Below is an extract from this website

We receive and publish.
I read with great interest the "story" that Marco Martini Italian sprinter has devoted to the early twentieth century, Ettore Caps. And I remembered to have in the library a book that I bought in Britain a few years ago, a book certainly Italic ignored our latitudes, published in the UK in 1943, then in the middle of World War II. So that in the back of the title reads: "this book is produced in complete conformity with the authorized economy standards ", but despite the limitations of the war economy the volume is very well presented, with a nice red cover, a hardcover that resists like new after more than seventy years, and some 91 photographs of excellent quality of the most celebrated sprinters, distance runners and cross-country professionals, as well as the organizers of those shows. Because it is precisely the professionals races which is dedicated, and as far as I know should be the only one on this matter. The well also think the compilers of the most useful publication, also British , "The British track and field guides to literature in 1275 to 1968 ", published for the first time in 1969 and then republished a few years ago by the British Library. We read on page 37 to comment " Powderhall and pedestrianism. The history of a sports enclosure, 1870-1943 ", this is the book to which I refer: " Professional athletics is a sport and twilight Jamieson is the only writer in modern times to give it a detailed consideration ". David A. Jamieson is the author, in fact.
In the north of the city of Edinburgh is created this space dedicated to professional sport, with races for men but also for animals, races that attracted thousands of spectators and especially of punters. Legacy of that road racing in the early nineteenth century who lived on large bets among the rich guy, who walked for days and days. A beautiful story with all the details is told in the book by Walter Thom (1813) walk on the "Captain Barclays", so he was known. From 1870 onwards Edinburgh flourished a busy pedestrian activities, involving not only the sprinters but also middle-distance runners, even the marathon runners. If we go into details never end, then we return to our caps. I asked myself if it was as good as he told the Italian reporters that "drank" avidly all, it should be somewhere above bid, with all the details, from Jamieson in her book. I looked in the index and found " Hoods, H., See Hector, C ". As also writes Martini, our was known to Edinburgh as Hector, and not with his Italian surname. Beside a reference: page 172, where it is the year 1916. He writes this author:
Coincident with Those events were the attractions provided by sprint handicaps And Also the continued popularity of dog-racing. In connection with the former a unique occurrence must be Referred to-one wich, moreover, has no parallel in the history of the Grounds. this incident occurred in the final of 130 yds. handicap run onSeptember 30, When Two runners ran two successive dead-heats, and Their struggle continued in a third attempe before a final decision was Gained. The runners were C. Hector , Edinburgh, running from 16 yds., and M.Malcon, Edinburg, handicapped at 11 yds., and Hector after another grim struggle succeeded in Gaining the judge's fiat. Both men were well-known competitors at Powderhall, Hector (in private life known as Caps ) was responsible for the introduction of many famous runners of foreign extraction, icluding the Kolehmainen brothers, to this country, whilst Malcon had a very successful carreer as a handicap winner, especially in the lower supporting items of the various New Year Galas, in cui he was successful in no fewer than four 220 yds. handicaps. ".
So our Ettore was a well-known competitor , and is what results from the search for Martini., But not a super And this is meant to be only a small documentary evidence, nothing else.
In the picture: the title of the book by David A. Jamieson                              

V 6 N. 41 Mike Agostini R.I.P.

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The IAAF website noted the passing of Mike Agostini.

Mike Agostini


If my memory is correct Mike was one of the early athletes who were suspected of taking under the table payments from meet organizers  when runners were being given a pittance to appear and compete at meets, while officials lived the high life.
Agostini winning 1954 Empire Games in Vancouver

Ira Murchison leading Agostini in Melbourne 100 Semis


Agostini started life in Trinidad in 1935, became an accomplished sprinter making the 100 meter finals in Melbourne in 1956, ran for Fresno State, and is seen online in a Villanova uniform.  After retiring from track competitions he emigrated to Australia and started several sports magazines including one called "Track and Field".   He was also an accomplished author and most recently published   "Death, The Ultimate Orgasm".    See Amazon link below.

Death, the Ultimate Orgasm

V 6 N. 42 Some Tid Bits Hopefully to Your Liking

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My colleague and co-conspirator Mr. Roy Mason sent me this little ditty yesterday.


In watching the  NBA playoffs - Go Warriors - I was intrigued with the intense play of Steven Adams of Oklahoma City (bearded white guy with one arm heavily tattooed, 7-0, 255).  Knew he was from New Zealand, but no more.  Love the internet.  Looked him up.  He is the youngest of 18 kids his English dad had with 5 women.  The big news, track fans, is that his sister is Valerie Adams, the Olympic gold medalist in 2008 and 2012.  Now, aren't you glad you know me?  This information is available nowhere else. 
Steven Adams,  Man in Transition







Roy,
Well, factually speaking, the information is out there, but I was totally unaware.
However I will be the first to admit I was particularly drawn to Steven Adams while watching the OKC  Warriors series for his size and photogenic character.  Also that is the same name my grandfather sported after going through Ellis Island as Stanislaus Adamowicz and confounding the immigration officers with his family monnicker.    Adams is listed as hailing from Rotorura, New Zealand, which any track and field expert will remember is the NZ home of Jack Foster, the 40 year old marathoner who broke the stereotyping in that event in the 1972 Olympics.

Valerie Adams Throwing





Don't mess with my little brother Steven!

Thanks, Roy.    Now if readers  will drop down  you will find some stunning track and field film taken in Birmingham,England in 1901 and  1902.   Nice editing and commentary with musical background fully appropriate to the times.  This appeared on Walt Murphy's blog recently.   A longer cut can be found on youtube.

1901 Birmingham England Track Meet

1902 Birmingham England Track Meet





V6 N. 43 John Hendershott, Hommage from Paul O'Shea

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Jon Hendershott, One of the Sport’s Eminent Journalists,
Leaves Track and Field News with Multitudes of Old, Good Friends
By Paul O’Shea






Adlai Stevenson returned to his alma mater Princeton University in 1954 after twice running for the Presidency, and serving as Ambassador to the United Nations and Governor of Illinois. Remembering his years at the Ivy League school he told the senior class: Your days are short here; this is the last of your springs.  And now in the serenity and quiet of this lovely place, touch the depths of truth, feel the hem of Heaven.  You will go away with old, good friends. And don’t forget when you leave, why you came.
After a distinguished career of 48 years, his legacy secure as one of this sport’s foremost writers, Jon Hendershott leaves Track and Field News. We know why he came--to write about the sport he loved, with flair, enthusiasm and integrity, and appreciation for its history and relevance.  He moves on with multitudes of old, good friends.


Thirteen years after Adlai Stevenson spoke at Princeton, the 21-year-old Hendershott began work at Track and Field News.  He came to California from Washington, and over almost the next five decades traveled to small towns and major cities across continents to cover Olympians and back-of-the-pack high schoolers, wherever there were runners, jumpers and throwers.


Jon will certainly remember how he came to track and field reporting, and those of us who looked for his byline are rewarded by the stories he told.  He made hundreds, perhaps thousands of friends, completing his service as Associate Editor.  From the era when races were timed in tenths of a second to today’s automatic hundredths, Jon reported at nine Olympic Games, fourteen World Championships (missing just one), innumerable national and international meetings, conference events, and lesser competitions.  He’s interviewed and written about many of the sport’s prominent figures, a number of whom became his friends.


Ironically, the writer in waiting emerged after becoming transfixed by a photograph.


When Jon was ten, older brother Bob brought home a copy
of LIFE Magazine.  There on the cover, blazing across the finish line, winning the 1956 Olympic Games 100 meters was Bobby Morrow of the United States.  The glories of Olympic sport made an indelible impression on the Seattle-raised fifth grader.  


“Having been swept away by the photography from those Games, in my naiveté, I wanted to be an Olympic-level athlete,” Jon remembers. “It didn’t take long to have that pipe dream punctured.  Once I got to junior high I tried sprinting and hurdling but couldn’t make the team.  When we moved from Bend, Oregon where I was born and I got to high school in Seattle, I was no better.  Strictly a junior varsity hurdler and mile relayer was I.”


He spent his first eight years in Klamath Falls where his dad coached high school football and track, “there were more than a few times when my brother, mom and I would go to the high school to watch practice, especially for track in the spring.


“I can’t say that I had any grand feeling of ‘freedom when running, the wind flying around me,’ or anything quite that lyrical.  But when I both discovered the Olympics at age ten, then tried out for track in junior high, the sport just grabbed hold of me.
“Even back in junior high I somehow knew that I had to find a way to get to the Olympics. It also happened that in junior high and then in high school that I took journalism classes and found that I could string together more than a few words into coherent and somehow readable sentences.  I wrote about track and other sports for the school newspaper. So writing about track specifically, became the vehicle by which I eventually got to experience all that is the Olympics.”


Jon picked up his first issue of Track and Field News when his high school coach subscribed and shared copies with the athletes. “I was totally smitten and in 1962 began subscribing immediately.”


After high school he entered the journalism program at the University of Washington. Then, in 1965, like a boxed in runner who sees a curb lane open up fifty meters from the finish line, he saw an ad in the magazine.  Track and Field News editors were looking for an intern. Jon applied to managing editor Dick Drake and was accepted for the one-year assignment only to confront an implacable object, Jon’s father.


“I asked my dad if I could take the job in Los Altos, California and it was the only time in our family life that he said no.  It was my freshman year in college, and he thought I should wait until I graduated.  And he was right.”  
Several years later T&FN circulation was growing like a triple jumper—in leaps and bounds.  Again Jon answered an ad and this time he entered the athletics world on December 1, 1967 as an editorial assistant in Los Altos. Transferring to San Jose State and majoring in magazine journalism he continued working toward his degree. World-class sprinters like Tommie Smith and Lee Evans walked across campus with the novice journalist.  It was his first mixed zone.


During his time with track and field’s foremost information source, Jon has handled a variety of assignments, managing a fleet of stringers, finding and acquiring immense amounts of the sport’s data, and working with dozens of photographers across the world since the magazine first went to full-color production in 1996 with the Athens Olympic Games issue.  The ten-year-old whose interest was fired by a LIFE photo turned out to have a keen sense of the story that a captivating photo will tell.  He also wrote single event analysis, participated in Track and Field News prediction efforts, and weighed in on the internationally acclaimed Yearly Rankings.  In addition, he also shepherded Track and Field News Tour members.


Since early successes and misfortunes with the barriers in high school (“My dream was to be an Olympic 400 hurdler), he’s had a special affection for the event and its high-end performers.  He’s interviewed such as Kingdom, Nehemiah, Drut, Moses, Young, Devers, Jones, Oliver, Jackson, Merritt, Richardson.  Three years ago in an article subtitled “Just A Wild & Crazy Thought,” he posited the idea that hurdlers could run faster if they took two rather than three steps between hurdles. It proved not to be a step whose idea had come.


In the view of this writer, one of Jon’s special strengths is the ability to find the soul of an athlete through long-form interviews.   Digging through recent issues supplied by my good friend, Tom Coyne of Kalamazoo, Michigan, another long-time subscriber, three articles show Jon at his best.


Jon’s interview with Jason Richardson came before the 2013 Moscow Worlds.  He explored how Jason’s focus on hurdling increased under the tutelage of John Smith, and the differences in concentration required between the collegiate and professional environments.  Jason also revealed why he trains on 39-inch rather than 42-inch hurdles.  Following retirement from athletics, Richardson has prepared a bucket list that includes attending a tennis Grand Slam tournament, NBA playoffs, Oscars, and the Metropolitan Opera Gala Ball.  He also intends to read the Bible in its entirety twice.


Brigetta Barrett presented another interesting subject, following winning the high jump silver medal in the 2012 Olympic Games.  In addition to her athletic abilities, Barrett offered entertainment talents as a singer.  In the post-event interview at the Olympics, she sang a religious hymn after being asked what she sang while in competition.  She has sung at professional baseball and football bowl games.


In 2014 Jon talked with Molly Huddle, whose success at shorter distances opened up questions about the University of Notre Dame runner moving up to the marathon.  The piece also explored her life with husband Kurt Benninger, another successful collegiate distance performer.  Huddle discussed the unusual benefits of a runner married to a spouse who understands the demands required of athletes who train at the elite level.


After decades of sitting in press boxes and standing trackside, Jon chose three of the greatest performances, two of which he witnessed.  The three were Billy Mills’ electrifying victory in the l964 Olympic 10,000 meters, Mac Wilkins setting three consecutive discus world records in one meet in 1976, and the l991 World Championships long jump, when Mike Powell set a world record, just after Carl Lewis had first obliterated Bob Beamon’s 29 feet, two-and-a-half inch Mexico mark. More recently, Jon holds high Usain Bolt’s two hundred meter world record of 19.19 set at the 2009 Worlds in Berlin.   


While he did not see the Mills victory in person, he viewed the TV coverage and the subsequent documentary of the Tokyo Olympiad.  In addition, Jon’s first major interview for T&FN was in l968 with the gold medalist.


Earlier in his career, one of the great runners he reported on was Steve Prefontaine.  “Once, we were sitting next to each other on a plane, as we headed up to Bakersfield, California for the l973 USA Championships. Though I had a chance to talk to him for a while, I realized that he was on his way to a big race, probably deep in thought. So the right thing to do was just to let him be.  I also felt he was a bit shy, and didn’t want to be disturbed.  So it was quiet there for most of the flight.”


One measure of professional achievement is the respect given by one’s peers.  Track and Field Writers of America elected him its president in l994 and l995, and conferred its Jesse Abramson Award as Journalist of the Year in l989 and 2012. He also is the author of Track’s Greatest Women, published in l987, which featured chapters on fifteen of the greatest female track athletes to that time, ranging from Babe Didrikson to Evelyn Ashford.


Though retired from day-to-day responsibilities at T&FN and now living in Salem, Oregon, he keeps his hand in as a senior correspondent.  Earlier this year the magazine ran a full page article on Jon’s stepping down, which included sentiments from sub-four minute miler Jim Beatty, hurdle legend Renaldo Nehemiah, Olympic hammer thrower Ken Flax, Coach Dave Wollman, World hurdle champ Tonie Campbell, and Decathlon Superstar Ashton Eaton.


Chicago Tribune writer Phil Hersh wrote: “Once again, Jon, my everlasting thanks for being a great colleague who was always willing to share his expertise with those of us who covered the sport far less frequently.  No matter how harried you might have been, you always found the time to answer a question, pass on a kind word or simply to elevate everyone’s mood with a smile.”


Ed Fox, long time Publisher of Track and Field News, assesses Jon’s contributions this way.  “Jon was a mainstay of our magazine for almost 50 years, and he now transitions into a well-deserved retirement.  But of course, we’re not going to let him leave us completely.  He’ll still do assignments for the magazine, and we’re going to keep him as our lead in-person at our Tour functions, a task he has done brilliantly through the years.  So Jon will thankfully still be involved, but no longer subjected to those cruel monthly deadlines that bedevil our editorial staff.


“Jon still has the same enthusiasm for our sport, and respect for its history, that he had when he started with us as a 21-year-old, and that’s what made him so valuable to us over the years—as a resource and a track and field ‘fellow traveler.’”


Finally, there are the thoughts of Olympian, American record holder and victor in The Dream Mile against Jim Ryun, when Marty Liquori was thinking about hanging up the spikes.
Quit?  Retire?  Hell, no.  Next year, I’m really gonna train.


------------------

Paul O’Shea is a lifelong participant in the track and field and running world, as competitor, coach, journalist and traveler to national and international events.  After retirement from a career in corporate communications, he coached a high school girls’ cross country team and was a long-time contributor to Cross Country Journal and Athletics, the Canadian publication. He now writes for Once Upon a Time in the Vest from hishome in northern Virginia, and can be reached at Poshea17@aol.com.

V6 N. 44 Program Southern Counties (California) 1965 Coliseum Relays 1950, and a Recent Cartoon

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Here is a program from the California   Southern Counties Track and Field Meet, sent by our friend Mike Solomon.    Note on Page 4  the reader of the wind gauge that evening was a young Lute Olson who spent a few years  in SoCal after leaving the frozen wastes of Minnesota and the Dakotas.  Lute would go on to coach basketball at Long Beach State and Arizona where he quickly went into the basketball coaches hall of fame,  and lastly a recent cartoon on the doping situation.


Page 1
Page 2

Page 3



Page 4

Page 5

Page 6



Cartoon recently in Victoria Times Colonist 2016




V 6 N. 44 Gunder Hagg US Tour in Cincinnati, 1943

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A dear friend,  Bob Roncker in Cincinnati started his own  blog recently and is putting out a  lot of good old days stuff on history of running in Cincinnati.  There's a lot to  be known about that running community including that I think they have the longest continuous Thanksgiving race west of the Alleghenies.   I know that may be news to some of the East Coasters who may think we don't yet have flush toilets west of those mountains (we do), so if you want to know some interesting things about Midwest running from the late 19th century on check out this site.  I've posted the two most recent items below.   The first is about Gunder Hagg's tour of the US in 1943 and his race in Cincinnati, then followed by one of those humorus things about you know if your were running a long time ago, buy Steve Price.    
Cincinnati Running History Blog

Bob and I were running against each other more than 50 years ago.  He was at Cincinnati Elder HS, and I was at Dayton Belmont HS.   Bob ran track at U. of Cincinnati and became famous in UC history by appearing in their yearbook running side by side with Bob Schul when Bob was running for Miami.  How long they were together is not important.  After UC days Bob and his wife moved out to the Mountain View, CA area where  he worked for Runners World before migrating  back to Cincinnati.  If you grew up in that town there is a strong call to return to your roots.   Bob ended up having one of the most successful independently owned running stores in the US,  Bob Roncker's Running Spot.  He's been heavily involved in the running community since day one of the running boom, and that community has been fiercely loyal to Bob over the years.   He's now retired and since he has little else to do, other than travel around the country and the world watching track meets, he started his blog, so there would be a permanent memory of what has been accomplished in the Cincinnati running world.

Good reading to all of you.   George







Monday, June 20, 2016


V. 1 #28 World Record Holder Races In Cincinnati

V. 1  #28  World Record Holder Races In Cincinnati

In 1943 the Swedish distance runner, Gunder Hagg, toured America.  During his eight-stop tour, including Cincinnati, he scored consecutive triumphs over America’s best.  It was not surprising that he was known as “Gunder the Wonder.”

Gunder Hagg

Who was Gunder Hagg?  From 1942 to 1945, Hagg and fellow Swede, Arne Andersson broke or equaled the world record for the mile three times each, usually by beating the other.  Hagg lowered the mile time down to 4:01.3, a mark that was not reduced until Roger Bannister’s historic sub 4:00 mile in 1954. Over his career he broke a total of 15 world records, 10 of them within a three-month period in 1942

Hagg beating Arne Andersson

Hagg’s tour began in New York City on June 20.  Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Cambridge, and Berea, Ohio preceded his stop here. Gil Dodds and Bill Hulse, top American middle distance runners at that time, accompanied Hagg on the tour to provide the competition.

L-R  Don Burnham, Bill Hulse, Gill Dodds, Gunder Hagg

His Cincinnati appearance was his seventh American race. It was contested on the evening of August 7, 1943 at the Withrow High School Stadium Track. The Cincinnati Firefighters Association sponsored the race for the Army Air Force Aid Society.



Gunder requested that the distance be two-miles. Earlier in the tour Hagg ran 8:53.6 in Los Angeles, well shy of his world record of 8:47.8 that was set the year before. The month long sea voyage had deprived Hagg of valued training opportunities but as the tour was nearing its conclusion, he felt that his speed and stamina were improving to the point that he might challenge his own record.

Hulse, who narrowly lost to Hagg the week before at Baldwin-Wallace College in Berea, when he ran a 4:06 mile, was given a 100-yard handicap.  Since Hulse’s mile time was the best mark ever achieved outdoors by an American runner, it was thought with a lead of that distance Hagg might be prodded to eclipse his own world record. Gill Dodds, the other top protagonist spurned a handicap offer and started from scratch with Hagg.  Dodds had previously clocked 8:53 for the distance so he figured his best opportunity to defeat Hagg was at this distance.  A fourth starter in the race was Bob Berger, a young Bay Village, Ohio athlete.  He received a full lap or 440-yard handicap.

Bob Berger

Hulse and Berger started far in the lead because of the handicap.  Hagg and Dodds ran almost even for the first mile.  Hagg’s split times for the first mile were 1:01.5, 2:07, 3:15, and 4:22 at the mile.  Hagg pulled away from Dodds as they entered the second mile.

Berger, needing only to run seven laps rather than Hagg’s eight, remained far out in front of Hulse. Hagg caught and passed Hulse as he entered the seventh lap.  Now his sights were on the youthful Berger.  Yard by yard he pulled closer.  However, he came up just short of overtaking his young opponent. 

Bob Berger, the 18-year old high school graduate, maintained the lead that he received due to his handicap advantage.  Berger’s time for the two-mile distance, minus 440, was 8:49.7.  The race was quite exciting as he broke the finish line tape only five yards ahead of the rapidly charging Hagg.

Gunder, the Swedish track champion, covered the two-mile distance at Withrow’s Stadium in 8:51.3, which was only 3.5 seconds off his existing world record. This time was the fastest ever run for that length outdoors on American soil. 

Hulse, from New York, finished in third place. His time of 9:08.3 was the first time he had ever raced two-miles.  Dodds, who started even with Hagg, was unable to catch up or overcome the handicaps given to Berger and Hulse.  He placed fourth with a time of 9:18.3.

Afterwards, Hagg was very complimentary about Berger saying, “He’s one of the best young runners I have ever seen. You track boys had better keep your eye on him.”  He felt that Withrow’s cinder oval was a little slow, but he added that he felt fine during the race and would try his best next Wednesday, on August 11, to set a new record at New York. His mile in New York would be the final installment of his American cross-country tour.

Gunder Hagg was branded a professional in 1946 because he received payments for running. Thereafter he was barred from competition.

Bob Berger died February 28, 1945.  His airplane was hit by enemy fire and he perished while parachuting.

Bill Hulse was the US National 800-meter champion in 1944 and 1945.

Gil Dodds became known as “The Flying Parson.”  He won the Thanksgiving Day Race five times in the 1940s.


Saturday, June 18, 2016


V. 1 #27 You Know You Have Been Running For Quite Awhile If You Remember... (Part 2)

V. 1  #27  You Know You Have Been Running For Quite Awhile If You Remember... (Part 2)

By Steve Price


you read, or have read, "Long Distance Log". 




you expect to get blisters by running in new shoes.

you have taken salt tablets at one time.

you have hitch hiked to races.

you have competed in races where there were less than fifteen (15) runners.

you know all the names of men who have broken four (4) minutes in the mile.

passersby have asked you if you are in training for a fight.

your local Sporting Goods store carries two brands......Adidas and Puma

you know the story of the Dassler brothers (Adidas and Puma founders)

you have run in all leather running shoes.




you have started the season in a pair of wonderfully soft
kangaroo skin spikes. By the end of the season they have stretched so much that you are now wearing two (2) pair of sweat socks.....but you still love them.

By Bill Hart

you remember when "tick sheets" were the preferred method of timing cross country and road races. 

you remember being given numbered tongue depressors at the end of a race to indicate your finish place.  

your first running wristwatch was metal rather than some polymer material. 

you remember digital stopwatches whose numerals glowed in the dark and they required 3 double D batteries for power. 

your favorite pair of racing socks covered your calves, was white cotton and had two cool color stripes at the top. 

you remember the big DMSO controversy. 

you had to go to two or three local bookstores to find a single volume on running. 

you recall when going to one of the Runner's World sponsored Fun Run at Sharon (Dick Stapleton) or Winton Woods (Martha and Bill Hart hosted) was a way to score a free complimentary copy of their magazine. 

you remember the Runner's World Fun Runs always included a half-mile, a mile, and a featured distance run of 2, 4, or 6 miles. These were not races, you ran with friends but they were timed. Everyone was entitled to a certificate of completion provided by the magazine on which you filled out your distance and time. On occasion there were prediction runs for some small prize. You wrote down your predicted finish, left your watch in your car and off everyone went. Winners were usually within two or three seconds of their prediction. 

you remember filling out self addressed envelopes at some road races in order to receive results in the mail. 

you remember when there were no display clocks at race finish lines, just someone who might scream out a time from their stopwatch as you crossed the line. 

you recall the earliest display race clocks that had flip numerals comprised of a series of little yellow paddles that sometimes stuck. The results, on occasion, were finish times that required puzzle-solving skills. 

more recently, you remember multi-lane finish line chutes at big races. Pick a lane, any lane. 

even earlier, you can recount swing ropes at finish lines that herded you down a specific chute. Perhaps you even had the happy experience of being clothes lined across the neck or face at the finish during a chute switch. Burn.  


you recall with fondness the annual fight between Bill Hart and Barry Binkley at the Thanksgiving Day Race finish line concerning how best to set up a multi-lane chute system. Good times. 

you remember when no self respecting high school cross country invitational would be held without Don and Carol Connolly present with a mimeograph machine to crank out on the spot race results. 

you remember when wearing nylon warm-up rather than cotton sweats meant you were a "serious" runner. Gore-Tex? What the heck is that?

no one would have predicted $10 or more race entry fees.  

Thanksgiving Day Race Entry Fee


$100 shoes? Oh, that's just crazy talk. 



you still wax nostalgically about your first pair of blue and gold Nike waffle trainers. 


V 6 N. 45 Oregon Reunion photo and Coliseum Relays Program

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Two photo sets, actually a photo and one photo set.   The gathering of old men is a reunion of University of Oregon track team members taken during the Prefontaine Classic weekend.  We don't know the source,  but Ernie Cunliffe forwarded it to us.  The second group of photos is from a 1950 Coliseum Relays program.  That was sent from Danny Metcalf who was a distance runner from Oklahoma State in the late 50s early 60s. Won the Big 8 cross country meet one year.    Lots of great names from the past in both of these.  Just decided to add a few more photos before going to press. See below.  You can click on any picture to expand it for easier reading.










Proof that Roy and George actually attended the Pre Classic

Here's a classic,  the Los Angeles Examiner Sports Page  August 8, 1954,
over a third of the page devoted to a one mile race.

Someday perhaps a classic,  note Asbel Kiprop autograph


V 6 N. 46 Sam Bell, legendary coach passes away

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Sam Bell,  track coach at Indiana University, Cal Berkeley, and Oregon State passed away this week.   Though I did not know  him or work with him, my friend Bill Schnier who coached under Mr. Bell knew him very well.   I never heard anything except positive words about Sam coming from that source.  He was a no nonsense guy, but one that knew what was best for his athletes and pointed them always in the right direction.  George Brose

The following is Bill Schnier's tribute to Sam:

Sam Bell


My friend and mentor has died.  So has as good a track and cross country coach who ever lived.  Sam Bell will be recognized for coaching 11 Olympians, 2 NCAA cross country champions, 147 All-Americans, 233 Big Ten individual champions, 26 Big Ten team champions, and 23 teams which placed in the top ten at the NCAAs.  He was known as the head coach of the US team at the famous 1964 Cold War dual meet with the USSR at the LA Coliseum and later served as the US distance coach at the 1976 Montreal Olympics.  He left his mark at Oregon State University, the University of California, and Indiana University.  He was a meet manager second to none.  Sam was a giant in our sport.


But those facts pale in comparison to the enormous influence he had upon the lives of so many athletes and coaches.  I have been privy to hundreds of conversations with others who knew Sam personally, and the words exchanged always recounted the same story, about a man who made a real difference in our lives.  My years with Sam at Indiana University were only five (1975-80) but they were life-changing years for my family and me.  He made everything else which followed at the University of Cincinnati possible.  Because he fully understood all aspects of the job, he was able to pass that information on to others.  Some coaches are good with technique, or motivation, or teaching, or administration, or vision, or relationships, or expectations, or strategy, or emotion, or knowledge.  Sam was good with all of these, and even more.  There was not one facet of coaching which escaped his attention.  Those other coaches who emphasized a limited number of these qualities dropped by the wayside, one by one.  They just couldn’t keep up with Sam who excelled at all of them.


I first met Sam at a clinic he and Charlie Baker conducted at Indiana University about 1972.  Each one would alternate teaching technique about a track and field event, and each would know more about it than any specialty expert you could ever find.  They were part of an era when each school had only one or two coaches, but in their case two was enough.  I wanted to coach the very best, to switch from high school to college coaching, so I chose Sam Bell to help me get there.  He was more than a helper, he was a coach of coaches.  He was demanding and difficult to work with, but he would do anything to assist a person along the way.  I never had to write anything down because what he said was usually unforgettable.  When I asked him in Oregon one day how Oregon and Oregon State were able to make track and field so important there, he told me “dual meets are the life blood of track and field.”  When I asked him why he left California to come to Indiana he replied “weather is overrated.”  When I asked him once about the importance of an up-and-coming meet, he noted “we treat every meet like the Olympic Games.”  After a heart attack in 1979 when he heard the doctors say to each other that they didn’t think he would make it, I asked Sam if he had been scared.  He said matter of factly “no, if I die, I die.  It would be my time.”


Sam was always vocal at track and cross country meetings, whether local or national.  Whenever he talked the room would grow silent.  Always there would be grumbling among lesser coaches who could not beat him, but Sam never favored a decision which would help the Hoosiers that year or even the next if it conflicted with the bigger picture.  His goal would be to benefit the sport in the long run.  He kept us centered and focused on why we were there in the first place.  All Sam did was based on his Christian faith, one which surely changed over his lifetime but never wavered, at least in outward appearance.  While writing individual workouts for athletes he would always prescribe going to church on Sunday.  I often wondered how many did so because of Sam.  Our country, and even the world, is populated by people who are better because of Sam Bell.  As one of them I simply say “thank you, Coach Bell.”


Bill Schnier,  Coach-emeritus,  University of Cincinnati
Indiana University grad assistant and assistant coach, 1975-80.

V 6 N. 47 Comments on Olympic Trials/ Coverage in the US

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We're putting this issue out, because lots of people seem to be forming strong opinions about the coverage of the US Olympic Trials on TV.  We're all feeling short changed in getting what we want and have paid for via US cable and hoping there will be a way to have some options when viewing the Rio Olympics next month.  You can express your views at the bottom of this page by writing in on "Comments".  It will come to us and we will put it on at the bottom of this page once we take a look at it and screen for appropriate content.    My comments which start this posting were spurred on by a series of conversations that came from Gary Corbitt's mailing list.   Initially Hal Higdon remarked on the lack of women in the track and field broadcasting team.  That in turn led to several other ideas, so here goes with my first response, followed by others that started coming in on my list of personal contacts.  George Brose

Network coverage of track and field.

This is an issue that will probably never be resolved to the satisfaction of everyone.

First, to try to find a set of commentators who are knowledgeable of all the track and field events is a daunting task.   I think most  of us on this mailing list tend not to care that much about background stories of athletes and their failures at Little League and turning to track or cross country and are not very interested no matter how hard the networks try to sell this stuff.  But the unknowledgeable public does find it  interesting , and they are the vast majority of people who wander into watching track and field.  So to keep their attention  and to sell toilet paper and Viagra you better put that fluff into your program, even if we die hard track fans have to sit and endure the mindless interests of the masses.  Is there nothing that would interest the two groups of watchers  equally?

Second,  it must be bloody difficult to make a thoughtful, insightful commentary of an ongoing race that is  over in a matter of seconds or minutes.  If you recall,  Dick Bank had to butt into the commentary in the 1964 Olympicsto tell Bud Palmer to "Look at Mills! Look at Mills!" And that intervention cost Bank his job with ABC.  The 10,000 meters this week in Eugene  was not an easy assignment as it got spread out fairly quickly and turned into a fartlek workout for Galen Rupp. (Bruce Kritzler's assessment of the race)   I would have preferred to have had a mike on Salazar during that race.  There were six or seven little races going on around the track simultaneously between people who had absolutely no chance of making the team.  Not an interesting story.   Perhaps of more interest is what were the Kenyans running for the US Army doing on the track.  Obviously they have become US citizens to be there, how about some more details.  Welcome to the US, guys.  Karibuni.   

  Games like football and basketball have lots of pauses for commentators to catch up to the action. Replays are lifesavers to these 'guys' (more on guys later).  Their assistants can keep stat sheets flowing to them to add 'knowledgeable' commentary.  Sure they do a bit of homework before the game, but football commentators have a team of spotters keeping them abreast of whatever is going on.  Lately,  even marathon coverage has gotten to be pretty marginal due to taking the comments out of the hands of experienced former runners who have a way with their minds and words.  No matter how much competitive experience one has, it doesn 't make them a good commentator either.  When that rare one does come along they often get replaced by a silver tongued devil of a faceman.  Smart, ugly people have had  almost no chance since Howard Cosell retired.  Howard depended on his words and wit, even when he didn't know that much about boxing,  and  because he could interact with Ali on any level and be entertaining.    Maybe the key word is 'entertaining'.  Entertain the masses, not the experts.  The few experts don't have that much buying power.  That's why the networks are forced into providing entertainment.  But it might also be a service to the viewing public to do some educating on the merits of the sport.  Then the public would have a better understanding of what they are watching.   Additionally there are probably some very good and competent people out there who can do the job, but they already have good jobs elsewhere and just don't want to put up with the B S and hucksterism that is the lifeblood of big media.

Third,  please stop interviewing winners immediately after their events when oxygen has not yet gotten back to their brains at normal levels.  This is neither informative nor entertaining fare.  Unfortunately Lewis Johnson has to go out there and try to talk to those folks with little or no feedback about what just went on in the event or for any time to have made sufficient analysis.  It's not fair to the interviewer or the athlete.   And please spare me the overwrought , over emotional orgasmic responses of some of the athletes.  I don't know if they are having a religious experience or what.  But I'm sure even Jesus is embarrassed.  And I wonder if Allah were to be praised in the same manner, would the networks allow it?  If the program is running on a delay as it often is, then the post race interview can be held 10-15 minutes after the event when the athlete and the interviewer can be better prepared to say something of value.  If you go to one of these events you can see that the athletes can and are interviewed in the press tent or just off the track for 30-40 minutes after the event is over.   

Fourth,   I have to confess I've become a fan of the Grand Tours in cycling purely through the television coverage, and not NBC  coverage.  I live in Canada and something called Sports Network 1 has excellent programming of the Tour de France currently in progress.  Their commentators have tremendous experience in racing and commentating.  Admittedly I don't always understand their British and Aussie accents but when that fails , the camera work overcomes anything I miss.   Dopers or no dopers these cyclists are incredible balls out athletes. I can't conceive of riding in a peleton at 30-50mph and risking serious injury in addition to concentrating for 4-5 hours and then sprinting my butt off the last 6 miles or 600 yards.   Enough, just had to say it.

Now for the guys at the mike portion.   Like any other discipline good women have had to work hard to break into this field, and they are still breaking in, and it must be aggravating as hell to stand on the sidelines at an NFL or NCAA game and interview a coach for 30 seconds on 'his' way to the dressing room at half time or a star player after a win or a loss.  The best have moved beyond the game, like Robin Roberts.  I don't know if any others have moved up the broadcast food chain, perhaps so, perhaps not.    If you come across the border, you will find that women co-host and even host on their own a lot of sports commentary programs that cover a multitude of events.  They are knowledgeable, fast with their quips, stunningly dressed, and damn good looking.   I'm afraid only the men can get away with being ugly and still being employed.  And if they are ugly, they better have a lively mouth and brain.  In the Alpha male sports like NHL hockey and CFL football in Canada, the women are still not in the booth, they are down on the sidelines.    In Canadian track programming, there is only one woman on the team and she is not in the booth.   I'd have to start watching more tv to say whether women's sports get a more balanced team of commentators.  Just don't know that one.   So even here in the more liberal environs of Canada, women are still somewhat under the Ginger Rogers burden of doing everything Fred Astaire could do,  doing it backwards, and wearing high heels.

Oiselle Must Take Down Pictures of Kate Grace with their Products  From Orange County Register, July 6, 2016

WTF!   This picture may now be deemed illegal.  Kate Grace who is seen wearing Oiselle clothing recently won a competition in Eugene, Oregon.  We cannot name this meet and the name of the product  (Oiselle) on the same page or the name of the sanctioning bodies in the same breath.  We recognize that this picture was not taken at that particular meeting in Eugene, so perhaps we are not violating those orders, but we will respect any cease and desist orders that we receive from those unamed sanctioning bodies.  


INCOMING COMMENTS:


Wow!  What a report.  This will take some time to respond but I do like the topic.
1.   Background stories are often interesting and since nobody knows everything about these people, they do tend to personalize the event.  For instance, hearing that Peyton Manning had a father and a brother who were/are NFL quarterbacks puts some perspective and interest into him.  Most people already know that but not the case with T&F.  However, I must say that some of the background reports are drivel, not worth hearing.  I think the problem is with the content and interest of the reports rather than to have or not to have these reports.  Once we put a face on T&F, it becomes personal to the TV viewer.  They need to have Bruce Kritzler make some suggestions about whom to report on and what questions to ask.


2.   Good comments on the play by play.  I notice that Ato Bolden is often wrong yet he is convincing, especially to the untrained listener.  He often has to contradict himself several times within a race.  Who really remembers that he said last Olympics that college athletes have no chance whatsoever to join the Olympic team, but now he is building them up inasmuch as many have the fastest times?  The 10K coverage reminded me of FloTrack where they put one camera on the leader and follow him for 28 minutes, not even commenting on anyone else.  That was a disgrace of an event for the OT but the coverage was not much better.  I would like to have known why two Kenyans were wearing ARMY uniforms and went 2-3.  I would also have enjoyed knowing why so many dropped out although it could have been due to the heat.  As in soccer, American TV has resorted to English commentators to give the audio some credibility with their accent and way of phrasing things.  This one usually "calls the event" rather than engage in all of the horseplay characteristic of too many American announcers.  Love him or hate him, Howard Cosell, did wonders for many sports.  He was decisive and knowledgeable.  I think that he and John Madden have been among the best US commentators because they were also teachers.  Madden was just more likeable.  I do believe that by talking at the level of the expert viewer, the novice viewer can learn as well.  Just to explain T&F in a simplistic way is much too easy and not very informative.  It deserves so much more.


3.   In the age of instant breaking news, waiting more than 30 seconds for an interview seems to be too long.  However, those out-of-breath interviews are painful to watch and yield very little positive information.  I am certain that each athlete, viewing his own interview later that night, would usually say "what was I thinking?"  30-40 minutes might be too long, but 5 minutes might be a good compromise, giving a chance to switch to a field event without allowing the public to forget the previous event.  This happens from time to time and usually is much more satisfactory.  At the meet sight, the winners are interviewed on the PA system about 15 minutes later and most do pretty well.


4.   Thanks for the update on cycling.  They have some great coverage, made more difficult by moving bicycles.  Hats off to those guys.  I think they are a bit lax on EPO testing so those guys can cycle at 95% of max for hours at a time.  That would not be possible for the average person or even the amazingly well-trained person.


5.   You are quite correct on women broadcasters.  I did watch some of the NCAA and they had a very good female interviewer and reasonably good looking.  She did not have Bruce Kritzler information but she was very up to date, asked good questions, and had the luxury of conducting the interview a little bit later after the event.  One trouble with T&F is that the experts are usually known athletes who have spent their entire sporting life working on one small phase of the sport.  Consequently, they are really out-of-it when asked to comment on a different event.  For instance, Carol Lewis did not seem to know anything except the long jump.  With that in mind NBC would have to hire about 15 female announcers.  Actually, the same could be said for males.  Furthermore, when you get the former stars, they often fail to keep current and want to talk about how things were back in 2004 & 2008.  An heptathlete might be a good choice because of her breath of knowledge.  
6.   If you are still reading this, any suggestions for commentators you think would be good, taking into consideration everything?   Bill Schnier

Bill,   Two names for women broadcasters came in on the Gary Corbitt communications.  Those two were both former Olympians who are breaking into the field.   Leslie Maxie and Carrie Tollefson.  Their work can be seen on youtube by typing in their names on that site.  You can be the judge of their talents.     


One other thing you mentioned about the Kenyans running for the US Army.
First Kenyan I heard of entering the US Army  was as Kenyan Catholic priest we knew at U of Dayton.  It was  a bit of a shock when he told us about going in the army, but he could get citizenship in the US for one, and two he could make a good living as an army captain (priests come in at that rank) and support young brothers and sisters and family at home, much like Ruth the Kenyan on your team was doing here.  These guys in the trials probably would never have been selected to any Kenyan teams, but they can make a good living in the long term with the army and with a good retirement in twenty years.  They are not stupid.  I'd like to know more about the army program.  Do you know anything about it?
George


Guys:
Earlier this season I viewed 2-3 Diamond League meets in Europe and Qatar?
The English announcers really knew their "stuff". Keep in mind that T & F is the #2 sport in Europe behind soccer. So our sport gets top flight announcing. However, I did have some trouble understanding their accents
But, I must add that doing an on going critique of our inferior US Announcing crews
 can just drain the joy out of watching the OT
and later on the Rio Games. 
I for one am just darn thankful that we are lucky enough to have so much coverage this Olympic year.
Those of you living in the northern tier of the US are fortunate to be able to get the Canadian coverage. CBC

I too have been very curious about the
Kenyans running for the US army n their bright yellow singlets

2-3in the 10K: 
2nd place: Shadrack Kipchirchir
3rd. Place: Leonard Koris
Also
3000M SC Hillary Bor - 9th qualifier 8:34

Anybody know about the US army recruiting of these "new Americans"?

John Bork



Did anyone see the Boris Berian 800 m final?   The Working @ McDonald's story yet again.   No one else was in the race to my knowledge until the camera panned back.    One star and a bunch of also rans --- one of which beat the stopping down Berian to the line.  NBC wrapping it's new favorite in the flag.   And then there was the SRR 400 heat, the Galen Rupp 10,000 m final, but let's not forget about Tom Hammond now chronically misnaming competitors en-race, Dwight Stones knowing nothing outside the high jump and the now "corporatized", reading-from-prepared-scripts middle distance and long distance commentators, Larry Rosten and he who won't even be named.  NBC is doing us no favors heaping the sheer tonnage of repetitive ad dreck on top of their shoddy celebrity tied attempt @ coverage.   Every four years yet another arduous slough through all the garbage to see a few sweet races.   I'm nominating Phil Liggett of Le Tour commentating fame along w. Stuart Story and Tim Hutchins, two Brit commentators, alongside Steve Cram of the DL coverage team and clean house @ NBC: hell even throw the baby, Ato, out w the bath water.   Clean Sweep!   

What chance of that ?!    None.   Richard Mach

 The cult of celebrity taken to its most extreme degree would mean we'd be looking at the Ashton Eaton OT.    Or the SRR swan song.   Or continuous nonstop reruns of the hideous excessive coverage of the sobbing crumbling Montano.  This is corporately driven "no think" designed to tell everyone they must continue to strive to the highest of heights because anything less means you are nothing but a loser.  That is what came to me on the line on a snowy post-T'giving morning in a half inch of snow with Dale Storey jogging by the assembled masses on the starting line of the NCAA X-C Championships in E. Lansing bare footed!   Fall of '61.    Who is going to come in second?   If Tom Hammond, their always sycophantic mouthpiece, could absolutely deliver this to his corporate masters, he'd have us all obiediant little Prussians working for less than a living wage, gobbling up Walmart's cheap plastic crap and ready to lay down our sons and daughters lives for Our Country -- namely for their disguised absolutely selfish corporate interests.  I say this as a highly decorated former Naval officer.   The whole thing is rigged, has been and will be. George, it's nothing less than nauseating to have to listen to this unoriginal balderdash masquerading as content on NBC.  And especially having to watch Ato Bolden be ground under the Network heel and with his obiescence become just like the others -- mindless, blabbering talking heads.   The Suits 10, the viewing public -- a big fat Zero!  

I couldn't disagree more with Buck's  put-a-nice-face-on-it-and-be-happy with NBC's crumbs "solution" to this chronic, non-stop ubiquitous, never-ending, low-rent coverage of The Games and our OTs.  Richard Mach


The WCAP (World Class Athletic Program) is what the three Kenyan distance runners are part of. Dan Browne, former West Point & Olympian is coach of the distance runners, based in Portland. All had good collegiate careers (Kipkirchir-OK St, Korir - Iona, Bor-Alabama). Think they go through basic training and specialized training, then go to Portland for full time athletics. They can be called up to active duty in time of war. It is also a shortcut to gaining citizenship (serving in military). Seems like most of these Kenyan kids who come here to run, like it, and want to stay.
There were 3 Air Force Academy pole vaulters who are part of WCAP (Simmons, Bell, Uhle-Olentangy, OH). A female discus thrower named Paige Blackburn sat beside us during women's discus final (she didn't make final). She is from Alaska, an Air Force Academy grad, part of the WCAP, based in Gainesville, FL, coached by Steve Lemke, UF throws coach. She said her next assignment is in (classified) , but hopes to be back in Gainesville in a couple of years.
Bruce Kritzler


Are you familiar with Tunnel Bear? It is a virtual private network, or VPN. Don't ask me to explain what that is. In the spring of 2012 my wife and I cut our cable cord. NBC had promised extensive Olympic coverage through television and the Internet so I felt comfortable.

The London Olympics rolled around and I felt I was ready to see a lot of coverage. During the first week gymnastics and swimming were the main presentations. Of course, on TV they had a lot of their up close and personals with a plethora  of commercials. So I went to my computer to watch the Internet version and alas, I was asked for my cable provider. Since I had none, I felt I would be limited to watching only the NBC TV version of the track and field portion which was to start the next week. Thank goodness for a good wife!

Mary Ann did a little investigation. That is when she found Tunnel Bear. I signed up for about $50 for a year's subscription. With the VPN the Internet thinks that you are from another country. In a sense you tunnel through to another nation. Canada and the UK are two choices. I would select the UK.

Then, I would go to my browser and key in BBC.com. In my mind they do a much superior presentation of track and field. Their commentators are former athletes and very knowledgeable. They're not afraid to talk about PEDs or other topics of interest and present events in their entirety. In my estimation, their version of showing athletics is much superior.

Over the past four years I have enjoyed watching not only the London Olympics but also Diamond League meets, World Cross Country Championships  and other British events. My personal internal timeclock was knocked out of whack last year, due to time zone changes, as I watched virtually every heat and final of the Beijing World Championships.

If you're not familiar with Tunnel Bear, I strongly suggest your considering it. I have to re-up again this year so I am not currently watching it. I am at the US Olympic Trials. Subscribing to it may not help to better view our own Trials but I suspect that the European Track and Field Championships may currently have BBC coverage.

I hope this helps for some of you.
Bob Roncker


V 6 N. 48 June, 1966

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  This may not be perfect, but it is the best a couple of C students could do.  Steve was a big help with over a dozen corrections.

JUNE 1966

    Records? You want records? We got 'em. We have world records. We have American records. Looking for something more economical? We can give you a good deal on a junior college record guaranteed to last decades. Step right this way.





    The date is May 28. The place: Modesto Junior College. The meet: the California Relays. Unusually cold windy weather has hampered the performance of an exceptional field assembled by meet director Tom Moore. Despite this handicap, the chilled crowd of 10,000 witnesses a world record. The dull-gold clad sprinters from Southern University overcome the weather and tight turns (look at the track on Google Maps) to clip a tenth from Stanford's 440 relay world record. Harvey Nairn, Grundy Harris, Webster Johnson and George Anderson combine to hold off Texas Southern, a Tommie Smith anchored San Jose State, New Mexico and Stanford in 39.6.
This is the 1965 Southern U. relay squad. with Theron Lewis on left then Webster Johnson, R. Johnson, unidentified, and Grundy Harris.  Was the fifth man their secret weapon?


    The Jaguars take aim at the 880 relay, but conditions hold them to 1:23.0, four tenths off the WR. They also scrape together a foursome that wins the mile relay in 3:10.8 with Theron Lewis anchoring in 45.8
    The 440 brings fans to their feet as Tommie Smith lays back behind Jim Kemp and AAU champ Ollan Cassell until the final straight before powering by to win easily in 45.7.
Gaston Roelants
Belgium's Olympic steeplechase champion, Gaston Roelants, opens up twenty yards in the middle of the two mile but Tracy Smith is not to be denied. He finishes with a 2:05.4 final half mile to win in 8:34.4.
Tracy Smith 398 following Pre at the 1972 OTs.
Gerry Lindgen in stripes, Cliff Clark #301, Dick Burkele 6th.
Final positions for these men  Prefontaine 1st 13:22.8 AR, Smith 5th 13:44.8, Buerkele 8th 13:57.2, Clark 9th 13:58.6, Lindgren 12th 14:17.2
(Sorry but this photo is six years later than the current posting.  Not many racing pictures of Tracy Smith online.)
    The best match up of the day is in the discus where three time Olympic champion Al Oerter tangles with the man who took his world record, Czechoslovakia's Ludvik Danek. Danek threw 211-9¼ on the day in 1964 when he became the record holder. He upped that mark to 213-11½ last year.
Al Oerter


    On the other hand, Oerter has proven he can meet a challenge as measured by the '56, '60 and '64 Olympic gold medals in his sock drawer. He says he is “so strong it scares me” but that he is “a year away” in technique.
When the dust settles, Oerter has thrown a PR of 207-5 to top the 205-9 of the great Czech. In third place with 201-1 is Rink Babka. Wait a minute, didn't that guy retire? Well, yes, but golf didn't cut it for the Rinkster, so a couple weeks ago he picked up a discus and apparently it's like riding a bicycle, you never forget.
    The quality of this competition is such that the third through twelfth place finishers all have the best-ever marks for that particular place.
Ever hear of a meet where the athletes had to pay to get in? No? Well, this story will put a smile on your face. Oregon long jumper Bob Woodell has been severely injured while helping fraternity brothers build a float for a celebration. He is paralyzed from  the waist down and will be residing in the hospital for the foreseeable future. There will be medical bills to pay.
Bob Woodell


Early Days of Nike,  Woodell in foreground
behind  Phil Knight, Joanna Ceciliani, Geoff Hollister
His coach, Bill Bowerman, puts on benefit meet to help defray those costs.  A lot more can be learned about Bob Woodell who went on to executive positions including President and member of board of directors  in Blue Ribbon Sports (later Nike) in this article  in The Oregonian about one of his friends and colleagues Jack Joyce who passed away in 2014. He also was cofounder of Rogue Ales, and director of the Port of Portland during his career.   Blue Ribbon/Nike must have been a stressful place in the 1980s as a number of their execs went to their great reward at a relatively young age.     Bob Woodell/Jack Joyce

    On Thursday night, June 2, 8000 fans and 22 athletes each pay a dollar to enter Hayward Field. There are only six events, but they are dandies. All four shot putters have PRs, the most significant of which is the 67-0¾ effort by Neil Steinhauer. Oregon Stater Lahcen Samsam Akka of Morocco joins the 60 foot club by 2¼ inches.  
Lahcen Samsam Akka


more recent photo of Samsam Akka on left
SamSam Akka would go on with his studies in the US earning a doctorate at Berkeley and returning to Morocco to become very involved in Moroccan track and field.  He was Director of the World Cross Country Championships when they were held in Marrakech in 1998 and the World Junior Track and Field Championships in 2005.  He served as national technical director of track and field for many years.  He threw in two olympics, 1964 and 1972 when he reached the finals in the shot put finishing 15th with a throw of 19.11 meters.  His PR was 20.45 in 1972.  

Mike Lehner has resumed training only six weeks ago but steeplechases 8:46.4, the fastest time in the country this year.
    The feature one mile race does not disappoint. Alumnus Dyrol Burleson excites the crowd with a the fastest mile ever run at Hayward Field, 3:57.3. He is followed by Ducks Roscoe Devine at 3:59.1 and Wade Bell, under four for the first time at 3:59.8, making him the NCAA favorite. Devine will not be competing as he is a freshman and therefore not eligible for that competition.
Roscoe Divine


Wade Bell
    Bob Woodell watches the meet from an ambulance stretcher in the infield. 
Although not originally named, this is the first of the Oregon Twilight Meets which continue today.
Here's those Oregon boys today

    The following Saturday in the NAIA meet, Theron Lewis blazes a 45.2 quarter to move to a second place tie on the all time 400-440 list with Otis Davis, Carl Kauffman and Mike Larrabee. Only WR holder,Adolph Plummer, 44.9y, is not affected.

    The even bigger news comes this evening in the Compton Invitational held in the Los Angeles Coliseum. The future of US track and field is evident in the performances of Jim Ryun and Gerry Lindgren. Ryun has just turned 19 but tonight he is wearing his big boy pants as he lines up for the mile. George Young and Neill Duggan are supposed to lead him through the 1320 in2:56 at which point it will be Ryun alone in his effort to top Michel Jazy's 3:53.6 world record.

    The pace is slower than planned, leaving the Kansas freshman at 2:58.5 with a lap to go and no chance for the record. Well, wait a minute, apparently no one has told Ryun his task is impossible. Jim Grelle is within a yard with 330 to go, but from then it is Ryun against the clock. With 220 to go he is at 3:27.3. The 1500 is passed at 3:39.3. His acceleration is unlike anything seen in a quality mile. The last 220 is covered in a stunning 26.4. His time, 3:53.7, so agonizingly close to the record, gives promise for the future. Grelle is second at 3:56.0. Duggan, the 25 year old Englishman wearing the colors of Hancock College, is third in 3:59.1, a junior college record.

    Twenty year old Gerry Lindgren also has a goal this evening, Bob Schul's 5000 meter record of 13:38.0. Tracy Smith and Ron Larrieu challenge briefly in the second mile but from then on Lindgren has no help. Does he get the record? Yes. Does he break the record? No. He equals it and now shares the record with the esteemed 1964 Olympic champion. He misses by 1/5 of a second, the margin by which distances longer than a mile are measured at the time. Smith and Larrieu follow in 13:45.6 and 13:56.2. The fourth place finisher deserves a mention. He is 18 year old Rick Reilly who runs the second fastest 3 mile/5000 in high school history, 13:35.6 and 14:00.2. The only faster high school runner? That would be Gerry Lindgren. Talk about difficulty gaining prestige, Rick isn't even the fastest in his city as both he and Lindgren are from Spokane, Washington.

    As weeks tend to do, one passes and we are in Terre Haute, Indiana for the USTFF national championship where Jim Ryun is just keeping busy while waiting for the AAU nationals. Although the new Grasstex track at Indiana State is fast, Ryun. has run a 1:50.9 qualifying heat two hours earlier before lining up for the 880 final. As he will run a mile heat and final and a 440 relay leg tomorrow, nothing earthshaking is expected. Ohio's John Tillman leads through a 52.9 quarter with Ryun at 53.3. No great excitement from the crowd of a thousand. But then Ryun comes alive. He leaves a good field – Tom Von Ruden, Lowell Paul, Charlie Christmas – in his wake with a 26.1 third 220 and now it is on. His margin grows to 25 yards as he comes home in 25.5. His final lap of 51.6 gives him a time of 1:44.9 and Peter Snell's world record by two tenths.

880 WR Terre Haute, IN  
Here is the link to our earlier showing of this race and an interview with Ryun about that race.

    This is his first world record and third American record (880, mile -3:53.7, 2 mile – 8:25.2). Although soundly beaten, Von Ruden (1:47.9), Paul (1:48.0), Christmas (1:48.4) and Tillman (1:49.4) all run PRs.

    Making this achievement even more remarkable are the facts that this is only his seventh open half mile, his previous best was 1:50.3, the oddity of a negative split in a high quality 880 and the fact that just three years ago he was doing a paper route.
The next day he wins the mile in 4:02.8 and runs a relay leg of 47.8. Let's keep an eye on this kid. He may amount to something.
    Jim Ryun is certainly the focus of the weekend, but there are other meets of significance, specifically a couple in California. The San Diego Invitational has an intriguing 5000 field. The great Ron Clarke is joined by fellow Australian Tony Clarke in competition with Tracy Smith, Billy Mills, George Young and steeplechase world record holder Gaston Roelants of Belgium.

    Although everyone but Young takes a turn leading, they are still tightly packed with 600 yards to go. At this point Young, a strong finisher, goes to the afterburners. Surprisingly Clarke, not a great finisher, matches him as they pull away. Young's top end speed provides a 56.9 finish and a 13:40.2 to 13:40.6 victory over the world record holder. Smith is third in 13:42.2, followed by Mills, (13:44.8), Roelants, (13:46.8) and Cooke, (13:49.2). Although not winning, Clarke and Mills are pleased with their performances. Clarke had arrived from Australia only 22 hours earlier and didn't think he would run this fast. Sharing self doubt was Mills who had just resumed training in April after a five month layoff.

    The mile matches the 5000 for excitement. Mike Eck tows the field through 58.1 and 1:59.2 splits before Neill Duggan takes over, passing the 1320 in 3:00.0. Jim Grelle has been waiting to make his move. It comes on the backstretch and leaves no doubt. 

David Bailey's first sub 4   for an insider's view of this race

The ex-Oregon great hits the tape in 3:55.4 to tie his PR set last year. Duggan improves his junior college record by three seconds, finishing in 3:56.1. Dave Bailey sets a Canadian record of 3:59.1 but is barely noticed because the fourth place finisher is 18 year old Tim Danielson from the San Diego suburb of Chula Vista who becomes the second high school runner to break four minutes with a 3:59.4 clocking.
Happier days, Jim Ryun, Tim Danielson, Marty Liquori, Alan Webb
at the time the only high school sub four minute milers.


Tim Danielson's life has certainly taken a turn for the worse with his spending the
next fifty years to life in the California Correctional System for the murder of his ex-wife.
The Danielson Trial  from an earlier posting



Ron Larrieu, making a rare mile appearance, is fifth in 4:03.6, a PR, making this the 15th consecutive year he has improved in at least one event. Rick Reilly's sixth place 4:04.7 moves him to number five on the high school list. Except for Grelle, every runner establishes a personal best.

    There is some magical sprinting going on 500 miles north in Sacramento's venerable Hughes Stadium where the Sacramento Invitational is held. When the gun goes off in the 220 the world record is 20.2 by Olympic champion Henry Carr. Exactly twenty seconds later it belongs to Tommie Smith. The San Jose State sophomore is out behind San Jose City College's Lee Evans,
Tommie Smith

Smith and Evans racing at a later date, result same.
but by the time he reaches the straight, he has a four yard advantage which he doubles by the tape. Evans is timed in 21.0. Pretty sure Lee didn't go home disappointed, as he shaved a tenth off his JC 440 record with a 46.1 earlier.

    Bits and pieces gathered from here and there. Jim Beatty has won nomination for Democratic candidate for the North Carolina House of Representatives. His slogan: “Let Jim Beatty run for you”. Honest.....Rex Cawley and Blaine Lindgren have retired....Cornell isn't mentioned much in T&FN, but there are two references in this issue. Two time Olympic champion Glenn Davis has been promoted from assistant to head coach at the Ithaca, NY school. 1952 Olympic broad jump silver medalist Meredith Gourdine, a Cornell grad, is a pretty bright guy. Not only does he have a PhD from Cal Tech, his company, Gourdine Laboratories, has been awarded a $685,000 grant from the Dept. of the Interior to conduct further research on a “novel generator”......Tom Moore ran 14.2 to tie the world record in the high hurdles in 1935. For 67 years he was the heart and soul of the California Relays, serving as the meet director, promoter and starter. In the initial meet in 1942, he started all but one race. What race was that and why? Answer below...
Tom Moore 
Publisher Cordner Nelson takes on the theory that the sitter has the advantage in a mile race. He has examined 89 mile and 1500 races since Bannister broke the four minute barrier and discovered that the leader in the home stretch wins 82% of the time, the leader going into the last curve wins 72% of the time and the leader with a lap to go wins 46% of the time. Take that for what you will.....Cordner has doped out the NCAA meet with UCLA winning easily with 69 points to San Jose's 44, Washington State's 32, Oregon's 31, Nebraska's 28 and USC's 22. That is unless Texas Southern can afford to travel to the meet. In which case, he would rate them a toss up with UCLA....Information we could probably do without: Rick Riley breakfasts on oatmeal with a dash of wheat germ every morning. He is also the vice-president of the student body at Ferris High and president of the Boys Federation.....The race Tom Moore didn't start was the high hurdles which he won.....
Tom Moore in the red shirt
And, yes, half a century later, Neill Duggan's 3:56.1 is still the fastest ever run by a junior college miler.

    We will meet Friday at 5:00 at the Dew Drop Inn as usual. Feel free to embellish the stories of your track achievements back in the day. As the line goes, “The older I get, the better I was.” Most of us competed so long ago that our times and distances can't be traced. Feel free to be creative.



V 6 N. 49 Track Trials and Tribulations

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So the O Trials have finally wound down.  The corporate power(s) have made their statement.  The athletes will be falling into line and heading down to Rio.  Lots of broken dreams, career endings, and new faces to become aware of, and a few old pros still hanging on.   Some of those who didn't make the team will still have some opportunity around the planet to ply their trade.  Maybe some of the Russians will be coming and certainly the the mad scientists and agents will be looking for new ways to beat the system.     Below are a few items and tidbits that have come across our desk and gotten stacked up, so while we wait for Roy to produce his next review of July, 1966 we'll share some of them with you.

Brief comment on the trials from Bill Schnier:

"The OT provide great theater.  This was apparent when Brenda Martinez was tripped in the 800 but came from behind to qualify for the Olympics in the 1500.  I was happy for her but sad for Eccleston from Hillsdale College whom she edged out by .01 seconds as both fell to the track.  The OT for women's gymnastics followed T&F and I was surprised at how ordinary it seemed compared with our sport, yet in the OG it often takes center stage, at least for Americans if the US does well."


Bill,
I belive Eccleston pr'ed 3 times at OT, 4:134:114:06.
Brenda Martinez came for recruiting visit at ULM (Univ. Louisiana Monroe) when I was coaching there. She stayed local at UC-Riverside. Think she ran 57, 2:134:57 in hs.
The HS kids running at the Trials was the highlight for me. Especially Lyles and Norman in 200.
Bruce


From Roy Mason:


"The North Bay League (okay, Montgomery High in Santa Rosa) was well represented in last night's Olympic Trials women's 5K. Kim Conley made her second Olympic team finishing third in 15:10.6. Sarah Hall (formerly Sarah Bei, now Ryan Hall's wife) was 14th in 15:55.

They were teammates in XC and track in the 2000-01 school year when Bei was a senior and Conley a freshman. The similarity ended there. Bei was big time, winning four state championships in XC and three in track. She also won the Footlocker XC meet. Conley was a good local runner but not the caliber of Bei. On the all time Redwood Empire lists she is 15th at 800, 6th at 1600 and 18th at 3200. Her best finish in the state meet was 19th.

Their HS times were Bei: 2:174:4610:11; Conley: 2:164:52.10:58. Bei went on to a glorious career at Stanford and after. Conley went to UC Davis where she slowly improved but wasn't on the national radar.

Guess all this goes to show that if at first you don't succeed, keep working hard and good things may happen. This means that there is still hope for you, Steve."

From John Bork


"I am wondering if you experienced the same 2 glaring faults in the NBC coverage:

1). Last night when they introduced the men for the final in the 110M Hurdles the coverage ended (for me)
     before the race started!  It had to be an unbelieve race with London Olympic Games Champion, Aires Merritt
     missing 3rd. place  to Jeff Porter by a mere .01 of a second. 13.21 to 13.22.
     After describing 2-3 times how Merritt was given a kidney transplant by his sister  then no race coverage-nothing!

     Again youth was serves when the winner was Oregon's sophomore, Devon Allen in a stunning 13.01!
     Just a sophomore or, Jr. at Oregon where he also plays football.

2)  A couple of nights before the NBC coverage failed to air the 1500Meter -Men's semi-final races (on my TV)
    even though the DVR - Guide indicated that they would be aired.

How about you guys? Did you see these races on your TV?


- Speaking of youth, 400M hurdle wunderkind Sydney McLaughlin is only 16 years old!
- Candace Hill, who made the semi-finals in the 100/200, is only 17 years old, and in December 2015 at age 16 signed a ten-year contract to run for Adidas. She has a best of 10.98 in the 100.
- Ageless youth Bernard Lagat, at 41, was jumping around like a kid at Christmas after winning the 5000 with a very youthful 52 second last lap.

Miscellany:
- Lagat has won two Olympic medals running for Kenya in 2000 & 2004, can he win one this summer? Back in 1984, an aging 37-year old Carlos Lopes of Portugal won the Olympic marathon gold medal; in the same race, youthful 25-year old Alberto Salazar finished 15th.

- The Kenyan "B Team" --

U.S. distance runners are the Kenyan (African) "B Team" --
5000M -
Lagat, born in Kenya; Paul Chelimo, born in Kenya; plus Somalian born Hassan Mead
10000M -
Shadrock Kipchirchir, born in Kenya; Leonard Korir, born in Kenya; plus U.S. born Rupp
The Marathon -
Galen Rupp and Jared Ward will joined at the starting line by 41-year old Eritean-born Meb Keflezighi !"


From Bruce Kritzler:  Link to Film on Sarah Brown training while pregnant to get to the O Trials.  Did she make it?
Run Mama Run
Editor's note:  Sarah Brown, four time NCAA All American made it to the trials but did not advance out of her semi heat.
July 7 (pm) Watched 2 hs kids win 200m heats in 20.04, 20,05 both windy, but impressive. Then hs girl Sidney McGlaughlin won heat of 400h in 55...Great women's steeple, where 5 contenders broke away in last kilo, but one of group faded to last, and another lost about 4 places in last 200m. This was after Emma Coburn waited till 2k to put the hammer down.


Time sort of stops when you are in Eugene for Olympic Trials. Track 24hrs/day. I loved it. Leslie says she will never stay in the dorm again (too many men using women's restroom).

One thing I missed was all the NBA players switching teams. I now have no idea who plays where? Bruce

  Like some of you, I was really pulling for the HS athletes or the Division II and III athletes or simply the newcomers.  TV coverage loves the older people because they have name recognition, but I think that makes the sport tired & predictable.  We have had two decades of the same old, same old.  Those PRs by Eccleston are amazing which leads me to believe that could happen more often if given the opportunity.  It's not everyone who can rise to the level of the competition, but it surely is true of a few.  
   Bruce, I'm glad you went to the Trials.  I now feel as if I got the real scoop.  You are absolutely the best person to see the Trials with.  I will never forget at the 1980 Trials when Sam Bell was asking you questions.  That was very impressive to me.  I can also picture you smiling as you read this message from me.
   Bill

V 6 N. 50 Canadian Sub 4 Minute Milers Gathering

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David Bailey sent us this article about a reunion in Ontario of many of Canada's sub four minute milers.
They all still look pretty fit.


July 8, 2016
Hi George,
I was prompted to send you this article as a result of the comprehensive recent posting about 50 years ago in June 1966.  Well, June 19, 2016 in London, Ontario there was a celebration of Canadian Sub-4 minute milers.  It was conceived and organized by a good friend, track coach and 1500m runner (3:42), Dave Mills. This was held at TD Stadium, Western University in conjunction with the annual 1500m Night, which is an major annual track event organized by Steve Weiler that regularly draws 300 – 400 runners from across the provinces.  Canadian standards for international teams and hundreds of personal bests have been run at this meet.  The celebration started as a reception at the Labatt Lounge in the main building at the stadium for 15 of 56 Canadian Sub – 4 milers who were able to attend.  Just before the elite sections for women and men were held, the attendees were individually introduced to the crowd.  I had the honour to present commemorative certificates courtesy Athletics Canada to the attendees and then Bill Crothers, my East York Track Club teammate (1964 Olympic 800m Silver Medalist) and the first person to let me know that I had run a sub – 4 mile presented me with the certificate and commemorative plaque.  For those who were not able to attend, certificates will be sent to them.  Also, a similar event is planned on the west coast hosted by British Colombia Athletics in July.


I have attached a PDF from the London Free Press article about this event published the day before the event.  As well, some photos courtesy of Howard Adams who provided them free of charge are enclosed.  As you can see, he captured some treasured moments.

David Bailey's first Canadian Sub 4   Here is the article we posted last year about that first Canadian sub 4.


The London Western Track and Field website has extensive coverage of this event at:




All the best,
David


Bill Crothers, David Bailey, Dave Mills at the reception

David Bailey the Certificate to John Craig

David Bailey Receiving his Certificate from Bill Crothers

Canadian sub – 4 milers who could attend.  Front Row: Ross Proudfoot, Richard Tremain, Ron Becht, Jeremy Ray, Taylor Milne. Back Row: Jason Bunston, Brandon Matthias, Paul Steeds, David Hill, Paul Craig, Scott MacDonald, John Craig, Grant McLaren, Harvey Mitro, David Bailey


Shaking hands with Dave Hill who broke my Canadian record of 3:57.7 of 1967 when he ran 3:55.9 in 1977.  Dave Hill made the trip from Dallas, Texas to attend this event.



George:
About 15 years ago I was in Halifax for the start of a tour of Nova Scotia. I came in a day or two early to check out some sites and found in the newspaper a Canadian HS kid from Ontario was going to attempt a 4 min mile in an all comers meet right there in Halifax. I took a cab over to the track and this skinny little guy did it! Nobody seemed to get very excited about it except Nate Brannan and me.
He’s had quite a career.

Pete

i well remember grant mclaren from the good old days at springbank.  he could pick them up and lay them down.
Richard Trace

Springbank, London, Ontario  Don't know what Springbank was all about?  Click on this link.

V 6 N. 51 New Book on the 1954 British Empire-Commonwealth Games

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I recently discovered a new book by Jason Beck ,  The Miracle Mile, Stories of the 1954 
British Empire and Commonwealth Games published in Canada  by Caitlin Press.

 Much has been written about the Miracle Mile between Bannister and Landy at these games and the outcome is no surprise, nor is the outcome of the Jim Peters collapse on the track in the marathon.

But what is unique in this book is the remarkable way Jason Beck has pieced together the underlying stories behind these two events and at the same time incorporated the other sports of those games in a chronology from the conception of holding the event in Vancouver, the skullduggery in getting the games awarded to the city, and the preparations that went into being the  host.   The British Empire was in its last days although independence was yet to come to many of the 'countries' participating;  Trinidad and Tobago would become just Trinidad and the Gold Coast would become Ghana.  Kenya was there as Kenya, a colony,  though not yet independent and they had two distance men Nyandika Maiyoro and Lazaro Chepkwony.  Much was made of their running without shoes and their imagined lack of training.   Maiyoro would be in the lead of the 3 mile race right to the last lap when he was overtaken on the backstretch by Chris Chataway and several others wearing their spikes and with the benefits of Franz Stampfl's training.  But it was  indeed a breakthrough for the Kenyans onto the international stage.  Later in the week Chataway would do the commentary on the Miracle Mile for the BBC.

Chataway was a 23 year old Oxford graduate and brewer's assistant at the Guiness Breweries who would later go on to have champagne tastes as a member of Parliament.  It's noted that both Chataway and Freddie Green who finished second enjoyed the occasional cigarette as well.

 Chataway came into the games as the world's most famous also-ran having been runner up to Bannister in his first sub four, and a few weeks later to Landy when he broke Bannister's record.

Chataway was not to be headed at Vancouver winning that 3 mile, and a few weeks later that summer went on to defeat his hero, Zatopek   at 5000, although they both lost to a new upstart named Vladmir Kuts.   Six weeks later that year, Chataway would dog Kuts' heels in another 5000 at White City in London and outlean him at the tape in a WR of 13:51.6.

Chataway Kuts  See the last 300 meters of that race.  Note the use of a spotlight on the lead runners.


Jason Beck now curator for British Columbia's Sports Hall of Fame has done a remarkable job of sifting through the records of the games to write this book.  He notes that it was a ten year work.  He meticulously interviewed countless athletes and coaches still living from that time including all the milers who participated in the Miracle Mile,  Bannister, Landy, Rich Ferguson, Victor Milligan, Murray Halberg, Ian Boyd, Bill Baillie, and David Law who followed in that order.  The book is full of side stories to the mile and provides good descriptions of the  preliminaries.

 Ferguson was the great surprise as his career had failed to materialize in the early 1950s.  He had twice won the Big Ten two mile championship for the University of Iowa and had run in the 1952 Olympics 5000 but failed to finish in his heat.  Since then he had developed a case of stomach ulcers.  He just managed to qualify for the Canadian team with a 4:19 mile.  But for a month he underwent intense training with the iconic and controversial Canadian coach Lloyd Percival and had a remarkable transformation.   Percival's athletes filled 14 places on the Canadian team although he was not named to the coaching staff except as a co-coach, a postion he refused.  Ferguson  qualified for the 880 finals and finished a respectable fifth place in 1:53.2 for a Canadian record, so he approached the mile with an increasing confidence.  He would finish third in the Miracle Mile in 4:04, a world class time then and another Canadian record.

While the excitement of the mile was going on,  the marathon was progressing in 80 degree heat.  Jim Peters would enter the stadium about twenty minutes after the mile was over and the crowd was just settling down.   Mr. Beck does a great job of describing that race from its onset and its incredible conclusion with Peters eventually being taken off the track by a caring team masseur Mick Mayes after British officials had repeatedly discouraged anyone from helping Peters in his desperate condition.   Beck also notes that British officials in an effort not to miss  seeing the super-hyped mile race had failed to provide Peters with fluids out on the course.

Of  note especially to Canadian readers but also the old timers who read this blog for its back stories is the account of a young high schooler from Cumberland, BC on Vancouver Island, Terry Tobacco.  Yes, that's right,  Tobacco.   Terry was literally in his first year of running the 440 working his way through various championships to be selected as a member of the Canadian team. In the semis at Vancouver he had the second fastest time of the 28 competitors,  48.3.   In the finals he finished third in 47.8, and would hit 46.4 as the anchor for the 2nd place Canadian team in the 4x440.   He would go on to compete for the University of Washington and make All American status including beating Otis Davis in the NCAA championships in 1959.  Davis would be Olympic champion and world recordman in 1960.

You'll also find stories of Mike Agostini and his psychological war with his Aussie counterparts,  the account of Landy cutting his foot on a photographer's flash bulb just before the mile and keeping it quiet.  He had four stitches put into the arch of his left foot the day before the race.  Being a gentleman, he didn't want to make excuses.

Another interesting story is that of Emmanuel Ifeajuna of Nigeria who won the high jump.  This was the first international gold medal for a citizen of a black African nation.  He would go on to co-lead a coup d'etat against the Nigerian government which precipitated the civil war with breakaway Biafra.  He was eventually executed by his own people , the Biafrans when he tried to make peace and is treated as a traitor to this day by the Nigerian government.  The winners write the history.

A slightly different  bit of history that rings contemporary today was the banishing of Canadian weight thrower Jackie Macdonald for having appeared in an ad for Orange Crush, one of the Games sponsors.  In reality  the expulsion was due to an ongoing dispute  between Macdonald's coach Lloyd Percival and the Canadian AAU and coaching establishment making  Macdonald the scapegoat.  It was noted that Bannister had appeared in a shoe store ad, the Pakistani team in a rug store ad, the New Zealand team in a grass seed ad, and that many Canadian athletes had been photographed wearing t-shirts with Orange Crush logos.  Macdonald was eventually vindicated, but long after the discus event she was supposed to throw in was over.

There is also an account of the photographer Charlie Warner of The Vancouver Sun who took the famous photo of Bannister overtaking Landy on the final turn.



Bill Baillie congratulating Bannister and Landy after the race





So without further compliments and leaving many, many more good stories to be found between its covers. I can highly recommend this book being added to your reading list.  All pictures except the Chataway-Kuts race have been purloined from the book in review.

George Brose

V 6 N. 52 High School Kids Who Have Made US Olympic Track and Field Team

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With the outstanding performances of several high school athletes at this year's Olympic Trials, a question came up of how many high schoolers have made the team in the past.   This year Sydney McLaughlin just turned 17 finished third in the women's 400IH in a time of 54.18 and qualified.  Also two young men Noah Lyles (20.09) and Michael Norman (20.14) just missed making the team in the 200.   Our group of experts have thrown out some names, which may be incomplete, but this is what we've found off the top of our collective heads.  If you are a stats freak or have a better memory, please help us out with any additional names.   By definition, the athlete should still be in high school or have graduated in the same year as the trials.  We can't count swimmers and gymnasts in this, and we know there are many, many 14 year olds who have made the Olympic teams in these and other sports.   Here is what we have so far as corroborated through the website  www.sports-reference.com .   Sorry, we are not collecting information about other nations, but if you think you have one from your country who meets this definition, please feel free to add to our list.

Chronological Order

1924    Lee Barnes  b. 7-16-1906,   Salt Lake City, UT,   won the pole vault in 3.90 meters.
Lee Barnes
            Though
            not the favorite he prevailed over the US champion.  Also of note the World Record holder
            in the pole vault  Charles Hof of Norway had injured an ankle and could not jump, but instead
            ran the 800 and finished 8th in 1:56.7.   Quite a Plan B don't you think?  Barnes is the only
            person to perform as a stunt double for Buster Keaton as seen at 2:16 in this video.
            Lee Barnes performing for Buster Keaton

1928    Betty Robinson  Running in only her fourth track meet won the 100 meters at Amsterdam.  A
            few years later was injured in a plane crash and did not compete at Los Angeles in 1932.

       However using a standing start, she was able to make the 1936 team as a 4x100 runner and
            earned a second gold medal.

1936    Helen Stephens  b. Feb., 1918, Fulton, MO.  The Fulton Flash   in her first ever race set a
            WR at 50 yards, beating Stella Walsh.  At Berlin, she won the 100, ran on the gold medal
             4x100 and finished 9th in the discus.   PBs  100y  10.8, 200m 24.1, SP  44'11  1/2", (13.70)
             and discus  (39.50) at Berlin.

1936    Louis Zamperini  b. Jan. 1917  finished 8th in the 5000 as a recently graduated 19 year old.
            Went on to fame with his war exploits.

1948    Bob Mathias   Tulare, CA, won decathlon at 17 in London and then set WR winning again in             1952.

1956    Eddie Southern,  b. January 4, 1938 won the silver medal at the 1956 Melbourne Games in the 400IH as an 18 year old.

The Games were held late, November, due to the Australian summer, so Eddie did not enter the University of Texas till January, 1957.  Interesting note: Eddie won both the 220 and the 440 at the Texas High School State Meet in May of 1956.  He set a national high school record in the 220 in 20.7 and less than an hour later won the 440 in 47.2, a national high school record also.  Quite a double!  Thanks for this info to Preston Davis.

Oak Cliff TX newspaper  The Oak Cliff Advocate claims in this article that he graduated in 1955, but that may be a mistake as there were some other errors in their story.  So we will give him a pass since Preston says he didn't enroll in UT until after the Olympics and that he graduated in 1956.    Here's the account from the Oak Cliff Advocate
    Eddie Southern began running races at W. E. Greiner Junior High School before entering Sunset, where he set state and national high school records ablaze. The 1955 graduate competed as a member of the ’56 USA Olympic Track Team that traveled to Melborne, Austrailia, and stood on the podium as the 440-meter hurdles Olympic silver medalist. Along with his USA teammate Glenn Davis, Southern broke the world record in the pre-lims, and then both men broke it again in the finals. Southern was leading the pack until the last hurdle, when Davis passed him by and grabbed the gold. Southern went on to lead the University of Texas Track Team to Southwest Conference championships in ’57, ’58 and ’59, setting more individual records in multiple events.
Breaking news.  Eddie Southern D.Q'd.  Some back checking by Preston Davis indicates that Eddie did indeed graduate in 1955.  Therefore his double at the Texas state meet most likely was in 1955 as well.  Then he must have enrolled at UT in Fall 1955 and attended Spring 1956.  He ran for UT as a soph in 1957 and may have sat out in Fall 56 in order to compete in the Melbourne Olympics. So he would have had some college time before going to the O's even though he was still 18 in 1956.   
  

1964    Jim Ryun , Wichita, KS  b. April 29, 1947  qualified for 1500 meters.  Eliminated in semis.
            Went on to WR in 1500, Mile, 880,  and a silver medal in 1500 in 1968.

1964    Gerry Lindgren  b. March  9, 1946.   Finished 9th in 10,000 meters at Tokyo.  Earlier that
            summer had won 10,000 in the USA  USSR dual meet.   Eleven time NCAA champion.

1976    Houston Mctear   made US team in 100, but had to withdraw due to injuries.  Replaced
            by another high school athlete,  Johnny Lam Jones.

1976    Johnny Lam Jones  b. April, 1958,  Lawton, OK.  Replaced McTear and finished 6th in
            the 100 meters.  Won a gold on the 4x100.

1976    Dwayne Evans  b. Oct. 13, 1958,  P:hoenix, AZ.  Won bronze in 200 at Montreal, 20.43.
            Ran at Arizona State,   won 200    AAU 1978, and NCAA 1981.

2004    Allyson Felix    Born in November 1985,  Allyson was still 18 when she made the US team
            and earned a silver medal in the 200.  Technically she had graduated in 2003 and so was a
            year out of high school and had turned pro, but we think she earns a pass, because of her age.



2016    Sydney Mclaughlin    b. 7-8-1999.  Her future awaits.



2016     Vashti Cunningham    High Jump        Don Betowski reminded us that Vashti is also a recent               high school
              graduate from Bishop Gorman HS, Las Vegas, NV.    Her dad Randall Cunningham was also               a pretty decent high jumper as well as an all Pro quarterback.

V 6 N. 53 About that track meet in Houston

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In Eugene at the Prefontaine Meet in May there was some talk about a series of meets to be held in the US with some prize money attached, so American athletes didn't have to go to Europe to make money the rest of the season.   Was the meet in Houston on Saturday part of that new series?  I did not see the meet up here in Canada so relied on some astute friends for their comments.  Also here is a link to the results.  Looks like it was a made for TV meet without a full compliment of events for either gender and some odd ball distances like 1000 meters for men.  When's the last time you saw an outdoor 1000 meter race that wasn't in Europe?  By the way did you see the size of that crowd at the Diamond League meet in London?  It must have been a near sellout in the Olympic Stadium.  They must have been offering a revote on the Brexit issue to get that many people in there.
American Track League (Houston)  Will there also be a National Track League someday?


From Roy Mason:
 Put this meet on in Eugene and you have 10,000 in the stands.  Anywhere else and you get the Houston type crowd which was how big?  Kids running around on the infield but you never had a shot of the stands.  The few times they were in a passing shot they looked....what's the word?......empty.

* Good fields.  These are professional runners.  Were they paid based on performance or was this just part of their contracts with their sponsors?

* The choreographed rush of children to the winner three seconds after the race ended was a big turn off for me.  

* Was there a charge for admission?  Guessing not.  Thinking they rounded up kids at the Boys and Girls clubs around the city and turned them loose.  No, just looked.  Tickets went at $12.50 but you could buy 100 for $500.  That would explain the kids.  

* Asafa Powell is built like a body builder.  What a physique.  

* Pretty sure DeGrasse and Powell didn't go out for beers after the meet.  These guys do not like each other.
Clayton Murphy

Fitzroy Dunkley

* I want to have another child because I found the greatest name in the world for the kid, Fitzroy Dunkley (2nd in 400).  Wouldn't be Fitzroy Dunkley Mason, just Fitzroy Dunkley.  Wouldn't matter if it were a boy or girl, Fitzroy Dunkley.  Sort of addictive.  I haven't been able to stop saying it all morning.

* Clayton Murphy is Clark Kent until the race starts.  Then he is Superman.  Really like this kid.

* Another guy I have liked for some time is Curtis Beach.  A decathlete (other than Ashton Eaton) who can break 50 in the intermediates.  Pretty damn good.  I learned this morning that Beach was the "pacesetter" who had the embarrassing job of running all by himself in that 1000.  Never seen a head swivel so often in a race.  Where are those guys?  They were here a minute ago.  Guys, come on, I can't run any slower.
Curtis Beach

* I recorded this and forgot it until I was about to stagger off to bed.  Fast forwarded through all the blah, blah, blah and commercials and just watched the races.  The major takeaway was the number and length of commercials.  Even at full speed ahead mode they took forever to get through.  One had to be a hard core fan to watch live.

* As I saw Trey Hardee and Lewis Johnson, I assume they were the only announcers.  As Johnson is experienced and never at a loss for words, I have to assume that it was Hardee, apparently not one to deal in metaphor, who provided the stunning description of the  100, stating, "That was a real footrace".  I envisioned Louis looking at him the minute they were off mike and saying "Did you really just say that?"

Thanks, Roy, you can go back to the hammock now.  GB



Sandi Morris
New American Record Holder 16'2"


Phil Scott says:

Murphy 2.20 1000m looked smooth Rick Wolhutter 2.13.9 AmRd  looks safe for time being. Curtis Beach Decathlete was rabbit 1.25 600m too slow. he also got 3rd in 400ih 49.6 

Phil


Steve Price Wrote:  Hey.......I enjoyed the ATL meet from Houston. It was a carnival like atmosphere with the little kids running about, people on the infield and hyped up music to accompany the races. The marks weren't great (cept' for the women's PV) but there was good competition and a real international flavor. Things moved along quickly and the interviews were quick and painless. I had pretaped the meet so could fast forward the commercials though even those were a tad interesting with Ashton Eaton et al.
A fun event that may catch on and spark some interest in televised Track & Field.
Comments ?
Bruce Kritzler wrote:
I also taped the meet and just finished watching it. Former Gator Hazel Clark handled the on field interviews.
Hazel Clark

Nice to see Clayton Murphy beat Centrowitz in 1k (basically workout time). Pretty good men's 400. Women's pv should have got more hype, and interview with new AR holder Sandi Morris. Good double by Prandini.
Pretty good meet over in London the last two days also. And US doing great in World Jr. Champs.
Gators just lost their two top recruits, as the Lyles brothers turned pro. Their parents, Kevin and Keisha Lyles, Seton Hall grads, trained in Gainesville most of post college career.
Bruce

Richard Trace in his succinct , Hemingwayesque manner reports:

 "It seemed very contrived to me."



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