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V 7 N. 2 January, 1967

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We start a new year of TF&N rehashes, and Roy Mason  our multi-talented co-founder of Once Upon a Time in the Vest asks the important questions of those heroes of the past.  Welcome again to a new , invigorated and armchair reclining issue.


JANUARY 1967

    Whether you were reading this issue when it had just arrived or 50 years later, its home would be the bathroom. The first 56 pages are devoted to awards, ratings and lists; world, U.S., college, junior college and high school. Your answer to the pounding on the door is “I'm okay. Be out in a little bit.”

    One wonders where those guys are now or whether they are now. What is the life story of Peter Chen who vaulted 16-0 to finish in a five way tie for 41st on the world list? Every now and then does he remember that exact instance when he knew he had cleared? Do his table mates at the retirement home know that he once jumped sixteen feet?

    On May 21 in Provo, Utah Mike Douglas ran the intermediates in 50.8. That earned him a four way tie for 21st spot on the world list. What have you done for me lately, Mike? Did you teach and coach? Were you a stock broker, a mechanic, a pilot? Did you own a bar, run a karate school, play the violin, raise a family, adopt foreign orphans?

    Bill Toomey set the world decathlon record of 8234 points. Russ Hodge was second at 8230 – yes, 4 points behind. They trained together and were roommates. There must have been a bond. They are both still alive. Do they communicate? Have they been lifelong buddies? Did they just exchange Christmas cards?

    A quick run through of the awards before we report on what few meets there are. Jim Ryun was selected as the World Track Athlete of 1966. His 86 points gave him a cushion over Tommie Smith's 69. Randy Matson was third with 25. Matson was the field athlete of the year. The European AOY was javelin thrower Janis Lusis of the USSR. Ralph Boston won the US Open (non-collegiate) award with Tommie Smith getting the US Collegiate title. If you are wondering how Ryun could top Smith in the world voting but finish behind him in the collegiate standings, the unexplained explanation must be that Smith competed on the varsity level which Ryun couldn't because he was confined to frosh competition. And, yes, Ryun was freshman AOY. Lee Evans was the JC winner. Tim Danielson won the high school award. Triple jumper Art Walker was Indoor AOY. The top performance was Ryun's 3:51.3.

    The individual event rankings were more interesting. Winners were: 100: Charlie Greene, 200: Tommie Smth, 400: Lee Evans, 800 and 1500/mile: Ryun, 3 miles/5000: Kipchoge Keino of Kenya, 6 miles/10,000: Naftali Temu of Kenya, Steeplechase: Viktor Kudinskiy of the USSR, 110 hurdles: Willie Davenport, 400 hurdles: Roberto Frinolli of Italy, High Jump: Ni Chih-Chin of China, Long Jump: Ralph Boston, Pole Vault: John Pennel, Triple Jump: Hans-Jurgen Ruckborn of East Germany (although Art Walker was undefeated and had the longest jump of the year), Shot: Randy Matson, Discus: Al Oerter, Hammer: Romuald Klim of the USSR, Javelin: Janis Lusis and Decathlon: Bill Toomey.
                                     Romuald Klim    died 2011


    The US indoor season starts on Dec. 22 in Mobile, Alabama where Bob Seagren has both a literal and figurative up and down performance. To the positive, he vaults 17-4, the best ever in indoor competition. On the other side of the coin, it doesn't count, as he had already been eliminated with three failures on the opening height of 15-0 and was just filling out his day.

    A week later in Saskatoon, Canada, Seagren increases his own indoor WR with a clearance of 17-1. Otis Burrell edges a come-backing John Thomas by an inch in the high jump with a 7-1 effort.

Unless the discus has become an indoor event, we assume the Orange Bowl meet in Miami is held outdoors, as John Morton of Florida throws that implement 183-2.

    The first really big news comes on January 7 in the All American Games held in San Francisco's venerable Cow Palace. For once the focus is on the field events. Neil Steinhauer hands Randy Matson his first loss in over a year and, in so doing, crushes Gary Gubner's indoor record of 64-11¾ by nearly a foot and a half with a throw of 66-6¾. Matson's 64-4½ leaves him a well beaten second. The gauntlet has been thrown.

    High jumper John Rambo missed the outdoor season last year because of an injury, so it is surprising to see him tie John Thomas' US indoor record of 7-3. Otis Burrell keeps the outcome in doubt, finishing at 7-2.

    Apparently the athletes liked the Bay Area so much that they return the next week for the Athens Invitational held in the Oakland Arena on January 15. The track and runways are covered with Fastrac, the new super surface guaranteed to produce faster times. The comparison of times made by the same athletes in the Cow Palace meet doesn't verify this claim.

    Fastrac, however, is responsible for the appearance of US triple jump record holder Art Walker. He is here because he jumped 54-9 off the surface last indoor season and is eager for another crack at it. Unfortunately this pit ends at 56 feet. Walker has to nearly abort his first effort, putting his feet down at 54-1 so that he doesn't hit the board at the end of the pit. Rather than risk injury, he calls it an evening after that single jump.

    Ralph Boston wins the long jump at 26-3. No surprise there, but the most significant mark of the competition is the second-place 25-3½ national high school record by Jerry Proctor of Muir High in Pasadena. The kid may have a future. Stay tuned.

    The following week finds us still in California, specifically at the Los Angeles Invitational where Jim Ryun makes his 1967 indoor debut with a 4:02.6 win over Tom Von Ruden and Dyrol Burleson. Ralph Boston once again wins the long jump, this time at 26-3¾, but gets no love from the sportswriters who vote that Proctor kid the athlete of the meet for breaking his week old high school record on four of his six jumps and finishing second at 25-10½.

    Once again Bob Seagren surpasses the world pole vault record but gets no credit for doing so. This time Seagren clears 17-2, but as he lands in the pit, so does his pole, resulting in a miss. After the meet he speaks vociferously about outlawing that rule.

    Dave Maggard puts the shot 62-11½ to edge Jon Cole by nearly a foot. Jim Grelle outkicks Gerry Lindgren and George Young to win the two mile in 8:45.0. Charlie Greene takes the 60 in 6.0.

    In a race we wish had been saved on YouTube, Richmond Flowers wins the 60 hurdles in 7.1 over European champ Eddie Ottoz who is attired in “bikini-like” shorts. On second thought, maybe that is a visual image we are better off without.


Eddie Ottoz then and now

Ottoz has been very influential in Italian track and field over the years and participated as a journalist and training specialist for Italian teams



V 7 N. 3 Track Reunion in Southern Californina Feb 25

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We've been asked to notifiy our readers of a track reunion/luncheon  in Southern California on February 25, 2017.  Here is the info:

From:

Doug Smith
26063 Laguna Hills, CA 92653
H:  949 831-5935
C: 949 230-1940
smitheld@cox.net
                                            Track and Field Luncheon

Date:  Sat. Feb. 25, 2017  11:00AM - 3;00PM
Location:  Spaghettini Restaurant
                  3005 Old Ranch Parkway, Seal Beach, CA 90740
                   526- 596-2199
Cost:  $45.00 per person  Buffet Style

Hello Athletes and Coaches,

If you plan to stay for an extra day, or more here is a list of local hotels and motels.

Ayres Hotel  562- 596-8330  nearest to Spaghettini
Hampton Inn & Suites  562-594-3939
Ocean Surf Inn and Suites  562-592-1993
The Pacific Inn  866-466-0300

Reservation form below:   Must be received no later than Sat. Feb. 18, 2017.  Please, do not show at reunion without having sent your reservation and check, because there may not be any space available.  Hope to see you on Feb. 25th.

Reunion Committe  Ron Allice  ronallice@gmail.com   562 455-3872
                                 Larry Knuth knuthfam@hotmail.com   949-357-7965
                                 Doug Smith  smitheld@cox.net   H. 949-831-5935     C. 949-230-1940

If you were not planning on attending, but discover that you will be attending, contact one of us on the reunion committee in advance; so, we may let the restaurant know of any additional attendees.  Bring your completed reservation form with your check to the luncheon.

If you know of any others who wish to attend, and they are athletes or coaches from the 20th Century, please make copies of these  pages, and give them to these people.  Or , you may contact one of us, who are on this reunion occommittee give us the cotact infomation for these people, and we will contact them for you.  Spouses are welcome, but complete a reservation form for them, also.





                                        TRACK AND FIELD REUNION LUNCHEON
                            
                                         RESERVATION FORM  (PLEASE PRINT)


NAME: ________________________________________________________________

EMAIL: ___________________________________ PHONE: ____________________

ADDRESS: ______________________________________________________________

SCHOOL AND CLASS YEAR: _____________________________________________

This form and your payment must be received before Sat. Feb. 18, 2017.

Please mail it early, so it will be received before Feb. 18th.  Please do not show on the day of this reunion without having completed and mailed this form with your check.  Thank you.
Cost per person:  $45.00 Make check payable to LARRY KNUTH in the amount of $45, or proper amount if more than one person will be attending in your party.  

Mail to:  Larry Knuth, 30862 Paseo del Niguel, Laguana HIlls, CA 92677

Make an extra copy of this form for each attendee.  In this manner everyone will be recognized.






V 7 N. 3 Ashton Eaton and Harry Marra

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Athlete and Coach:  

An Appreciation of Ashton Eaton and Harry Marra

by Jon Hendershott

(All photos supplied by Jon Hendershott)


     It was the perfect storm:  supremely talented athlete meets ultra-experienced coach.  Once their work together began to bear fruit, the multi-events would never be the same.
Harry Marra, Brianne Theisen-Eaton, Ashton Eaton, and Jon Hendershott

     Ashton Eaton was the athlete, just beginning his third season at the University of Oregon in the fall of 2009.  Harry Marra had just been hired by then-head coach Vin Lananna to work specifically in developing the obvious talents of emerging decathlete Eaton--as well as the second-year heptathlete from Canada, Brianne Theisen.

     The connections that formed virtually from the beginning between the coach and both athletes would result in world-class performances, championship medals plus Eaton remaking records in the men's multis, indoors and out.  And Theisen would eventually become Eaton's wife as well as a world-class seven-eventer in her own right.

     Now, after Ashton's two Olympic 10-event titles, two decathlon World Records and three indoor heptathlon bests, two World Champs deca wins, three World Indoor heptathlon victories and a total of five NCAA triumphs (three decathlon, two heptathlon), both Eatons announced their retirements on January 4.

     Brianne tallied five NCAA titles, two outdoor Worlds heptathlon silver medals and a pair of World  Indoor pentathlon awards, including the 2016 gold medal.

     Eaton himself headed west across the Cascades to Eugene out of Mountain View High School in Bend, in central Oregon.  He had been directed as a high schooler by Tate Metcalf and had won state sprint and long jump titles.

     Oregon's then-assistant coach Dan Steele--8th placer in the '99 Worlds 10-eventer with  his 8130-point PR--recruited Eaton and felt all along he could make an impact as a decathlete.  Steele directed him to the 2009 NCAA Indoor heptathlon win and a defense of his outdoor decathlon title.  Then Steele was hired as head coach at Northern Iowa and Lananna had to find a knowledgeable, experienced coach for his obviously diamond-in-the-rough talent.

     So he called Marra for advice.  Marra had earned his Masters in physical education from Syracuse and had coached at San Francisco State University in the 1980s, as well as with the VISA Decathlon team.  He was a 6524-point scorer in the mid-1970s while training in the then-hotbed of U.S. decathloning, Santa Barbara.

     Even though he measured just 5'6" and 140 lbs (168cm/64kg) then, Marra was known as a tenacious competitor, but also a voracious reader and student of the sport.  He constantly asked questions, especially of renowned coach Sam Adams, as well as the athletes training in Santa Barbara at the time.  Marra just couldn't soak up  enough technical knowledge about events in general and the decathlon in particular.

     When Lannana sought his advice about coaches, Marra and his wife Madeline lived in San Luis Obispo, just north of Santa Barbara.  With his wide knowledge of the decathlon and its coaches, Marra directed Lannanna toward various candidates.

     But Lananna once recalled, "None of the coaches Harry recommended could take a job at Oregon.  Suddenly, I thought, 'Why am I asking other people?  Harry knows as much, or more, than any of them.' So I offered Harry the job.   I asked him, 'Can you keep developing Ashton, and eventually Brianne, so they win more NCAA titles?' He said, 'Sure, I can do that.'"

     While he admitted, "I just loved California," the prospect of a university coaching job--especially with the storied program at Oregon--won over Marra.  So he and Madeline left their large home in SLO to move to a small apartment in Eugene.

     On November 3, 2009, Marra began coaching Eaton and Theisen--and , yes, the rest is history.  As in, just four months after they began working together, Eaton won the NCAA Indoor heptathlon--with a World Record 6499-point score.  And Brianne won her first of three straight NCAA Indoor pentathlons.

     Marra knew immediately that he would work with two exceptional athletes, and people.  He said,  "The thing with the multis, in all the variations, is that life needs to revolve around the event.  It can't be vice versa or you won't be successful.

     "From the beginning, it was clear that Ash and Bri were very mature kids, on all levels.  Athletically, they ate, drank and slept the multis.  They also were endless readers with curiosity about the world in all aspects.
Marra shows desired shot form to the athletes.
     "In the multis, an athlete has to be excited to accept challenges--but you also have to know and accept that you won't get the desired outcome right away.  It's a long, long process and an athlete has to be ready to continually accept challenges.

     "A multi-eventer needs to have an attitude of coming  back from failure.  You're going to fail in practice more than you're going to succeed.  Ash is the type of athlete who might have a very good high jump practice one day.  But it still wasn't quite what he wanted.

     "Damn good, but he was still ticked off about it. 'Aw, I didn't like that,' he would say.  And that's a great attitude to have.

     'But you also have to be sensible.  You can't expect to be good in the decathlon tomorrow.  You can be better than you were yesterday, but you have to stick with it for a number of years.  I try to teach safe mechanics because I want every  athlete I coach to be 100% healthy going to the starting line for any competition."

     It didn't take long for the athletes to connect totally with their coach.  Only about three weeks after they began working together, Eaton approached Marra and said, "Coach, for me, less is more." Marra recalled, "He meant that training didn't have to be hammer-hammer-hammer every session.  He felt fresher not doing that and could keep moving forward."
Marra and Eaton compare notes on their training observations

     "So we kept our training short and sharp.  I learned long ago that you listen to the body.  When it's time to go, you go.  When it's time to rest, you rest.  The body will tell you."

     But Eaton added, "We went through a lot of different scenarios in our careers, but I always knew that Harry knew where we were and where we should end up.  He knows and could communicate the things an athlete needed to do to reach a certain goal.  Bri and I might get frustrated with something, but he would say, 'It will come.'"
Marra and Eaton compare notes on their training observations.

     Marra replied, "No decathlete or heptathlete in history has not dealt with frustration.  Ashton was so good because he could deal very well with chaos--and the decathlon is chaos."

     Those lines of communication remained open throughout their careers.  After Brianne placed 10th in the 2012 London Olympic heptathlon--short of all of their expectations--she told Marra,  "Harry, I'm not in this to place 10th.  I never want to do that again.  I want to be on the medal podium from now on."

     So Marra totally redesigned her training and the next spring she won the prestigious heptathlon staged annually in Goetzis, Austria.  Later that season, Theisen won the heptathlon silver medal at the '13 Moscow World Championships  She would win the Commonwealth Games  7-eventer in '14 and ultimately the '16 World Indoor pentathlon and the Rio Olympic heptathlon bronze medallion.
Eaton doing pole vault run-ups while Brianne  Theissen checks his step.

     Brianne said, "Harry just loves to coach and work with athletes." Marra added, "I take coaching very seriously, regardless if an athlete is trying to win a junior high school championship or the Olympic title.

     "An athlete puts his or her life into the coach's hands.  So you have to take that responsibility seriously and say, 'I'm going to do the absolute best I can to see that this athlete becomes the very best he or she can be.'"

     Marra also believes,  "The coach can't be a crutch for the athlete.  Many athletes will do an event, then immediately look to the coach for feedback.  I want the athletes to be able to analyze things on their own.  They write down every aspect of their workout:  how they felt; what they did that they liked, or didn't like; every detail.   Then we can compare notes.

     "That's because the athlete and coach always should be continually learning.  You have to be confident in what you know--but you have to realize that you don't know everything."

     And there could be times of scary lessons.  On an early spring day in 2013, the athletes and their coach were training in Santa Barbara, logging a six-week bloc of work prepping for the World Championships season to come.  While training with the javelin,  Ashton had gone out to the far left of the landing area at Westmont College to retrieve his spear.
The trio doing javelin training --just before the "near-miss" incident.

     Brianne took her own throw, but instead of her usual to-the-right style, she pulled the javelin to the left--and it bore down on Ashton, who didn't know it was coming.  Brianne and Marra screamed warnings and the ultra-athletic Ashton arched his back to the left as the spear whizzed by his head.
Ashton reassures Brianne that he is OK after the javelin near-miss.

     "Whoa," he said later, "that was close.  I saw this flash of purple go right under my nose." That was the handle of Brianne's javelin.  She immediately ran to him and they embraced, him smiling to reassure her that he was fine.  But that close call certainly went into the training logs--no doubt in the "near-miss" column.

     It was just one more unique happening in their unique relationship.  Yet while the athletes won major championship medals for their efforts, his peers honored Marra with the Coach of the Year awards from USA Track & Field in 2012 and the IAAF just this past November.

     He said, "I said after the USATF award, but it holds for any award I have received, that I owe the honor to every coach in the room.  I have tried to listen and learn from every coach I have ever met.  Then I try to transmit that knowledge to the athlete.

     "But I'm also a competitive guy and I have tried to teach that competitiveness to athletes.  I have been a teacher first and that's what has fired me up my whole career."

     Now,  the sport will be without the unique talents of all three.  Their lives will change markedly with the athletes' retirements.  Ashton and Brianne are taking their time finding new challenges in life to devote their energies toward.  Marra says he wants to stay with coaching, but in a much-scaled back fashion and perhaps working at directing younger athletes.

      In announcing his retirement, the always-thoughtful and introspective Eaton said,  "I gave everything I had to the decathlon.  I did all I could.  Thank you for making it the best time of my life.

     "I'm deciding what to do next.  Other interests of mine are education, transportation infrastructure and energy."

     Then, in a tease--or was it?--Eaton gave an indication that the world certainly has not heard the last from him, by far.  He concluded, "Being the first person on Mars would be cool."
The author Jon Hendershott with Coach Harry Marra (left)

(Jon Hendershott has followed track and field for 60 years.  For 48 of those seasons, he was a writer and editor at Track & Field News.  He has covered 9 Olympics, 13  outdoor World Championships, 3 World Indoor Championships and the World Relays, as well as dozens of NCAA and USA Championships.  He has twice won track Journalist of the Year awards presented by the Track & Field Writers of America.  An Oregon native, he is now retired and lives in Salem, Oregon, and is eagerly awaiting the start of his 61st year following the sport.)

Comment from Bill Schnier, U. of Cincinnati track coach (ret'd.)

Jon's article is right on point, devoid of glitz, yet full of the personal story which this topic deserves.  Great addition.

Comment from Don Betowski:
Hi George,
I enjoyed the story about Ashton, Bri, and Harry.  I was in Santa Barbara in the '70s doing research at UCSB, but also training at the track, usually doing interval training at noon.  I got to know several of the decathletes including Harry.  I remember Harry telling me he was the shortest decathlete, who scored over x number of points.

Another great runner has died of Parkinson's Disease.  Dr. Jack Reilly and Richard Greene were joined in the fact that they were very good milers in the early '60s, as both graduated from college in 1963, Richard from Western Michigan and Jack from Georgetown (where he was my resident adviser one year at Georgetown).  Richard had run a 4:06 mile, Jack a 4:01.  Perhaps Jack's most famous run was his anchor relay leg at the 1962 Millrose Games, the same meet where John Uelses broke the 16 foot pole vault barrier.  You can view Jack's anchor here:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bc1yPzjkBGk 



V 7 N. 4 When a Canadian Woman Was World's Best Marathoner

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                 How Could a Thirteen Year Old Girl Set a World's Best in the Marathon in 1967?
Maureen Wilton  May 6, 1967

One of the youngest ever world running record holders, Maureen Wilton  of Willowdale, Ontario was a 13 year old Canadian girl who put all of two weeks of rather questionable training  into running  her first marathon.  She was not new to the sport of running but to long distance she was  a neophyte.  A member of the  North York Track Club in 1967, she  had been training since the age of nine.  But nothing prior to her effort on May 6, 1967 gave much indication that a world's best time was about to be recorded.  Women were still fighting for a place on the roads with men, and I'm not referring to being allowed to drive cars in Saudi Arabia, but to compete in races of the same distance that men ran every weekend.  Today even with the  majority of marathoners being women, the under 60 age crowd are probably not even aware that this was an issue fifty years ago.  Now it's rare that we  see a man on the cover of a running magazine.  I won't go into that in this piece.   Never the less women were not welcome on the roads in 1967.  Less than a month earlier, Kathryn Switzer had been able against the will of the organizers to run in and complete the Boston Marathon.  Jock Semple, race director and  never one to mince words or actions, tried to 'man handle' Kathryn off the course, but in that famous photo, the men around her kept Jock at bay and Kathryn on course.  Bobbi Gibb won that race at Boston in 3:27.17 as well as 1966 and 68,  and Switzer was second in 4:20.02.
Bobbi Gibb winning Boston in 1966

Gibb post race

In 1967 Switzer getting mugged by Jock Semple race director at Boston

Years Later Forgive and not Forget

Maureen's Wilton's  story was brought to my attention last week at a running club workout when Jamie Kantor told me that there had been a story on the CBC that day  about a young Canadian woman setting a world best for the marathon back in 1967.    I was intrigued by the story, and couldn't think who that might have been.  I thought Jamie might have been confusing Jaqueline Gareau who came along years later in 1979-80.  So I looked up the CBC story when I got home.  You can see it for yourself by clicking on  "Maureen Wilton" at the bottom of this page.  This is not the first time this story has been written, but for some reason it has  filtered through the pages of various running magazines over the last twenty years, and its significance each time has  been forgotten.   A google search will bring out some of those other stories.
Maureen and Her Parents after the Race
What is truly unique is that two stories came out of this one event, because Maureen Wilton's coach was Sy Mah.  Mah would run  his first marathon that same day as Maureen   and run 523 more marathons in his lifetime which in 1988 was a world record.   I mentioned that Maureen's training was questionable.  One story says Sy had Maureen running repeat 220s and 440s and some distance runs, in the two weeks prior to her attempt.  Sy only broached the subject of running the marathon to Maureen after she had done well in a 1.5 mile race.  She had never heard of the marathon, didn't know how long it was, and had no idea of what it would be like to go that far.  However she did have some serious talent  at shorter distances, probably a near five minute mile capability,  and a good sense of pace.  She mentions in one interview that she could hit a 440 on demand at the pace her coach dictated.  Mah had calculated that Maureen could break the record of 3:19.33 held by Millie Simpson of New Zealand set in Auklannd on July 21, 1964,  by running a 7:30 per mile pace. But by the end of the run with a mile to go, Maureen's mother who was keeping track of her time felt that they had messed up the timing and that Maureen was behind the record pace. Mom informed  Maureen, and she picked it up and ran a 6:00 last mile finishing in 3:15.23.  Kathryn Switzer came up to the race 2 weeks after her Boston adventure, but was never in it against the Wilton.  Not many people can pick up the pace like that at the end of their first marathon.  The 4'10" 80 pounder had gone into the stratosphere of distance running and barely realized it.  It is not noted in the stories, but I don't think Maureen ran another marathon.  She dialed back and hit the cross country circuit and represented Canada on some national teams and was out of running at age 17.   A few months after her marathon, the record was no longer hers as Anni Pede-Erdkamp of Germany cranked a 3:07.26.  Pede-Erdkamp a twenty-seven year old set her record at Waldniel, Germany.
Maureen getting her award after the race and Sy Mah in Yellow Shirt

There was some criticism of Maureen's parents at even letting their daughter run such a distance.  The old prolapsed uterus argument  was the main source of outcries, which have long since been proven not to be an issue.  Even today a number of sanctioning bodies discourage long distance running by teens and certainly younger children.  There are other concerns regarding growth plates being damaged on developing children's bones which are a legitimate concern.

Maureen's daughter Carolyn became a runner and was good enough to get a scholarship to run at West Alabama University.  That was an opportunity not available to Maureen when she was old enough to attend university.  Amazingly Maureen had never told her daughter about her running career until Carolyn was well into her career.    Maureen eventually earned  her way through her studies into a career in the financial world, and now at 58 years  has taken on a whole new career in dog training.

Regarding Maureen's life after a world best, her family went to their lake cottage after the race and were surprised when they came home to see the overwhelmingly negative press coverage about her accomplishment.  Even the track and field establishment was down on her achievement.  Since then Maureen is yet to be considered for a Hall of Fame nomination anywhere in her native land.  She has been soundly applauded at some recent events when Kathryn Switzer came to Canada and told the story to a packed audience at a pre-race event and then introduced Maureen who was sitting next to her totally unrecognized.   Maureen Wilton , now Maureen Mancuso was finally acknowledged and given a heartfelt ovation from her fellow runners.
Sy Mah in Olander Park, Toledo, Ohio




Sy Mah  would move on from Toronto to be an assistant professor of physical education at the University of Toledo.  He was very instrumental in the running community in Northwest Ohio in the 1970s and 80s until his untimely death in 1988.  Today his statue stands in Olander  Park where many road races took place in Toledo and the annual   Glass City Marathon.  His name is on the mugs given to all finishers.

See the CBC story which put me on to this post.
Maureen Wilton  by David Giddens, CBC Sports

George,
Don't remember Maureen, but sure knew Sy Mah well. He moved to Toledo, and was main force behind Toledo RRC when I started racing weekly, in about 1970. Believe he was teaching at Toledo University, as I remember visiting him at his apartment on campus. Sy was definitely more interested in road racing and marathoning than track. Sy was locally famous  for the number of marathons (524) he finished.
Bruce  Kritzler

George:

I am of the strong opinion that male runners should not attempt marathoning until they are 18 years old.
Perhaps even 21 Year old.

To heck with records!

Just because you can do it, does not mean that it is good for your short term health or for your long term
development as a runner.

Comments encouraged. Especially from our readers and contributors with coaching backgrounds.

John Bork

John,
I share your concern about young kids running marathons.  I looked up the current world best for 13 year old girls and it is now  2 hr. 44 min.     Thirteen year old boys  is 2hr. 43 minutes.  Also of note is that the girls' record was set in 1987, the boys' record in 1977.  This indicates that nobody is trying to beat the record  and putting  their kids' health at stake anymore.  At least not on a grand scale. The records are listed down to 4 year olds.  Remember in the late sixties early seventies there were groups of parents trying really hard to have their kids doing long distance stuff.  Even Runners' World put out some pamphlet books on a group called PaMaKids who were promoting family togetherness through distance running.   There are probably still a few parents promoting such activitiy. Fortunately they are few and far between.  But child abuse is rampant in many forms in our country and throughout the world, certainly not just through sport.  For 15 years  I worked in the field of very serious child abuse, and if there was a common thread in those cases, most parents never felt that what they were doing to their children was out of the ordinary.   It would probably be very hard to prosecute a parent for training a kid to run a marathon  today, even knowing that the child's health and well being might be at risk.  Look at how controversial the vaccination question is.   That said I recently saw a film from India about a little boy training to run marathons. He had run 48 marathons by the age of 4 when the HBO film was made.   He was clearly being exploited, because the coach of this slum kid was obviously doing a lot of self promotion and making  money off the child.  Someone murdered the coach.  I hesitate to say 'fortunately murdered' but the thought did come to mind.    See   Marathon Boy trailer.    Of interest, that child is no longer running marathons, and someone has looked out for him, and he is getting an education in a boarding school which would certainly have been out of his family's reach had he not had that notorious past.    In other ways less flagrant but still exploitative we see in every grandstand and every performance hall children being driven by aggressive parents to the brink of exhaustion to excel in various activities.  Psychological abuse is no less devastating than physical abuse.  Any college coach today can tell you stories of exploitative parents they have had to deal with.   This is not only sport but spelling bees, dance, piano, theater etc.   The parent clearly driving the child to thrive where the parent has failed..or excelled.    In some societies it is seen as the only way out  of poverty such as baseball in the Caribbean and South American countries as well as soccer.  In their own way the East Germans and Soviet Bloc promoted their societal beliefs  in the 70s, and there are still vestiges of that past in Russia today.

In Maureen Wilton's case, it was fortunate that her experience was a one and done.  She was clearly a natural and her effort probably not much more than the equivalent of a long hike on a family outing.


Still begging the question , when is it time to run a first marathon for a young person?  So much indivduality in this query.   If you're training for the mile and using a Lydiard system to train, you're going to run at least a 20 miler on occasion as part of the endurance building phase.  Some kids mature physically much earlier than others.  Some kids have tender joints and others don't.  Really hard to put a specific age on the question.  Some atheltes have very little natural talent and might see a marathon as simply a personal challenge to try to complete.  It might not have any bearing on their future performances, yet for others at any age it could be a devastating event.
George

George,
  Interesting debate.   I know in late 90’s a high school coach in Salem ore took his boys distance runners to do the LA marathon.   I heard through the track coaching grapevine that the marathon wiped out the boys track season.   The parents were upset and the coach was relieved of his coaching duties.  

Mike Waters

George,

I agree with you and John.  I took up distance running in grad school at the age of 24 and did not run a marathon until 28.  I don't think kids want to run a marathon, and it is usually the parents, who are pushing them.  If the kid really likes running, I think the parent should curb his/her exuberance  and limit his running to maybe 20 miles per week and certainly not a marathon.  It seems as if some of the best runners come out of age group swimmers or soccer players.  I remember growing up with no parent involvement in my athletic endeavors, mainly baseball and basketball and only on a club basis.  I still think this is a good model.  Of course, the kids are better at everything sport today, but I thoroughly enjoyed my athletic upbringing and later morphing into a distance runner (still not very good compared to college trained runners).

Don Betowski

V 7 N. 4 Running Through Hell with Peter Sagal

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Keep Going



Host Peter Sagal on Wait, Wait....Don't Tell Me!

This is an oral presentation by Peter Sagal of National Public Radio and the "Wait, Wait Don't Tell Me" series.  If you click on the link above "Keep Going" you will be connected to a 15 minute monologue by Sagal recounting his running the Boston Marathon accompanying Will Greer, a blind runner.  The story caught my son's ear and he suggested I look up this presentation.  In the opening Sagal recounts that early in the New Year the family would sit around the table and recount the most important thing that happened to each member during the past year.  When Sagal said his most important event was setting a PR on his marathon time, his wife responded, "What could possibly be important about that?" At that point Sagal surmised that his marriage was over, and it was.
Greer (19984) and Sagal (Guide)  side by side at Boston
.
He continues in a very humorous and then poignant way to talk about his run at Boston with Greer and how  the event  was possibly a turning point in his life.  I think even the most hardened curmugeon will be moved by the story.  For the curious, Sagal's PR in the marathon is 3:09.25 set at the Philadelphia Marathon in 2011.   His Boston time in the picture was about 3:27.

George Roy Steve.

V7 N. 5 Frank Murphy R.I.P. Jim Murphy USAFA HOF

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Frank Murphy  R.I.P.

Frank Murphy the Villanova University  880 and miler of the 1960s passed away this week of Parkinson's disease at the age of 69.  

The two-time Olympian for Ireland (1968 and 1972) was on NCAA cross country winning teams in 1966, 67 and 68. In track, he was a member of 8 Penn Relays title teams and is in the Penn Relays Wall of Fame. At NCAAs, he anchored Villanova to DMR titles in 1968 and 1969. Individually, he won the NCAA 880 indoor title in 1969 - the same year he won the IC4a 1k crown. 
Frank Murphy seen here in third place on the cinders in Ireland

Murphy also represented Ireland at the 1968 and 1972 Olympics and was a medalist at the European Championships.

A nice review of Murphy's life written well before he died is at the following link written by Ian o'Riordan of the Irish Times  from Nov. 29, 2014

Distance Runners Contemplate the Price of Pushing Pain Barriers




Jim Murphy into USAFA Hall of Fame

The second Murphy making news this week is Jim Murphy former US Air Force Academy great who was recently put into the USAFA Hall of Fame.


Jim Murphy is a 1965 Academy graduate and was the school’s first NCAA champion, winning the 5,000-meter run at the 1964 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships. He also finished third in the 1964 NCAA cross country championships. Murphy was the track and field and cross country program’s first All-American in each sport. He remains ranked among the program’s top-10 in the outdoor 5,000-meter run, ranking eighth with a 14:06.60. Murphy was named the USAFA Most Valuable Athlete in 1965 and was a recipient of an NCAA post-graduate scholarship.  

Of note:  Murphy's 1964 NCAA title was shared with Bill Straub of Army. The two finished in a dead heat at Eugene.   Film of that race as well as the whole meet is available at the U. of Oregon archives.  
Use this link to the 1964 NCAA meet.  The 5000 meters race can be found at aprroximately 4:32 into the clip.
1964 NCAA Meet U. of Oregon


V 7 N. 6 Ray Wyatt R.I.P. Kansas Jayhawk

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                                                               Ray Wyatt  R.I.P.


Ray Wyatt leading the pack at the Big 8 Indoor 195?
Ray Wyatt passed away on October 16, 2016.   Ray was a stalwart (long sprints) on the U. of Kansas track team in the 1950s.  He was teammate and friend of Wes Santee and spent a lot of time with Wes during Wes' final days.  Ray also was a great friend of KU track alumni and hosted several gatherings of that illustrious group.  His website can be seen at  Ray Wyatt.   This website has a lot of interesting things about Kansas track in the 50s and also some things about Ray's hobbies with big Corvettes and collecting relics at archeological sites in the Lawrence area.  He contributed information about KU to this blog and also to Racing Past written by my friend John Cobley.  John did a nice piece about Wes Santee with Ray's assistance.    I only learned of Ray's passing when his emails failed to be delivered when we sent notices of new posts on Once Upon a Time in the Vest.   Ray and I never talked directly except by email, but he was generous with his time and his answers about track at Lawrence.  
George Brose


Ray Wyatt left us October 6, 2016. Born May 11, 1936 in Topeka, KS, to Ralph and Maryetta Wyatt, he distinguished himself by record-breaking high school track performances that led to scholarships at The University of Kansas. Upon graduation, he served in the Army and National Guard 1959-1969. He was known in Wichita for his influential management at Boeing, his love of speed and Corvettes, and long-lasting friendships. Memorial contributions in his honor are welcomed for the "Ralph E. and Ray C. Wyatt Fund For Athletics" at The University of Kansas, 1651 Naismith Drive, Lawrence, KS 66045, to provide student scholarships for participants in non-revenue producing sports. He was a proud Jayhawk.
Published in The Wichita Eagle on Oct. 14, 2016

V 7 N. 7 The First Sub 4 at Hayward Field

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Down the Homestretch
Dyrol Burleson and Ernie Cunliffe in Hayward Field's First Sub 4 Minute Mile
Burleson appears to be wearing some of Bill Bowerman's early experimental shoes.


U Oregon Stanford dual meet 1960   (clik here to view film)


A few weeks ago I was looking through the online archives of the U of Oregon's Knight library archives for old  track and field footage.  One of their uploaded to Youtube clips was of Oregon's early sub 4 minute milers including  Jim Grelle, Jim Bailey, Dyrol Burleson, Wade Bell, Keith Foreman, Arnie Kvalheim and others.  Brief clips of each of those men running is found on that particular piece.  In it I was intrigued to find Burleson running the first sub 4 minute mile at Hayward Field.  I had also known a bit about this race, because the man who did all the work to get Burleson to the line under four minutes is one of our regular readers, Ernie Cunliffe, who ran for Stanford and represented the US in the 800 meters at Rome in 1960.  I had known Ernie's sister in Ohio for many years before knowing she was related to Ernie.  When that connection finally came up, I was astounded that I was talking to someone whose brother was a boyhood idol of mine when I was in high school.   Ernie and I met a few years later on a visit Ernie made to Ohio, and we talked for a long time about track and field.  He remembered every split of every race he ran.  And he could fill in details of meets and happenings from that era that few ever knew about.  This was before Once Upon a Time in the Vest was even a dream, but it may well have been a seed that was planted in my brain.

 Ernie has mentioned that Oregon race several times, because it was his best mile (4:00.4), and on today's synthetic tracks no one can dispute that his time would have been under 4:00.  The original clip of the group of Oregon runners was black and white and showed only the backstretch of lap one and the last 50 yards of the race.    I wrote to the library last week asking them if there might be more of the race in their archives.  Elizabeth Peterson was assigned the task to dig it out and she graciously did so and uploaded the film onto Youtube and granted us permission to use it on our blog.  The upside is the film is now available in color.  The downside is that we don't see more of the race.  However there is a bit of footage of Burleson and Ernie after the race.  Ernie looks extremely disappointed, I'm sure because,  one,  he was passed at the end , but also that he was so close to breaking 4 minutes.    The film is almost five minutes long.  It shows how the old dual meets looked.  There were often 'walk ons' competing.  The pole vault on metal poles is looking about 12 or 13 feet by some of the vaulters.  There's a low hurdles race.  Note there are no throwing cages and officals, spectators, and contestants are standing dangerously close to the discus throwers.

     Ms. Peterson also attached a clipping from the Eugene Register Guard describing the race, and in the story, Burleson was very gracious toward Ernie  for carrying the pace in that race.  This is the link to that story.   Classic Mile by Bob Mullin    If you are clever, you will be able to scroll that front page over to page 7 and get a full run down of the race and the meet which was won by Oregon 87-44.   Both Burleson and Cunliffe were scheduled to run again in the 880, which was a post race concern to both of them, especially after both had run two of the fastest miles in US history.  That was dual meet strategy in those days.  Fortunately both were relieved of that necessity by Bowerman and Jordan.  However Ernie ran a leg in the mile relay.  You can see his exchange on the film clip.  Their splits in the mile were   62, 60, 59, and Burleson 57.6, Cunliffe 59.4 on the last lap.  Third place was Oregon's Norm Lloyd in 4:28.  The box score of all events is also there and a lot more pictures of Burleson and Cunliffe.  Also note that three other track meets are reported in the paper.  This was not uncommon in the 1960s.

Knight Library track archives link   This link will get you into the ballpark on track archives at the library.   You won't find everything you want here, but there is still a nice selection of film from the 60s and 70s and 80s of some of the big meets that have been held at Hayward Field.

Some Comments:

"Well George you certainly did a lot of work to get the extra video of the race, in color no less.   I appreciate it and enjoyed viewing some other bits of the Oregon vs Stanford dual meet.   Oregon seemed to win most of the events although Norman Lloyd won the 880. "  Ernie Cunliffe

"What a treat !  Besides the mile, a lot of field event coverage.......     1960....The year I graduated from HS."   Steve Price,  Piqua, Ohio


"Dear George and Roy.:

I love this story, ....because , like you, George, I got to know Ernie Cunlife on a trip too.

Yours in Ohio and mine in New Zealand, where we roomed together throughout our 2 1/2 week tour.
We even got to go out salmon and trout fishing there and caught a couple of nice fish. Ernie's best race
was probably in the Wanganui world record mile which he and Bruce Tulloch helped set up for Peter.

Mine was a 1:48.5 at Hamilton, in coming second to Snell to his 1:47.6, or so.
My best only only winning effort during the N.Z. trip was also at Wanganui, where I was able to best
the former, NZ record holder,  Gary Philpott and Jim Dupree. in a time of 1:49.2.
I considered these to be good times since my last workout in Oxford Ohio before getting on the plane to
NZ consisted of 24 x 220 in the snow behind Withrow Court where I beat down a path to run the intervals in.

If it hadn't been for Once upon a Time in the vest., I might not have met up with Ernie again.
So,, thank you."


John Bork    CA

George,
  "I love it.   all my track friends down here that know the legend of Hayward field really got a kick out of the 64’ NCAA’s from Hayward field.  It looked like a high school track ( with the grass) that needed a lot of work.  LOL! " Mike Waters Corvallis , OR

 Good articles from the Eugene Register.  When IU went there for a dual meet in 1979, there were also about 5,500 in the stands, all very knowledgeable T&F people.  It was a great meet going down to the mile relay which Oregon won by a few steps.  At that time they also had articles about the meet in advance and also after the meet which was really nice.  Those other 1960 articles were very good and helpful.  What a big sports section!  This was in 1960 and I noticed the Pirates beat the Braves, beginning their drive toward the Bill Mazeroski World Series.  The Reds were one year away, 1961 NL pennant.
   It is fun to read old papers to get history first hand.  Looking back on current events puts things in a better perspective.     Bill Schnier     Cincinnati, OH

George,
Thanks for the Oregon-Stanford link. Visited Oregon Knight Library during "08 Trials. Great archives.
14-6 pv was excellent with metal pole. Still running 220 low hurdles. 14.2 HH by Edstrom, Ore great mark, as well as 187' discus school record, and 221' jav.
Register Guard had front page article on U. of Oregon fighting discrimination (racial and religious - how timely !). Of course noticed there were no black athletes competing. Tangentally, I attended Florida HS Track and Field Hall of Fame banquet in Daytona Beach Jan. 6 (Gainesville friend Rick Quintana was being recognized for his contributions- announcing, video making, list making, coaching, writing). Host of the weekend was Ron Coleman, U. of Florida track athlete, and first black scholarship athlete at the school and SEC.
Bruce Kritzler     Sea Island, GA?







V. 7 N. 8 An Oral History of American Long Distance Running

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For several years I've been privileged to read Gary Corbitt's website and blog on historical events in American long distance running with particular emphasis on African American runners.  As most of you are aware, Gary's father  Ted Corbitt is lovingly referred to as the father of American Long Distance Running by his peers.  For most of his life Ted was a competitor attending and running for the University of Cincinnati  and represented the US at the 1952 Olympics.  After that he spent the rest of his life working in New York City as a physiotherapist and ran to work each day nearly 20 miles round trip.  His service to running involved developing accurate measuring of road courses, organizing, and many other activities too numerous to mention but all important in the promotion of the sport.  Not only these things but even more important, Ted was a person willing to listen and respond to folks seeking advice on training, on treating their injuries, and creating a correspondence over the years that has provided Gary a life's task of sifting through all that data and putting it together for posterity.

In his youth, Gary often witnessed his father competing in races and grew to have an intimate knowledge of the sport and the runners as few have had.  In the past year Gary has organized several conference calls between some of those folks who ran the big races in the 1950s and 60s and a conference call between some of the early female competitors in the sport.   He now has those  calls available to listen to on his website.  If you are a real student of the history of running in mid 20th century America, it will be worth your effort to visit his site, pull up a comfortable chair, a warm drink or a cold beer and listen to some of these conversations.   They are listed by subject   The Yonkers Marathon 1964 and Mt. Holyoke 1967 are the two races discussed by the men, and the women discuss their struggles to gain a place on the distance running stage.   He also has an index to show who is talking in each time period of the recording so that you can advance to a particular speaker if you so choose.

Here is Gary's brief description of the site and the link to listen to those calls.
George

Running History Conference Calls

I coordinated these three running history conference calls in 2016. The timing for each of the panelist is listed so you can listen in segments. The calls last around 90 minutes. These were the two most historic marathons in U.S. running history that I witnessed. I hope you take a listen and hear from some of the participants.
The Women Ultramarathon call is part of series and was dedicated to Ruth Anderson, and featured the late Eileen Waters Connolly.

*1964 Yonkers Marathon
*1967 Holyoke Marathon
*Women Running Pioneers of Ultramarathons – Part 2

Best Wishes!
Gary Corbitt
Curator: Ted Corbitt Archives

V 7 N.9 Clifford F. Johnson, U of Oregon 1949

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In recognizing Black History Month we choose to celebrate a U. of Oregon Track and Field athlete whom you more than likely have never heard of in track history.    Clifford Johnson is one of those men.  Below is his story as reported in the special collections of the Knight Library on the campus of the University of Oregon.  Clifford Johnson is not one of those men who should be remembered for their athletic exploits so much as their academic achievement and groundbreaking work in the enlightnment of our society.   Our hats off to the memory of Mr. Johnson and to Herman L. Brame whose research opened up this story to the public.  Mr. Brame was also a track athlete on the Eugene campus in the late 1960s.     George, Roy, Steve



CLIFFORD F. JOHNSON: GROUNDBREAKING MASTER’S THESIS ON RACIAL BIAS IN NEWSPAPER REPORTING





clifford f johnson cropped oregana 1947 pg 155
Clifford F. Johnson 1946 UO Track Oregana 1947

Clifford F. Johnson is our third feature in our series honoring Black History Month that highlights the work of historian Herman L. Brame. Johnson was raised in Illinois and decided to join the US army after graduating from high school. While in the army, Johnson served at Fort Lewis, Washington during World War II. During his time there, he faced racial segregation. Recreational facilities and the chapel were segregated and he, along with a large number of other African Americans, felt restricted while at Fort Lewis. However, in 1945, a basketball team comprised of Johnson and other African Americans beat the visiting Harlem Globetrotters in two out of their three games. In 1946, Johnson was honorably discharged as a chief warrant officer and became an undergraduate student at the University of Oregon in the same year. There he would have a successful academic career that would land him national attention.
After World War II, Johnson was one of a small but growing population of African American students in higher education institutions in Oregon. Johnson was a dedicated athlete and student at the University of Oregon. He was a broad jumper for the 1946 UO track team and was a journalism student when the University of Oregon School of Journalism was gaining national attention as one of the most prestigious journalism schools in the United States. Johnson was also a member of the Sigma Delta Chi journalism fraternity and eventually graduated with a bachelor of arts in journalism with honors in 1948.


Clifford F. Johnson 1946 UO Track Team Oregana 1947
Clifford F. Johnson
1946 UO Track Team (Johnson seated front row, far left. Seated next to Coach Bill Hayward)
Oregana 1947

Johnson continued his academic career as a graduate student in the School of Journalism in 1949. As a confident journalism student, he wanted to test his writing ability and so competed in a national journalism contest that was sponsored by the American Newspaper Publisher’s Association. Johnson placed second in the competition and attracted national attention. He was the first “negro” winner the competition had seen in its six years of existence. It was also likely that he was the first winner from Oregon.
In addition to his success in the journalism competition, Johnson also earned further praise for his graduation in the same year. 1949 was a year of an all-time high in African American graduates from Oregon colleges, and the NAACP and freelance writer Kathryn Bogle from The Oregonian paid particular attention to Johnson and a few other African American graduates in a featured newspaper article. Johnson’s praised thesis titled, “An Analysis of Negro News and Non-News Matter Appearing in Four Oregon Daily Newspapers during the years 1931, 1936, 1941, 1945, and 1948” was one of the first systematic studies on media bias. It has been and continues to be cited by various publications including: “Blacks in the State of Oregon 1788-1971,” by Lenwood G. Davis, 1971, “Protest at the Post, Coverage of Blacks in the Washington Post Magazine,” by Thom Lieb, 1988, and “History of Portland and Oregon,” City of Portland Planning Bureau, rev. 2015.
Although limited information is known about Clifford Johnson’s professional career after graduation, we do know that he continued seeking opportunities to exercise his talented writing abilities. Johnson was also a member of Sigma Delta Pi, a national Spanish honorary fraternity, and showed interest working in South American journalism in Argentina and Brazil. Furthermore, in 1949, he was also the managing editor for the “Bulletin of the U.S. Army Medical Department, Combat Psychiatry,” which was a monthly publication of the Office of Medical History. Through determination and his passion for journalism, Clifford F. Johnson became a national leader in the study of racial bias in media reporting in the United States.

Information for this article was collected from the following source:

V 7 N. 10 Jon Hendershott's Favorite Sprints and Hurdles

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        Enjoy this memory lane article by Jon Hendershott.  We've inserted pictures and video clips where appropriate. Two videos that do not seem to be available are Rod Milburn's win in Munich and Renaldo Nehemiah's 13.16. ed.  We're honored to be putting these stories by Jon online for the first time.  George, Roy, Steve

If you missed earlier articles by or about Jon, see:

Jon Hendershott, short bio    by Paul O'Shea

Ashton Eaton and Harry Marra, An Appreciation  by Jon Hendershott



JON’S MOST MEMORABLE:


Men’s Sprints & Hurdles.


by Jon Hendershott

In 48 years of writing at Track & Field News, and some 60 total seasons of following our great sport, I have been privileged to witness many (many) superb performances.

After a year of retirement—and much reminiscing, sometimes on purpose, sometimes not—I decided to chronicle those performances that evoke my strongest memories.

I fully admit that the idea for me to generate these recollections came after reading the Editor’s column in T&FN authored by colleague Garry Hill.  I trust he won’t mind if I filch the concept—after all, we all have our own unique memories of the great moments we have been privileged to witness.

But while I tried to bravely (quote-unquote) settle on just one “most” performance in each event, I also admit that I wimped out in certain (alright, many) cases and chose more than one.  Also, there are a few instances where thinking and remembering certain events triggered memories not necessarily of a “super” sort.

So, Sherman, fire up the Way-Back Machine. I begin with the men’s sprints & hurdles (the latter being my old events in my non-stellar competitive days).


100 METERS:

Right out of the blocks, so to speak, I can’t settle on just one most-memorable century performance. That’s because two memories are ultra-vivid for me.

The first comes from the initial USA national meet I witnessed, at the 1968 AAU Championships in Sacramento.  My parents had driven to northern California from Seattle so that my dad Bob, then an assistant track coach at Washington, and I could attend the AAU.  My folks had driven to Berkeley earlier that June for the NCAA Championships and returned just two weeks later for the AAU.

What a night of 100-meter sprinting it turned out to be at Hughes Stadium. The crushed brick and clay surface was groomed and ultra-fast—and the record rolls took a beating. Future Olympic century champion Jim Hines got things off to a roaring start when he won heat 1 in 9.8 (wind +2.8mps), a full 0.2 off the accepted World Record of 10.0 (hand timing in those days).
Jim Hines

Three heats later, both American Charlie Greene and France’s Roger Bambuck tied the 10-flat record. Then in the semi-finals (all races held on the same night, June 20), Hines and Ronnie Ray Smith sped 9.9 in the first race (wind +0.8mps) to lower the official record. Greene then matched the clocking to take the final (wind +0.9mps).

In all, the previous 10.0 WR was equaled or bettered a total of 10 times in that one evening of unparalleled sprinting. The occasion was later dubbed “The Night of Speed”—rightfully so.

Jim Hines night of speed

And 35 years later at the 2004 Olympic Trials in Sacramento, organizer Steve Simmons brought together many of the stars of that epic final for a Night of Speed Reunion. Hines, Greene, Bambuck, Lennox Miller, Mel Pender and Larry Questad all shared their memories of that spectacular night.
It was a true privilege to attend that reunion dinner and hear Hines proclaim, “That race was the greatest race ever and it made us the greatest runners.”

And the ever-voluble Greene added, “We raced because it was important to ourselves. We had style. We were mentally tough. We were not afraid of the challenge. We were not afraid. If you are afraid to lose you will never be a good sprinter.

“We had T-A-L-E-N-T. If you don’t have talent you can’t be a sprinter. If you are not fast, just go and talk to your parents.”

Charlie Greene
Roger Bambuck
Ronnie Ray Smith



Lennox Miller

Mel Pender
Larry Questad
Yes, Sacramento ’68 was an exceptional night to remember. Yet my most memorable race of pure straightaway power and speed came on the night of August 16, 2009, in Berlin’s World Championships final. Jamaican star Usain Bolt had ascended to superstardom the year before at the Beijing Olympics by taking both sprint victories, plus the 4 x 100 (though the relay title has since been stripped due to a positive doping test for a teammate).

Usain Bolt
On Berlin’s blue track—in the same stadium where immortal Jesse Owens won four Games golds in 1936—Bolt underscored his phenomenal talent by dashing 9.58 to slash his own global mark by no less than 0.11, the largest record lowering ever in the auto-timed era. The wind read +0.9mps as Bolt led virtually the entire race. IAAF splits show he passed 50-meters in 5.48 and 60m in 6.31—both faster than the accepted indoor WR marks of 5.56 and 6.39.
Usain Bolt 9.58

“I didn’t think I could run a tenth [of a second] faster than my World Record,” Bolt claimed afterwards. “But for me, anything is possible.”

No one who saw Bolt decimate the Berlin field would argue that he was at the height of his powers—with an even-more stunning sprint yet to come.


200 METERS:

For the half-lap dash, I will again cop to youthful memory.  Like many other of life’s firsts—first love, first kiss, to name two—for a track fan like me (lifelong, in other words), meeting one’s first Olympic champion is always ultra-special.

For me, that moment came in late June of 1961 in Everett, Washington. As a 15-year-old hyper-fan, my dad and a friend had ventured north of Seattle to the Pacific Northwest AAU title meet, precisely because the 220 was going to feature none other than 1960 Olympic 400 champion Otis Davis.
Otis Davis
Davis was an early hero of mine, being a graduate of the University of Oregon (my dad’s alma mater;  he pole vaulted for coach Bill Hayward in the late 1930s) and also because he won a pulsating Rome final the previous year in a World Record 44.9—at age 28, ancient for world-level competing in those days.

In the waning twilight in Everett, Davis easily won the district AAU 220. I believe his time was in the mid-21s but I am relying for that stat on my memory (also waning).

After the race, my friend Fletcher and I ventured onto the infield and approached Davis, who was sitting on the grass and pulling on his warmup flats.  We congratulated him, he said thanks and we were thrilled to speak with the Olympic champion, however briefly.

Flash forward 55 (really) years to the summer of 2016.  I was a guest at a banquet of many Olympians attending the Olympic Trials in Eugene. Included among the plethora of athletes was, yes, Otis Davis. Even at age 84, Davis still was trim and erect.  He looked like he could almost challenge some of the younger sprint stars in attendance.

After many of the younger Olympians had paid their respects to Davis, I approached him as he stood on a patio overlooking beautiful vineyards in the hills west of Eugene.  I introduced myself and briefly told him of the 1961 race in Everett and having shook his hand those many years ago.
Otis Davis
He smiled and replied simply, “That’s nice—but did I win the race?” I said he did indeed win and he said, “Ah, good.” Ever the competitor.


But my most memorable 200 came from—who else?—Mr. Bolt.  Again in Berlin at the ’09 Worlds, this time on the evening of August 20, just two days after his sensational 100 WR.

After Usain’s record century effort, and his comfort in winning his 200 heat and semi, the denizens in Berlin’s press tribune speculated just how fast he might run in the half-lap final. I suggested we stage a pool to pick UB’s winning time. Pay 1 Euro to get in & pick a time. Mr. Smarty (that would be moi) reasoned that he would just try to win.  Bolt had set the 19.30 WR to win at the Beijing Olympics.  I just thought there was no need for him to overexert himself to complete the Worlds sprint sweep. I predicted 19.35.

I believe T&FN’s Sieg Lindstrom guessed at a just-under-the-record 19.28 (or so). Correspondent Ben Hall picked right around 19.30, as I recall. Staffer Jeff Hollobaugh got some ribbing when he picked something in the 19.20 range. We guffawed and Jeff just smiled.

Then Bolt proceeded to eviscerate the field, winning by a stunning 0.62 as the wind read a negative 0.3mps.  The trackside quick-time clock stopped at a mind-numbing 19.20—and everyone proceeded to go certifiably  crazy.
Finally the official time flashed up on the trackside clock and the stadium scoreboard: 19.19! Bolt had not only put the global record under 19.30—he had skipped the 19.20s altogether!
Usain Bolt 200 M 19.19

I usually try to avoid using exclamation points in my writing.  But this time, I’m sorry, but it is impossible to not use them. Bolt’s performance simply defied description—and belief.  As amazing as Michael Johnson’s 19.32 had been to cap his 200-400 double at the ’96 Atlanta Olympics, and even Bolt’s 19.30 in Beijing, his 19.19 simply boggled the mind.  I am just so thankful I got to see it in person—and I still get chills remembering it more than seven years later.

It was, simply put, the single most memorable performance I have ever witnessed.


400 METERS:
Michael Johnson

At the time of the ’99 World Champs in Seville, Spain, Butch Reynolds owned the one-lap WR with his 43.29 at the 1988 Zürich Weltklasse meet. Reynolds 43.29
The closest any challenger had come to that record was the 43.39 by Michael Johnson to win the ’95 global title in Gotebörg, Sweden. Still, there was a feeling among world fans that Michael was just marking time until he really put together a 400 for the ages and took down the record. Michael Johnson 43.39

That time came on the hot, humid evening of August 26 in central Spain. MJ was aiming for his fourth consecutive Worlds 400 title and there never was any doubt that he would get it.

And when he split 21.22 and 31.66 at the 200 and 300 points, it was clear where his aim really was focused. His distinctive, low-slung arm carry didn’t waver down the final straight and he broke the timing beam at 43.18 while winning the race by some 10-meters. Michael Johnson 43.18 WR

It was a stunning performance as Johnson backed up the guess by his long-time coach Clyde Hart of a time in the 43.19-43.20 range. MJ himself admitted to a sense of relief that he had finally broken the record that so many followers had expected for his entire career.

“When you have been chasing something for so long, it’s a relief to finally get it,” Johnson said. “It’s an indescribable feeling.”

And Johnson’s mark survived for 17 years, until South African Wayde van Niekerk cut the record down to 43.03—from lane 8, no less— at the Rio Olympics.
Next stop: the 42s.


110 HURDLES:

Okay, I should have titled all these ramblings, “My top TWO memories per event,” since I have had trouble choosing just one. But I have two “strongest” memories from my old event, the high hurdles.

The first was a World Record that many people hardly realized was a record. Well, not quite true: the hand time for the race equaled the WR—but the automatic time set a new mark all by itself.

The race was the 1972 Olympic final in Munich, staged on September 7, when all Games competition resumed following the memorial service the day before for the 11 Israeli athletes killed by Arab terrorists on September 5.
Rod Milburn
American Rod Milburn was the ’71 T&FN Athlete of the Year and the world’s best high hurdler, by far. And the Louisianan—he of the mutton-chop whiskers and white knee-length socks—surged over the 10 sticks in Olympiastadion in a hand-timed 13.2 to match the WR.

But those also were the days of dual-timed records, hand plus auto, and Milburn clocked 13.24 to set an outright best. It was an effort of unquestioned supremacy as Milburn turned back France’s Guy Drut (who would win four years later in Montréal) by 0.10. (Regrettably no video is available of this race. ed. )


My second memorable 110H race was another record that was unlooked-for. The 1979 Bruce Jenner Classic Grand Prix meet in San José, California, was staged on April 14, early in even the U.S. spring campaign. Many athletes had barely begun serious outdoor-season training, let alone the speedwork and technical sharpening required.
So it was a shock—pleasantly so—when barely-20-year-old Maryland sophomore Renaldo Nehemiah ran faster than the world had ever seen. The Maryland sophomore sped 13.16 to trim 0.05 off the WR set nearly two years earlier by Cuba’s Alejandro Casañas.
Renaldo Nehemiah
Besides the time by the hurdler then called “Skeets”—and I once heard his mom call him “Skee,” which sounded even quicker, and yet fitting for such a fleet and supremely-talented athlete—the race is especially memorable for me since it came on the blue San José City College track. It was an oval on which I had run during my competitive days (it was black rubberized asphalt back then), so I had compiled a lot of personal memories there (including my last formal competition, a PR decathlon of 5159 points back in 1973).

Then, too, I had interviewed Nehemiah for T&FN going back to his high school junior season at New Jersey’s Scotch Plains-Fanwood High. I had spoken with Renaldo, as well as his coach Jean Poquette, on numerous occasions after his many record-setting prep hurdling exploits.

Both athlete and coach came to feel like friends, so it was extra thrilling to see Nehemiah’s first World Record. But the 13.16 didn’t last long as, some three weeks later, Nehemiah sped 13.00 in Los Angeles. Then two years after that, he broke the event’s big 13-second barrier with his historic 12.93 in Zürich. That mark lasted for eight years and, in all, Nehemiah owned the global record for better than a decade.


400 HURDLES:
This is another event that’s tough for me to pick just one “best” performance.  I also ran the one-lap hurdles and—yes—usually as an also-ran. I actually could pick three best races.
John Akii-Bua
The first would be the 47.82 World Record authored by Uganda’s John Akii-Bua to win the ’72 Olympic title. It always helped my feeling of the “mostest” when I was reporting on an event, and so it was on that late-summer evening in Germany. The fact that Akii-Bua slashed the record by 0.03—from lane 1—only added to the amazement. John Akii Bua WR (2nd half in English)


Then there was the man who succeeded Akii-Bua as Olympic champion. Edwin Moses had begun serious concentration on the 400H only in the spring of ’76. Yet the brilliant physics student from Atlanta’s Morehouse College had improved hugely all season and won the Olympic Trials in an American Record of 48.30. Again, I had been lucky enough to cover Moses’s emergence basically from its beginning, so I had gotten to know him well.
Edwin Moses

Edwin Moses
Fairview HS, Dayton, OH

Then, King Edwin buried the Montréal field with a 47.64 record, and U.S. teammate Mike Shine won an unexpected silver medal (again from the inside lane 1) for a glorious USA 1-2.

But the Moses mark that stands out most for me came at the 1977 USA (then the AAU) Championships at UCLA. He powered around the Drake Stadium oval in 47.45 to slash his own WR while leaving ’76 national champ Tom Andrews 2nd in a far-back 49.03. Edwin Moses 47.45, 1977 (commentary in Italian ed.)

And, memorably, I got to spend a post-race hour with Edwin and friends in his hotel room, celebrating his achievement. Yet again, “being there” only added so much depth to the experience.

Edwin eventually won the ’84 Games title, part of a 122-race winning streak that stretched over a full decade. He set two more records during that stretch, getting the record tantalizingly close to sub-47 with his 47.02 fastest.
But my most memorable intermediates race was produced by the man who broke Moses’s 47.02 WR.


In the ’92 Olympic final in Barcelona, long-legged Kevin Young ended the 19-year reign of Moses’s revered 47.02 WR via a performance that still defies belief in me nearly 25 years after he produced it.
Kevin Young

On August 6, 1992, in Barcelona’s hill-top Montjuic Stadium, UCLA grad and ’88 Games 4th-placer Young unfurled the ground-gobbling strides inherent in his 6’4¼” frame, holding back nothing. He even covered the 35-meters between two backstretch hurdles with 12—yes, twelve—strides, one less than the more-common 13 used by some, but not all, of the world’s best.

Young, 25 at the time, carried a 5-meter margin into the homestretch and stretched it to 7 by the line—despite creaming the final obstacle with his left lead leg. But nothing could stop Young and the clock showed why: a stunning WR of 46.78, history’s first—and so far, only—sub-47 time.

It literally was an historic achievement, since Young remains the fastest one-lap hurdler ever, 0.24 ahead of Moses’s still-brilliant 47.02. The closest any hurdler has ever come to either of those clockings was the 47.03 run by Bryan Bronson to win the ’98 U.S. title. Kevin Young WR 46.78.

Yet again, being able to cover the event only added to my pleasure and amazement to first witness and then report on a performance that has not been approached, let alone threatened, for nearly a quarter-century.

(Next: the distances and the two Olympic relays.)

Comments:

Outstanding.  This is like having Joe DiMaggio coming to play on your baseball team.

V 7 N. 11 Remember What's His Name?

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REMEMBER ‘WHAT’S-HIS-NAME?’  WELL, YOU SHOULD


In 1979 sports writer W. C. Heinz wrote the excellent memoir, Once They Heard The Cheers, following up on the lives of sports heroes who had, in the main, outlived their fame.
Each sport has its own list.  The occasional superstar will still be mentioned but, for each one,  scores and more of truly gifted athletes have faded into obscurity saved by the occasional trivia question in a sports journal or being resurrected every twenty-five or fifty years on an anniversary date.
Is it sad?  Is it better to be a “Has Been” rather than a “Never Was”?  Is this the comparison we want  to make?
That would be tragic because “Has Been” is a cruel term reducing an athlete’s peak performing years to a meaningless period of false fame instead of honoring the true achievements they actually were.
Let us focus for a moment on just track, and on just men, although the progression for women is much the same.
A review of runners who have held the world record for the mile reveals names, some more recognizable than others, who for greater or lesser periods stood on the peak of athletics’ premier event.  Just a few:
Hagg leading Andersson

Gunder Hagg……………..Runner and non-runner alike remember the name of Roger Bannister who first went sub-four in the mile.  But when was the last time you heard the name of the great Swedish world record holder who, with his countryman and competitor, Arne Andersson, drove the mile time down, second by second, until only the last twitch of the stopwatch remained before Bannister achieved immortality.
John Landy……………..Eclipsed by the turn of a head in his one race against Bannister, the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games,  Landy ran the second ever sub-four mile in 3: 58.0 in 1954 setting the world record that stood for the next four years.
Derek Ibbotson
Derek Ibbotson…………….This long forgotten runner returned the record to England briefly in 1957 when he ran 3:57.2.
Michel Jazy
Michel Jazy……………….A holder of nine world records including his 1965 time of 3:53.6 in the mile, he might be remembered in the United States solely because Jim Ryun was the next record holder.
John Walker
John Walker……………..Perhaps the most unfortunate, unremembered, hero of all, Walker was the first man to run sub 3:50 in the mile with his 3:49.4 record in 1975, twenty-one years after Bannister’s historic run.

Filbert Bayi

Steve Cram and Steve Ovett

Sebastian Coe
Nouridienne Morceli

There are others, Bayi, Ovett, Cram, Coe, Morceli, etc.  They are alive today and track enthusiasts everywhere should honor them.  Second by second they set standards for others to chase.  They pushed the boundaries of physical perfection in running but they all, everyone, whether they thought about it or realized it, demonstrated that men and women can do magnificent things if they are willing to strive, fall back, and strive again.  
To reference only an athlete’s competitive career leaves blank the years following retirement.  Most, if not all, of the world record holding milers went on to very productive and, in many cases, distinguished lives in government, athletics, business and other endeavors showing that the drive to excel in running was also present in civilian life.
Don Bowden
Fame is a tenuous thing.  We honor an athlete for his or her achievements but if one goal is met and not followed by another, the fan moves on although the achievement remains.  A case in point: when was the last time you heard any coach or runner make a reference to Don Bowden.
You remember, Don Bowden don’t you?  A great runner…………. the first American to run sub-four in the mile, 3:58.7 in 1957………..Bowden had a relatively short career as a competitive athlete due to injuries but has had a long and successful life afterward.   He helped develop the Tartan Track;  he has his own business; he is active in the Bring Back the Mile movement.  The first American to run sub-four…………..and too few remember his name.
To be sure, some runners’ competitive careers are longer than others.  Also, Americans (except for die-hard track nuts) tend to remember only the American champions.  We are a fickle lot and it is not to our credit that after their days of glory, great runners, world record holding runners, become an afterthought.
These men and women were standard bearers.  May their memories live always fresh in our minds.
Tom Coyne
February 14, 2017

Comment:
 This piece by Tom Coyne brought back a memory about Don Bowden --- I was at the meet in 1957 at the College of Pacific when Don ran the 3.58.7. I was at the end of the pole vault runway getting ready to vault, the announcer was telling all about the record chance, and as Don came off the last turn into the straightaway, I dropped my pole and ran along with him on the infield shouting encouragement ---don't know if he remembers this but I sure do.

  Bill Flint


For those who don't know Bill.  He is a salty old steel  pole  man who vaulted for Stanford in those days. ed.

V 7 N. 12 Derek Ibbotson R.I.P.

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Derek Ibbotson with Kichoge Keino

If you read our previous posting, you'll have seen a mention of Derek Ibbotson, one of Great Britain's early sub four minute milers and a former World Record holder in that event at 3:57.2.  Notably he was also the first person to run a mile in exactly 4 minutes even.  Below is a link to the obituary from the The Mirror by Ben Rossington  recalling Mr. Ibbotson's career.

Derek Ibbotson

V 7 N. 13 Charlie Fonville U. of Michigan WR Shot Put

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Do you remember who held the Shot Put world record before Jim Fuchs?   Hell, do you remember Jim Fuchs?  My guess is only Pete Brown in Plano, TX ever saw Jim Fuchs throw and is still alive to tell it.  But this story is about another man who preceded Mr. Fuchs.  Charlie Fonville was a walk on at Michigan who graduated from Ann Arbor as a lawyer and  a world record holder.   Thanks to Sheppard Miers, of Tulsa, one of my U. of Oklahoma teammates for bringing this story to our attention.  Sheppard was an excellent shot putter in his day and threw for many  years in Masters competition.  In fact he may still be throwing.  Thanks too to Wikipedia for doing the legwork on this article.  George

Charlie Fonville

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charlie Fonville
CharlieFonville.jpg
Charlie Fonville
Personal information
Full nameCharles Edward Fonville
NationalityAmerican
BornApril 27, 1927
Birmingham, Alabama
DiedJuly 13, 1994 (aged 67)
Detroit, Michigan
OccupationAthlete, Attorney
Charles Edward "Charlie" Fonville (April 27, 1927 – July 13, 1994) was an American track and field athlete who set a world record in the shot put. In 1945, he had been named the Michigan High School Track & Field Athlete of the Year. He won the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) shot put championship in 1947 and 1948. Competing for the University of Michigan at the Kansas Relays in April 1948, Fonville broke a 14-year-old world record, throwing the shot a foot further than the record.
Fonville was considered the favorite for the 1948 Olympic gold medal but a back injury prevented him from qualifying for the Games. After undergoing back surgery in November 1948, Fonville sat out the 1949 season, but came back in 1950 to win his third Big Ten Conference shot put championship. Fonville later became a lawyer and practiced law in Detroit, Michigan for 40 years. He was inducted into the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor in 1979, as part of the second class of inductees.

 

Early years[edit]

Born in Birmingham, Alabama, he moved with his family to Decatur, Illinois at age 11. Prior to his senior year in high school, his family moved to Detroit. In 1945, following Fonville's lone track season at Detroit's Miller High School, he was named Michigan High School Track & Field Athlete of the Year for his first-place performance at the Detroit City League Meet. Fonville's winning effort in the shot put was five feet better than that of the state champion.   Later that summer, Charlie Fonville and Jessie Nimmons competed in the Detroit YMCA Track Championship as a two-man team for the St. Antoine YMCA; Fonville won the 100m200mhigh jump, and shot put. Fonville and Nimmons won the 440 yard relay, with each of them running 220 yard legs. They were later disqualified for not having four runners. They finished in second place at the meet; their disqualification in the 440 preventing them from winning.
In 1945, Fonville enrolled at the University of Michigan without a scholarship and paid his way through college with summer jobs and working in a sorority dining room.

Big Ten shot put record in 1947

Fonville won the 1947 Big Ten indoor shot put championship. Early in the subsequent 1947 outdoor track season, Fonville was throwing over 53 feet (16 m) and was poised to break William Watson's Big Ten Conference record.    At a meet in early May 1947, he broke Watson's Ferry Field record with a throw of 53 feet 10.5 inches (16.421 m).   At the Big Ten outdoor track and field meet in late May 1947 in Evanston, Illinois, Fonville broke the Big Ten shot put record in the qualifying rounds. Henry J. McCormick, of the Wisconsin State Journal, reported that "Friday's finals were highlighted by the shot put, where Charlie Fonville set a new conference record of 53 feet 11.75 inches (16.4529 m), smashing the former mark of 52 feet 11.5 inches (16.142 m) which Bill Watson of Michigan set in 1938."    Fonville then topped his own mark in the finals of the same meet with a throw of 54 feet 1 inch (16.48 m).  The following month, Fonville continued to improve with a throw of 54 feet 10.875 inches (16.73543 m) to win the NCAA meet.

World record in 1948

Fonville won the Big Ten indoor shot put championship again in 1948. In April 1948, Fonville broke the world record in the shot put at the Kansas Relays with a throw of 58 feet 0.375 inches (17.68793 m).  The previous mark of 57 feet 1 inch (17.40 m), set by Jack Torrance, had stood since 1934.  The United Press reported:
Two of the nation's greatest Negro athletes smashed a pair of world records Saturday [hurdler Harrison Dillard was the other] at the 23rd annual Kansas Relays to send U.S. Olympic hopes soaring. Charles Fonville, mighty Michigan shot putter, shattered the world mark in his event with a heave of 58 feet 0.25 inches (17.6848 m) ... Fonville's great toss came in the morning preliminaries. ... Fonville broke into the limelight indoors last fall and has been starring ever since. His toss Saturday was almost 6 feet (1.8 m) greater than that of his nearest competitor.
Ironically, Fonville had felt he was not ready for the Kansas Relays. A back injury had discouraged him, and there was even discussion that he might not make the trip.
Charlie Fonville, University of Michigan, 1950 Michiganensian, p. 247
Fonville noted at the time that, in his opinion, speed was more essential than beef and weight in the shot put. Speaking about his technique, Fonville said, "You concentrate—and then you just try to explode across the circle."   His coach, Ken Doherty, described Fonville as "one of the hardest working, most studious athletes" he had ever coached.   Doherty also added that Fonville's technique distinguished him from most shot putters: "Fonville drives completely across the ring in one continuous motion. Previously, most shotputters made their initial hop and hesitated before their final drive. ... Any track coach looking at him, would recognize all the points of good form. The only difference is that he has unusual speed and quickness—and he is the greatest competitor I've ever coached."[9] One columnist described Fonville's steady improvement from his freshman year in 1946 through his junior year in 1948 and concluded: "Small as shot-putters go, Fonville is the greatest in the long history of sensational 16-pound (7.3 kg) heavers."
Fonville's son, Carl Eric Fonville, later wrote that his father was troubled by the unequal treatment given to African-American athletes during the Kansas meet at which he set the world record. Upon arriving at the Kansas Relays, Fonville and Harrison Dillard of Baldwin-Wallace College were housed at the home of a black family.[1] His son wrote: "Without unpacking they decided to take a walk to the University of Kansas campus where they found the other visiting white athletes being given campus tours and their treatment far different than their own. They both considered leaving but decided to stay and compete. Charles called Ann Arbor, Michigan to tell them that he wanted leave, he got Don Canham who told him that he was 'Sent to Kansas City to represent the University of Michigan,' the conversation was short and clear."[1] Fonville and Dillard both set new world records at the event.
In June 1948, Fonville successfully defended his NCAA championship at the NCAA meet in Minneapolis, with a throw of 54 feet 7 inches (16.64 m).

Back injury and Olympic disappointment

Even before the Kansas Relays, one writer stated: "Michigan's Charley Fonville has only to retain his present form to be a certain Olympic games winner in the shot put."   After a record-setting performance at the Purdue Relays, the United Press noted that "American Olympic stock was several points higher today."      And after he set the world record at the Kansas Relays, the United Press reported: "You can write down the names of the midwest's terrific trio—Harrison DillardFortune Gordien, and Charley Fonville—today as sure leaders of the U.S. Olympic track and field squad this summer. Out of the helter-skelter of three relay carnivals, ... these three emerged as Uncle Sam's surest hopes for glory in London."
However, Fonville had been competing with an ailing back all year. The injury worsened as the track season wore on, and in early July 1948, Fonville was forced to pull out of the National AAU track and field championships due to a "strained back." Michigan's coach, J. Kenneth Doherty, informed the meet of the injury but "did not say how severe the injury was nor if it would keep Fonville from Olympic competition."
Fonville competed in the Olympic trials in Evanston, Illinois in mid-July 1948, but he was not able to meet his own standards as a result of the injury. He finished fourth and, despite having broken the world record just three months earlier, did not qualify for the U.S. Olympic team.   There were some who suggested that Fonville should be named to the Olympic team despite his fourth-place finish at the trials; others argued it would be unfair to the third-place finisher to take away his spot on the team. And "there was also a suspicion that Fonville's ailing back hadn't healed and that his performance at Evanston represented the best he can do at this time."
"The competition in these trials is merciless, but it's fair. ... Still there was heart-break aplenty at Evanston. There was Fonville, the rangy University of Michigan Negro who broke the Olympic shot put standard by almost a foot and still couldn't win one of the top three places. Fonville had tossed the shot repeatedly for distances that would have earned him a berth, but—to quote his own words—'I just didn't throw it far enough this time.'"
Henry McCormick, Wisconsin State Journal
Wilbur Thompson won the gold medal in the 1948 Summer Olympics with a throw of 56 feet 2 inches (17.12 m)—almost 2.0 feet (0.61 m) shorter than Fonville's world-record distance.
Despite not making the Olympic team, he remained Michigan's most valuable track and field star, and at the end of the 1948 season he was chosen by teammates as captain for the 1949 season. However, in the fall of 1948, the severity of Fonville's injury was discovered, and it appeared he would never compete again. In October 1948, after observing Fonville for a month, specialists at the University of Michigan Hospital concluded that Fonville was suffering from a fused vertebrae.   He apparently had the ailment since birth, but had aggravated the condition throwing a 16-pound (7.3 kg) iron ball in event after event.   The Associated Press (AP) reported that the injury "has ended the Michigan star's brilliant collegiate shot-putting career."
"Learning that Charley Fonville, Michigan shot putting ace, will no longer thrill the crowds with his mammoth heaves was a sickening shock. Fonville, who handled the 16-pound (7.3 kg) shot like the average citizen does a baseball, might have been the greatest in the history of the event. Tall, powerful and perfectly co-ordinated, he was becoming the idol of weight fans throughout the nation. He destroyed the lingering notion that a good shot put man had to resemble a two-legged hippo. He gave hope to the athletes who were big—but didn't seem big enough. At the Big Nine track meet at Madison, Wisconsin in the spring of this year one could discover exactly how much the soft spoken Negro had contributed. ... Every time he came on the line murmurs of anticipation ... through the stands. The moment the ball left his hands all eyes followed it in lumbering flight. ... When [the judge] reported the Western Conference record had been broken an outburst, like wind from a giant bellows, popped from the stands. Though this was striking in itself the best treat remained to the last. After Fonville came back from the discus, even he was swamped with young and eager autograph hunters. With only a request for 'no shoving' the symmetrically perfect athlete sat down and fulfilled his obligation of fame."
— Waukeha Daily Freeman Sports editor Tom Smith's tribute to Fonville
In early November, doctors operated on Fonville, placing a bone graft onto his cracked vertebrae. After the surgery, doctors described the procedure as "100 percent successful."    Fonville refused to give up, saying at the time of the operation that, though he would not compete in 1949, he had been troubled by his back for two years and hoped the operation would cure him and allow him to compete again in 1950.

Comeback in 1950

After sitting out the 1949 season to allow time for his back to heal from the surgery, Fonville returned to competition in 1950.    The 1950 U-M yearbook, Michiganensian, simultaneously lamented about and praised Fonville's comeback, noting his return to form with a 55 feet 1 inch (16.79 m) throw in the Michigan A.A.U. meet in January and describing how it would have earned second place in the 1948 Olympics. However, Fonville was not able to throw at the distances he reached in 1948. After a victory in a meet against WisconsinThe Wisconsin State Journal said: "Charlie Fonville, the former world recordholder in the shot put, heaved a creditable 53 feet 7.5 inches (16.345 m) to win the event. The Negro star, sidelined for 18 months, returned to competition three weeks ago to heave more than 55 feet."   He also won the Big Ten Conference indoor title for the third time.    However, the AP noted that Fonville "returned to competition this season after laying out last year and either has lost his terrific snap or is favoring the back."    Jim Fuchs of Yale broke Fonville's world record, and the AP reported: "An injured back, perhaps, is all that stands in the way of boosting the world's record for the shot put to 60 feet. Michigan's Charlie Fonville, the athlete with the bad back, was the world's best shot putter two years ago and still holds the official mark of 58 feet 0.375 inches (17.68793 m)."   Though Fonville won the 1950 Drake relays, his winning throw of 52 feet 1.5 inches (15.888 m) was described as "comparatively puny" compared to the 58 feet 5.5 inches (17.818 m) throws of Jim Fuchs that year.   In 1952, Michigan track coach (and future athletic director) Don Canham dedicated his book Field Techniques Illustrated to Fonville as follows: "Dedicated to Charlie Fonville a world record holder who accepted disappointment as graciously as he did fame and success."      

Later years

After graduating from Michigan in 1950, Fonville worked in labor relations at Kaiser-Frazer, an automobile manufacturer, while attending Wayne State University Law School at night.   Fonville was a lawyer in private practice in Detroit from 1954 to 1994.      In 1979, Fonville was inducted into the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor. He was part of only the second class inducted into the U-M Hall of Honor, being inducted in the same year as Michigan legends Fielding H. YostFritz Crisler and Willie Heston. The only U-M track athlete inducted into the Hall of Honor before Fonville was Bob Ufer. In 1994, Fonville died at the University of Michigan Hospital—the same hospital where he had surgery in 1948 to repair his vertebrae.   He was 67 years old when he died.

V 7 N. 14 Track and the Recent Academy Awards Hoo Haa

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Jack Keller , Ohio State U.

Pete Brown in Plano, TX sent us an article from today's Wall Street Journal, March 1, 2017 by Bob Greene.  Mr. Greene mentions that the recent Academy Award bungled presentation of Best Picture to La La Land  that had to be withdrawn and given to Moonlight  reminded him of a similar incident in the 1932 Olympic Games in Los Angeles when Ohio State athlete, Jack Keller, was announced to have finished in third place in the 110 meter HH and subsequently it was found by photo timing that he had really finished fourth.  Having already been presented his medal, Keller was told to go to the Olympic village and seek out the third place winner Donald Finlay of Great Britain and hand over the medal.   This may have been easier to do  last week as La La Land had already won five awards that night.
Finlay striking a hurdle pose on his Spitfire

For more on Finlay see wikipedia   Donald Finlay

 Greene remarked on the grace of Jordan Horowitz, producer of La La Land in turning over the Academy Award to the rightful winners of Best Picture.
Horowitz handing over the trophy to Barry Jenkins
For Jack Keller, this was his only time on the Olympic podium although he was not unaccustomed to winning awards having won the NCAA meet in the 220 yard lows and even setting a WR in the highs at one time.  But to send a man on a quest to find the true medal winner is indeed a task far beyond what people would be expected to do today.  Now the whole event would be recorded on media and broadcast all over the world, and Keller might even have become more famous than Finlay or the winner of the race George Saling of the University of Iowa.  Ironically Saling would die a year later in a car crash.  Jack Keller would go on into the world of journalism and become editor of the Columbus Citizen Journal.  He died in 1978, a quiet and modest man.



"Marquette sprinter Ralph Metcalfe poses with hurdlers Jack Keller (Ohio State) and George Saling (University of Iowa), and middle-distance runner Glenn Cunningham (University of Kansas) at the NCAA championship meet at the University of Chicago. The NCAA meet also served as the semi-finals for the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials, and each of these athletes earned a spot on the 1932 U.S. Olympic team. Each had just established a new NCAA record, or tied or set a new world record."  picture text from Marquette University Archives

Image courtesy Marquette University Archives. Image No.: MUA_RM_00018

What about number two in that Los Angeles hurdles race?   Percy Beard
Percy Beard
Later head track coach at U. of Florida
At the 1932 Olympics, Percy Beard was in the lead until he hit the sixth hurdle and ended up losing by a very narrow margin to [George Saling]. Beard had won the first of three AAU high hurdles titles in 1931, posting a new world record of 14.2 for 120 yards. Over the 110 meter distance, he equalled the world record of 14.4 in the 1932 Olympic Trials and during a European tour in 1934 he lowered the record to 14.3 and then to 14.2 After graduating from Auburn as a civil engineer, he ran four outdoor and five indoor seasons for the New York AC, losing only one race in all. He won the AAU indoor hurdles in 1931, 1932, 1933 and again in 1935. Beard went on to earn a master's degree from Auburn and taught engineering there from 1929 to 1935. He then moved to the University of Florida as track coach and became athletic director before his retirement in 1973. The University of Florida track is named for Percy Beard.  Wikipedia

Any coincidence?  Two major flubs, both in Los Angeles?  If you are wondering whether Steve Harvey's  2015 blunder in mispresenting the Miss Universe winner was in L.A.  it wasn't, it was in Las Vegas.





V 7 N. 15 A 4x880 WR Fifty Years Ago This Week

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Wow, we are getting a lot of great stuff coming in already written by our friends and followers.  This time by a man I would call 'friend' though I've never personally met him to say "Hi." It's Darryl Taylor former Long Beach State  half miler.  Turns out Darryl and I shared a track in Albequerque about 1964 when my Oklahoma Sooners and his Long Beach State 49ers got towed in a vacuum by the Oklahoma State Aggies on that lightning fast indoor track.  Here's Darryl's story.

Hello George and Roy! With this year's 2017 USA Indoor Championships about to scream into our living rooms, I thought I'd go back exactly 50 years to March 3rd, 1967, which also was a Friday,  and recall one of the strangest races I can remember.
50 years ago this Friday, on March 3rd 1967, as a member of the Long Beach 49er Track Club 2-Mile Relay team, we won the USA Indoor Championships. The winning time of 7:36.9 was our slowest of the 1967 season, having set an American Record in the Albuquerque Indoor Meet a month earlier at 7:25.6, which was recognized at the time as the leading time in the world and the fastest ever on a class "C" track. We also ran 7:29.8 in a close victory over Oregon University's 7:30.2 and Fordam's 7:31.6 at the New York AC Games held in Madison Square Garden. In this National AAU meet there were a couple of last minute changes in the line-up with Tom Von Ruden replacing Dave Mellady and John Perry replacing his brother Dave Perry. I was in my second year of teaching 9th grade English and coaching cross-country and track while finishing my teaching credential at Chapman University. As such this was the last year that I could devote to a full-time training regime. Those three guys I share the podium with were truly "Super-Stars" and it was an honor to share the track and pass the baton with them. Tom Von Ruden made the '68 Olympic team at 1500 meters, John Perry was a member of Oklahoma State's WR outdoor 2-Mile Relay team while Preston Davis was a sub 4:00 miler from Texas. The experience of racing with these guys certainly inspired me to run my best.
The USA INDOOR CHAMPIONSHIPS, formerly called the AAU Indoor Championships, was one of the strangest races I've ever experienced. My running log for this date states that as I began my warm-up, I started feeling early signs of the stomach flu.  When the starter called us to the line I asked him if I could run to the restroom to throw up. I could tell by the look on his face that he had never had this request before. He gave me 3 minutes and off I went. Returning with baton in hand, at least for the moment I felt better if not exactly normal. Fortunately we were not facing Oregon or Fordam here and I won the lead-off leg without too much trouble.  To add insult to injury, the exchange zones were miss marked so that my lead-off and Von Ruden's 3rd leg were 10 yards long while the 2nd leg and anchor were 10 yards short. Splits, as I have noted here were 1:54.8 for me, 1:55.3 for Perry, 1:53.9 for Von Ruden and 1:52.8 for Davis. After the race it was all I could do to stand for this photo before racing to the restroom again. The flight home late that night was by far the worst flight of my life and I had to call my wife to come to the airport and drive me home.
The month before was a much more pleasant experience. When we arrived in Albuquerque for the 1966 AAU Indoor Championships, Harry McCalla, Tom Von Ruden and Preston Davis were at the bottom of the stairway as we got off the plane. The immediately informed me that we were going for the American and world record that night. No pressure there!  What gave us hope for this outcome was the 7:27.4 mark we set the previous year at Albuquerque with a team made up of Dave Kemp-1:51.6/Darryl Taylor-1:51.7/Dave Mellady-1:54.0 and Dave Perry's 1:50.1 anchor. We only needed a couple of seconds improvement to reach that goal. Adding Von Ruden and Davis to the line-up made it a realistic goal. Harry McCalla (Stanford/Air Force) improved on Mellady's 1:54.0 with a nice 1:53.1 lead-off giving us 9 tenths in the bank. I ran my life-time best on the second leg with a 1:51.2 to put us 1.4 seconds up on our '66 time. By the time Tom Von Ruden blasted an eye-popping 1:49.2 on the third leg the record was ours and Preston Davis cruised home with a beautiful 1:52.1 for our 7:25.6. Albuquerque had a high banked all red plywood track that was 10 laps to the mile and was by far the fastest indoor surface I ever ran on. The flight home the next day was by contrast surely the best flight I ever took!

 Little mixup on the certificate with Dave Mellady listed by Tom Von Ruden being the guy on the left followed
                                                                by Perry , Davis and Taylor


Great article but I feel more sad for Donald Finlay missing his moment on the podium than Jack Keller having to find Donald and hand over his medal. Although now thinking about that how cruel!! Why didn't someone from the Olympic Committee deal with it?   Susan 

V7 N. 16 Jon Hendershott's Most Memorable Men's Middle Distance Races

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JON’S MOST MEMORABLE:


by Jon Hendershott


Part II—Men’s Middle-Distances.


800 METERS:
Okay, okay, I’m back with my usual entreating comment: “I just couldn’t pick one most memorable performance!”  But, I couldn’t when thinking about the men’s 800.

I could have claimed Alberto Juantorena’s World Record 1:43.5 to rumble to the ’76 Olympic title, the first half of his unprecedented 400-800 double. He was called El Caballo (“The Horse”) for good reason as the Cuban showed in Montréal.
Juantorena
Then there was the WR 1:41.24 by Kenyan (later to be a Dane) Wilson Kipketer in Zürich ’97 as he followed up his Athens World Champs victory by slashing his own record by nearly a half-second. (Also see at the end of the 5000 section in Chapter III for some background on this record, and two others, from that very memorable Zürich affair.)
Kipeter
And there also was the current global mark, 1:40.91, clocked in London in ’12 for David Rudisha’s first Olympic title. As English writer Phil Minshull wrote for T&FN, Rudisha “decided to run the legs off everyone else.” It was stunning, as the Kenyan led the entire distance in a fabulous display of power and dominance.

Rudisha
Yet I did settle on just one two-lapper for my best. My topper came at the ’72 Munich Olympics—so you know what to expect. Young American Dave Wottle had tied the 1:44.3 World Record in winning the Trials in Eugene, wearing his trademark golf cap to keep his curly blonde locks under control. Yet a lot of fans favored the USSR’s Yevgeniy Arzhanov, the ’71 European champion and No. 1 World Ranker. Bowling Green’s Wottle was, after all, in not only his first Olympics but also his first international meet ever.
Wottle
Plus, Dave had been bothered by a knee strain heading to Munich. His parents were on the T&FN Olympic Tour, as was his college coach Mel Brodt. Yet I didn’t want to bug them by continually inquiring about Dave’s health – even though I was chafing to ask. But the Wottles and Brodt likely wouldn’t have known much anyway. Dave was at the USA training camp in Austria and ’72 was light years away from today’s world of instant communication via cell phone, text and social media.

Then in the final, Wottle not only had to face Arzhanov, but the two outstanding Kenyans in Mike Boit and Robert Ouko, plus other European stars like Franz-Josef Kemper of West Germany and Andy Carter of Britain.

So when Dave slid right to the back of the pack early in the final, collective USA hearts probably sank appreciably. Ouko towed the field through a 24.7 opening 200, with Wottle trailing at 26.4. The pace lagged after that as both Kenyans split 52.3, with Arzhanov sixth at 52.9 and Wottle last at 53.5. Arzhanov assumed command down the second backstretch to lead at the 600 in 1:19.2.

Wottle, meanwhile, was clocking comparatively-consistent 200s of 27.1 and 26.2, yet trailed the Soviet by a half-second entering the homestretch. But Dave was on the outside and closing like a runaway freight train. He gradually picked off everyone ahead of him before finally catching Arzhanov with maybe three steps left in the race. The Soviet threw himself across the finish stripe, bouncing a couple of times on the surface.

But it was not enough as Wottle prevailed by a slim 0.03 in 1:45.86. Everyone in the stadium was roaring at the sheer competitiveness of the contest, but the Americans were especially—and understandably—delirious over Wottle’s win.

Boit, Wottle, Arzhonov
All three seem overcome by the moment but for vastly different reasons.


Dave himself must have been in a kind of fog, too. After the medalists received their awards (Boit finished 3rd; runner-up Arzhanov hung his head as though he had failed every single one of the multi-millions of his Soviet countrymen), they turned to face the flags for the playing of the U.S. national anthem—and Dave forgot to remove his golf cap. It was such an everyday part of his running garb that he simply left it on.

When told later in the media interview room of his mistake, Wottle put his hands over his face in shock, embarrassment and dismay. Yet I will bet my ranch (if I had one) that not a single American in Munich, or anywhere else, held it against Wottle. He had provided a thrilling, unforgettable example of a major part of the Olympic Creed: “to compete well.” For me, it was unforgettable.

The 800 at Munich click here to see the entire race ed.




1500 METERS:

Any Olympic final is a race combining strength, speed and tactical brilliance. But for me, no other Games 1500 final could outshine Seb Coe’s successful title defense at
Los Angeles in ’84.
Coe

Britain’s Coe, 27 at the time, had won the 1980 gold medal in Moscow to outduel rival Steve Ovett, who had scored an upset 800 victory. Most fans and pundits figured Coe to take the ’80 800 with Ovett claiming the 1500. But in the best Olympic tradition of producing upsets, Ovett had outrun Coe in the two-lapper. Then Coe turned the tables in the 1500.

Great Britain took a powerful 1-2-3 punch to LA, with Coe being the defender, Ovett having set the WR at 3:30.77 the previous September in Rieti and young Steve Cram having won the inaugural World Championships the prior summer in Helsinki.

But Coe had missed the global meet due to illness and had suffered a loss or two in the build-up to LA. So the English press—always ruthlessly critical of the UK’s sporting stars— seemed especially so toward the reigning Olympic champion, judging him as vulnerable as the Games neared.

And then Coe was outrun in the Olympic 800 by the young and powerful Brazilian Joaquim Cruz, who clocked 1:43.00 for an Olympic Record that lasted until the next U.S. Games 12 years later in Atlanta. Still, Coe had timed 1:43.64, certainly not chump change but more fuel for the fire stoked by the British media.

Plus Coe had shrugged his shoulders as he crossed the finish, as if to say (which he later verbalized), “I can’t complain, Cruz is a great champion.” But in a real shocker, defender Ovett placed last in 1:52.28.

In the LA 1500 final, Spain’s José Manuel Abascal led the Brits through 1000-meters, ahead of Coe (2:39.2) by two-meters, with Cram (2:39.6) and Ovett (2:39.8) following. Then in a stunner, Ovett stepped off the track just after the bell. He had battled bronchitis all spring and said his breathing at the Games wasn’t helped by LA’s notoriously smoggy air.

Meanwhile, Coe chewed up the final curve in a stunning 13-flat to enter the homestraight with a two-meter advantage. He clocked 13.1 for the final 100 and won by six-meters in 3:32.53, an Olympic Record that would last for 16 years. He outran Cram (3:33.40) by nearly a full second, with Abascal 3rd (3:34.30).

Then after he crossed the finish, the usually mild-mannered Coe let out his frustration as he ran back up the finish stretch and stopped in front of the British press section in the LA Coliseum. He pointed both his index fingers at the Brit scribes as if to say to them, “There, write about that, mates!” Coe, now the president of track’s governing body, the IAAF, had provided the most emphatic reply possible to his critics—by becoming the first, and so far only, man to ever win two Olympic 1500 titles.

Link to IOC excerpt of 1500   (This IOC film does not show finish but the clarity of segment of the race is terrific.)  ed.

The Full Race  1984

Manzano

(Another memorable finish stretch for me: Leo Manzano’s storming 13.1 final 100—fastest of the London ’12 final—to close his 52.8 last lap, equal-quickest of the race, and claim an unlooked-for silver medal. For sure, a raspy-throat producer from yelling so loud, even if the unwritten ethos of press section is that scribes aren’t supposed to cheer on athletes. Sometimes it’s hard not to be human—and a fan.)



That London 1500 men's final





MILE:
Thank goodness that the IAAF retained the mile as the only English-distance World Record, even as the federation changed records to all metrics in the mid-1970s. And thank goodness that Eamonn Coghlan could handle indoor tracks like no other runner.
The Irishman and Villanova grad simply possessed his own special talent for managing the curves and changes of rhythm inherent in indoor racing. On February 20, 1981, at San Diego’s Jack-In-The-Box Invitational, the then-28-year-old Coghlan sped 3:50.6 to come the closest yet to the then-mythical sub-3:50 barrier for the indoor mile.
Coghlan also claimed the 1500 record with his 3:35.6 en route split, after taking over from leader Steve Scott with two laps to run. Scott finished in an American Record 3:51.8, also under Coghlan’s previous record of 3:52.6 set in San Diego in ’79. New Zealander John Walker, the first man to duck under 3:50 outdoors in ’75, ran 3:52.8 for 3rd ahead of Ireland’s Ray Flynn (3:53.6). It was the deepest mile finish to that time.
The San Diego Sports Arena capacity crowd of 11,000 fans howled throughout the race, but when Coghlan made his move, as Walker said later, “Once Eamonn gets ahead at that stage, it’s over.”
Coghlan in the Wannamaker Mile at Millrose in 1981
Coghlan said, “My goal for the season was 3:50. Someone’s going to do it and I’d like to be the first.” Scott called the race “one of those near-perfect races.” Unforgettable, too.

Coghlan sub 3:50 in 1983 ( This is not the race Jon describes, but it will give you a clue to Coghlan's style indoors. ) ed.

(Next: men’s distances.)

COMMENTS

Maybe I'm a little home boy but Wottle's win was THE most exciting of the races described. As we try to tell our runners year after year, It's where you are at the END of the race that counts.   Thanks, Jon..           Steve Price

Steve coached for many years at Bowling Green and in retirement at Findlay Univ. ed. 

V 6 N. 19 February, 1967

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FEBRUARY 1967

    How time flies. It is February 1967 already. Let us turn the pages as we go back in time half a century. To show you how complete we are, let's start with January, specifically Wednesday the 26th when the venerable Millrose Games is celebrating its 60th running. Australian steeplechaser Kerry O'Brien has been here only two days but already has created overweight baggage problems for his flight home. The 20 year old O'Brien, already fifth fastest steeplechaser ever, destroys the two mile field in the last quarter mile to win in a meet record 8:39.6, leaving Pat Traynor (8:43.0) and Tony Benson (8:43.8) in his wake. For his efforts he is faced with stuffing his duffle bag with three large trophies, one for winning, another for being selected the meet's outstanding athlete and permanent possession of a “big silver cup for the best time over a three year period”. No, we are not quite sure what that means nor do we see the difference between winning a trophy and being granted permanent possession of one, but we have our best people working on both these issues and will undoubtedly have a clear explanation for you later in this report.
Kerry O'Brien

    Two nights later O'Brien and luggage arrive in Boston for the Boston AA meet. The potential problems on his flight home are exacerbated by winning the two mile, setting a meet record and being awarded another of those cumbersome most outstanding athlete trophies. His 8:38.4 is the fastest in the world this year, but doesn't come easily, as he has to run 58.1 on the final quarter to hold off Tom Laris (8:38.8) by three yards.

    O'Brien was not the only one leaving with a seasonal world best. Ricky Urbina blazes 1000 yards in 2:08.1 for that distinction.
Judge Ricardo Urbina (ret'd.)
Georgetown Track Legend
Photo: Washington Post

 The 600 provides a preview of a things to come as Martin McGrady is credited with a “mild upset” for holding off Dave Hemery and Bill Crothers in 1:09.9. Let's keep an eye on this McGrady kid. He may have found his race.
McGrady appearing on TF&N cover
in 1968 beating Lee Evans and Jim Kemp
    On the same night, 3088 miles away in Portland, world indoor shot put record holder Neil Steinhauer puts more distance between him and the accepted gold standard of the event, Randy Matson, when he puts the iron ball 67-10, a spectacular improvement of 15 ¼ inches. Indeed he nearly averages his old record as his six tosses average 66-6 1/8, topping Matson's best average of 65-10 ¼. Apparently there's a new sheriff in town.
Neil Steinhauer
    Ralph Boston notches his fourth hurdle – long jump double of the season, 7.1 and 25-8 ¼ . Charlie Greene outsprints Harry Jerome and San Jose State teammates Bob Griffin and Tommie Smith, all timed in 6.1.
Ralph Boston
    Wait, there's more this evening. Travel with us 1362 miles (yes, we love Google maps) Southeast to Albuquerque for the appropriately named Albuquerque JC meet where three world records are set, only one of which is benefitted by the ten lap to the mile track. That would be Theron Lewis' 47.1 440. Wendell Motley's old record of 47.3 is tied by Jim Kemp who is second this evening. Jim Hines of Texas Southern ties the 60 record of 5.9 in a heat before winning the final in 6.0. This is just business as usual, for Hines ran that time twice last week in the NAIA meet.
Jim Hines

    Bob Seagren pulled a muscle in his back two nights ago in the Millrose Games. Trooper that he is, Seagren not only competes, but takes a shot at his 17-1 world record. Efficiency is his watchword as he takes but three attempts, 16-0, 16-6 and 17-2 for the WR. Thanks for coming, Bob.
Bob Seagren
    Three world records make for an I-was-there night for any fan, yet the crowd favorite this evening is 17 year old high school kid Jerry Proctor who wins the long jump at 26-2. How good is this? Let us count the ways. He breaks his own high school record of 25-10 ½. His worst jump is 25-5 ¼, equal to the previous best ever HS jump indoors or out (Doyle Steele last year). No aberration this, not only did he jump this distance twice, he had another effort at 26-1¼. Oh, he also beat a pretty good field, Bill Miller, Gayle Hopkins and Bob Beamon. The kid may have a future. Stay tuned.

    We would be amiss were we not to mention that the 49er Track Club records the third fastest two mile relay ever, 7:25.6, more significantly the fastest ever on a ten-lap-or-smaller -to-the-mile track. Harry McCalla opens with 1:52.9. Darryl Taylor picks up the pace with a 1:51.4 carry, handing to Tom Von Ruden who sizzles a 1:49.2. Preston Davis finishes with a 1:52.1. Job well done, guys.
Lindgren and Baillie
(photo listed for sale on E Bay)



    The big news the next weekend comes from the west coast. On Feb. 4the Seattle Invitational sees New Zealand's Bill Baillie hanging with state favorite Gerry Lindgren for 20 of the 22 laps of the two mile. At this point Lindgren goes to the afterburners to open a gap of 40 yards at the tape. His 8:31.6 is history's third fastest (Ron Clarke 8:28.8 and Jim Beatty 8:30.8) and heightens track fans' anticipation of his match with Clarke in San Francisco in two weeks. Baillie finishes in 8:37.8. Darryl Horn sets meet records of 25-8 and 51-0 in the horizontal jumps.

    The initial San Diego Invitational the same evening plays to a capacity house of 11, 781 with over 2000 turned away. The primary attraction is the matchup between the two big guys in the shot put, indoor world record holder Neil Steinhauer and the holder of the outdoor record, Randy Matson. A month earlier Steinhouer broke the world record in handing Matson his first defeat since the 1964 Olympics. Since then he had increased that mark as reported earlier in this report.

Matson putting another kind of ball.
A little one on one before an indoor meet with Steinhauer and Matson might have sold
a few more tickets.
    The magic isn't there for either. Steinhauer pops 66-2¼ on his second toss but Matson is stuck in the 63s until getting 65-4 on his fourth attempt. Steinhauer can't improve, but with Matson throwing only 60-1 on his penultimate effort, he may not have to. With Matson throwing first, the pressure is on the big Texan. He responds with a 66-10½, placing the burden on the Oregon senior. History does not record the length of Suoerduck's response, as he fouls, giving Matson the win and tying the year's indoor series at 1-1.
    When he toes the line for the start of the 1000, Tom Von Ruden's best is 2:10.2. Two minutes six and eight tenths of a second later he breasts the tape with the third fastest clocking in indoor history. Only Peter Snell and Bill Crothers had run faster and then just barely at 2:06.0 and 2:06.4.
    The USTFF is held on the following Friday, Feb. 10 in New York. As well as San Diegoans supported their meet the previous week, the New Yorkers don't. Only 4409 spectators see Villanova's Dave Patrick blaze a 55.6 final quarter to finish the season's fastest mile, 4:00.6.
    The big news on this weekend is produced in consecutive evenings in Texas. On Friday in Fort Worth, Randy Matson destroys, crushes, smashes, demolishes (your turn, you pick a word) Neil Steinhauer's 67-10 shot put record. Not only does he throw an amazing 69-2, his average for six puts is 67-11.
    What can he do for an encore the next night in Dallas? Hopefully you are seated. He blasts a 70-7½, a quarter inch beyond his outdoor record. Track and field officials are notorious for nit-picking. They find the throwing area exceeds the maximum slope allowable by, well, it isn't stated, but we bet it isn't much, so it doesn't count as a record. Doesn't matter to Randy who says, “I'm just happy I could do so well, so soon.”

    That very night a sell out crowd at the Times Indoor Games sees Ron Clarke run away from Bill Baillie in the last half mile of the two mile to win 8:41.8 to 8:48.2 and Bob Seagren set the pole vault world record....sort of. Yes, the USC sophomore clears 17-3 to break his own record by an inch, only to have the pole go under the crossbar, which no longer is a sin, but back in the day this was sufficient to negate a clearance. Maybe next week, Bob.

    This is a memorable evening for track fans as the Mason-Dixon Games are being held on Freedom Hall's spacious 8 lap to the mile track. As the turns on a 220 yard track are less tight that those of the traditional 160 yard 11 laps to the mile tracks, the M-D meet has produced at least one world record every year since 1962. This night is no exception as four WRs fall.

    Three weeks ago Theron Lewis broke Wendell Motley's 440 WR with a 47.1 effort in Albuquerque. Tonight Tommie Smith puts that on the ash pile of history with a 46.2 clocking which also displaces Mike Larrabee's 46.8 400 meter record. Tom Von Ruden runs negative splits, 56.5 and 52.5, to shave eight tenths off Tom Farrell's 1:49.8 WR. Inexplicably 8 lap to the mile times are lumped together with 11 lap to the mile times, but apparently a time run on a larger track is not valid for record purposes as the fastest ever indoor time is 1:47.7 by John Woodruff in 1940 on a 263 yard banked track.

    Further evidence of the difference between 8 and 11 lap tracks is offered by Southern University's mile relay team. The previous night in New York the Jaguars ran 3:16.7. Tonight they lop 9 tenths off the record they share with Texas Southern at 3:10.2. Neil Steinhauer wins the shot at 65-8, but we may want to keep an eye on the second place finisher who nets a lifetime best of 63-4½, 24 year old George Woods.

    On Friday, Feb. 17 15,382 spectators view the 99th running of the New York Athletic Club Games, nostalgic because it is the last to be held in the original Madison Square Garden which is soon to be torn down. Villanova's Dave Patrick, who missed breaking the four minute mile barrier by six tenths of a second last week, dominates a good field, pulling away for a 3:59.3 victory and moving to fourth on the all time US list.
Dave Patrick
Finishing in a bunch between 4:01.9 and 4:02.6 are Richard Romo, Dave Bailey, Tim Danielson, John Camien and Tom Von Ruden.


    If Von Ruden's 49erTC teammates miss him in the two mile relay, you couldn't prove it by the Oregon team. The Ducks had the lead at the last handoff, but 49er anchor Preston Davis is up for the challenge. His 1:50.1 carry gives the Long Beach squad a four tenths of a second win in 7:29.8.

    On the same evening Stanford senior Jim Eshelman is the star of the fifth annual Golden Gate Invitational in San Francisco, vaulting 16-10½. His six inch improvement moves him past John Pennell, into second on the all time indoor list. In a change of strategy, Ron Clarke allows Jerry Lindgren set the pace in the two mile. With four laps to go, the great Aussie makes his move and appears to have the race in hand. Lindgren bides his time before responding with two laps left to pull away for his first win over Clarke in six tries, 8:32.6 to 8:35.8.
Lindgren and Clarke in years prior
    San Jose State has chosen this meet in their backyard to take a shot at the 11 lap to mile WR in the mile relay. After two 49.7 legs, Lee Evans zips a 48.2 quarter and hands to Tommie Smith who counters any thought than a long legged athlete can't run such tight curves, with a stunning 46.5 split. The Spartans' 3:14.1 easily tops the record of 3:15.6 set two years earlier by Morgan State.

    Cecil Turner of Cal Poly nips USC's newly enrolled football prospect, OJ Simpson, in the 60 with both clocking 6.1 PRs.

    Now it is the next evening and we are back to mundane 160 yard tracks. Track size doesn't concern Bob Seagren as he increases his three week old pole vault WR to 17-3 in the Cleveland K of C meet. It appears that USC has another sprint prospect in Lennox Miller who takes the 50 in 5.3.

    On this same evening in Vancouver, a mile match up among Ron Clarke, Dyrol Burleson and Kip Keino doesn't come off as one might expect. Burleson turns on the gas to win in 4:03.4. Surprisingly, Ray Haswell and Dave Roberts take the next two spots in 4:03.7 and 4:06.1 with Clarke a well beaten fourth in 4:09.9. What about Keino?, you may ask. Being boxed on the last lap, he is discouraged and drops out. What? How about that “A winner never quits and a quitter never wins” adage? Don't fret. Twenty-four minutes later there is the enigmatic Kenyan lining up for the start of the two mile. Long story short, he wins in 8:37.6, his fastest indoor time.

    Before we tell you about Jim Ryun's exploits Feb. 23, we have to give you some background. On Wednesday, the 15th, he finishes fifth in a dual meet with Oklahoma. How can this be? There must be an explanation. Yes, there is. He had run two hard workouts the previous day and another the morning of this meet. Compounding his competitive handicap, is the fact that this is a 600 yard race, no more than a workout. Three days later he wins the Kansas Federation two mile in an unpressed 8:44.2.
Ryun about to pass Glen Ogden
    Now it is the dual meet with Oklahoma State on his 220 yard home track on the 23rd. He has lessened his training and is ready to run fast. And he does. His 1:48.3 eclipses Tom Von Ruden's recent 1:49.0, but doesn't qualify for the world record because it is run on a clay track. Indoor records must be run on boards. Go figure.
Keino on a better day

    We used the word enigmatic earlier to describe Kip Keino. Though history will remember him as one of the greatest distance runners of all time, he is at a hit or miss period in his career.

    In Toronto's Maple Leaf Games on the 24th, he is leading with half a mile left in the three mile. Money in the bank, right? No, for an unexplained reason, he falls off the pace and finished ninth. Dave Ellis holds off Van Nelson 13:35.2 to 13:36.0. Sixth place is 13:51. No time is given for Keino.

    Ryun will be running the 880 in the NCAA meet in two weeks, but even with his recent 1:48.3 to verify his status as favorite, he may have a serious challenge on his hands. On the 25th, Villanova's Dave Patrick clocks 1:49.1 on a 160 yard track in Baltimore, the fastest ever on a track of that size. Your reporter can't wait until the action goes outside where all tracks are the way God made them, the same size.

    Oh, speaking of outside, Texans already are. On the 24th, in a meet with Baylor, Randy Matson tosses the rock 68-8¾. It is 50 and windy the next day in Houston, but that doesn't prevent Texas Southern's 440 relay team from running 39.9. Anchor Jim Hines returns to hold off East Texas State freshman John Carlos in the 220 by a tenth in 20.9.

    Now tidbits culled from the On Your Marks column: Ralph Boston is contemplating another athletic endeavor when his track career is finished. He has plans to play for the Kansas City Chiefs of the AFL. A wide receiver or defensive back, you may be thinking. No, a punter....
Clyde Glosson

Clyde Glosson is one of the fastest men in the world based on his times last year, 9.2w and 20.6w, yet his Trinity University coach not only won't use him on the anchor leg of the 440 relay, he won't put him on the relay team at all. Here is the question for the more astute of Clyde Glosson?  Clik here  Clyde G
   
Not heeding the directional advice of Horace Greeley, Western Michigan assistant, Bob Parks. is going east, specifically to his alma mater, Eastern Michigan where he will assist this season before becoming head coach at the end of the season.
Bob Parks
We'll keep an eye on the young man.......Back in the day, Mel Pender raced the best sprinters in the world. Difficult as that was, it didn't prepare him for the tension of his current occupation.
Mel Pender
He is an Army platoon leader in Viet Nam, “hacking my way through the jungles of the Mekong River Delta”..........We all remember the image of 8000 pigeons being released at the recent Tokyo Olympics. The MPFA (Mexican Pigeon Fancier Association, but then you knew that) is preparing a challenge. They have promised that in next years' Mexico City Olympics the sky will be filled with 10,000 pigeons, a spectacle we will cover in detail...

..And now the reason why Clyde Glosson will not carry the baton for the Trinity Tigers: there are only two guys on the team, Clyde and some guy named Fred. The team bus is the coach's VW bug......As proof that this was a simpler time, we'll close with this notice, “Results of the postal competition sponsored by T&FN are now ready, and are available by sending a self addressed envelope with ten cents postage for first class service.”


Where did you find all those recent GREAT pics.....especially the one of Boston going over a lumber yard of hurdles. I will tell you that moving those monster barriers was not a job for the timid.......or the weak. That is one part of "back in the good ole'days" I do not miss one bit. 

(along with having to line the track before every meet).    Steve


that Ralph Boston photo, hit that hurdle you were done for the week....I remember those NCAA guides.  They covered the results of even the little bitty conferences like the Prairie College Conference (I think that was the name) that Principia was in.  I remember going through those leagues, looking for those in which I had a faster time than what won their championship.  Weren't many, maybe one.  Think it was an amalgamation of agricultural colleges in western South Dakota, appropriately named the WSD 4 conference...
.....Do you realize that somewhere there is someone who knows someone who accidentally sees our site and tells those people of the Glen Ogden photo.  Eventually this leads to the comment, "Grandpa, you are on the internet.  Boy, were you skinny."..Roy

V 7 N. 18 Ed Whitlock R.I.P.

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Ed Whitlock
Ed Whitlock passed away yesterday.   He ran his last competitive race in December,  ran a marathon in October, just 4  1/2 months ago.  He was 86 years old.  He was not just an old marathoner.  There are lots of them.  He was simply the best man who, after the age of 70, ever ran across the face of the earth.

His likeability was second to none.  Self depricating humour was his forte.  Who else trains exclusively in a cemetery and could say, "At least nobody bothers me there."?   He didn't seem to follow any scientific principles or give sound advice.  He merely ran and ran regularly and a lot.  He was gifted with genetics, and when he discovered this gift he used it to the fullest.  We try to teach children this behavior, and Ed was a prime example.
Ed in his favorite training area

I've not seen Ed since 1976 when I was living in Quebec.  We raced several times on the track, perhaps never on the roads.  He was 45 years old then and looked every bit of 60 years.  But oh did he have  wheels.  I could never out kick the man, and he was thirteen years older than me at the time.  Ed raced from his days as a school boy right through to the end.  There may have been some breaks in his racing while he was establishing a career as a mining engineer in his adopted Canada.  He was an Englishman who became a Canadian.   If we look at various senior runners and their running histories, we find very, very few who ran all their lives.  The seniors today seem only to have discovered the sport after the age of about fifty. They aren't carrying the endemic injuries that end careers too early.   But Ed was the exception.   No one lives or runs forever, but no one ever saw Ed in the End Game.   The cycle of  life inevitably caught up to him.  But it is one of the only things that ever did catch up to Ed.   Rest in Peace , Ed.

George Brose


Click below to see Ed's obituary in the Globe and Mail

Ed Whitlock The Globe and Mail  by Marty Klinkenberg

V 7 N. 19 Honoring Sportsmanship, Devon Cornelius and Trey Everett

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Devin Cornelius
Trey Everett




Too often we get very caught up in the moment of competition that we fail to notice events that transform athletes from aggressive, self centered, win at all costs people into something more genuine, caring and human.  Admittedly we humans have some serious flaws whether ingrained by genetics or reflected by our evolving societal standards.  History has demonstrated unimaginable cruetly of man on man, and our history books are punctuated and demarcated by chains of endless war.   But sometimes that lust for being the victor or being better than someone else is cast away, and the high side of our nature peaks out from behind those dark clouds.

There have been innumerable tales in our sport of such events.  The friendship of Jesse Owens and Luz Long in 1936 under the grey skies of the Third Reich.   John Landy stopping to help up a younger fallen comrade, Ron Clarke during a race.  The embrace of C.K. Yang and Rafer Johnson, teammates and opponents in the Decathlon in Rome in 1960.     Followers of this blog like to read about what happened more than fifty years ago, and we are less interested in today's track when we see our sport has become more and more commercialized, more and more crass in its determination to gain unfair advantage spurred on by financial reward.

Recently at the NCAA Division II Championships something occurred that would cause us to think that we were looking at the past once again.  Two young men, one from Central Missouri University and one from the University of Findlay shared a moment that they will be able to hold onto for the rest of their lives.   I'll let the words of  Marc Arce, University of Findlay track coach tell you what went on, so that you will better understand.   Here is a letter that Marc sent to the AD and President of the University of Central Missouri.  Marc gave us permission to share this with you and hopes that you will pass it on to others.  George Brose

March 14, 2017

Dr. Charles M. Ambrose, President
Mr. Jerry Hughes, Athletic Director
Central Missouri University
500 S. Washington Street
Warrensburg, MO 64093

     I would like to take the opportunity to share with you the highs and lows of an NCAA Championships and the ultimate sportsmanship exhibited by Devin Cornelius, a senior member of the track & field team at Central Missouri University.  Trey Everett is a junior at the University of Findlay, who like Devin is a multiple NCAA II All-American.  This past weekend, both young men competed in the heptathlon at the NCAA II Indoor Championships in Birmingham, AL.  This is a two day competition in which the entrants compete against each other over seven events, scoring points based on each event's performance  This was Trey's first heptathlon competition  at a national championships as he previously competed only as a high jumper.  Over the two days, Trey was exceeding our expectations and entered the final event , the 1000m run in fourth place.  Trey was 150m from the finish line when he tripped, lost his balance and unitentionally stepped into the infield of the track.  Several runners passed him, but to his credit, and to the credit and pride of every multi-eventer, he got back on the track and finished the race.  When the  final score was tabulated, Trey lost one place, finishing fifth overall, with Devin one place behind in sixth.  Awards were distributed soon after in recognition of the top eight finishers.

     Unbeknown to most at the time, a protest had been lodged by the coach of the ninth place athlete, requesting a disqualification of Trey for stepping inside of the track, not completing the race distance as prescribed.  Ultimately the referee concurred and disqualified Trey and the Jury of Appeals upheld his decision after extended deliberation.  The decision of this coach to file a protest was questioned by many of my colleagues there, including that of the Central Missouri coach, as Trey did not gain any advantage, rather his mishap resulted in a much slower time in the race.  What this coach does not fully comprehend is that there is a bond that is developed through athletes competing in the heptathlon that extends well beyond those who won or lost.  Devin understands this, as his actions that followed the competition clearly demonstrate.

     Trey accepted the results, taking responsibility for stepping inside the track and returned his fifth-place trophy as requested by the NCAA.  Devin took it upon himself to seek out Trey on the last evening of the meet, following the closing ceremonies.  Accompanied by CMU graduate assistant coach Mathew Harris,  Devin gave his sixth-place trophy to Trey, a gesture that symbolized an injustice had occurred.  Devin's sportmanship exceeds everything that took place during and after that competition.  He understands the comradery that is developed between this select group of athletes over the many times, grueling two-day competition and recognizes the efforts of those competing with  him, not against him.  It is my hope that the coach who filed the protest will one day reach the maturity level of this young man.

     I thank Devin for easing the pain and disappointment that Trey had been feeling.  His sportsmanship is truly felt, not only by Trey, but by our entire team.  With one simple gesture, he impacted many, many people.  Years from now when Trey looks at that trophy, he will not remember how fast he ran, how far he threw, or how high he jumped; but will be reminded of an act of friendship and sportsmanship that will endure forever.

    For me personally , I did not want this act to go unrecognized.  I have been coaching at the collegiate level for over 30 years.  Devin has restored much faith in all that is good in college athletics.  Central Missouri University should be proud of Devin for his accoplishments on the track and his actions off the track.  CMU should also be proud of the influence of his coaches, Kip Janvrin and Kirk Pederen who represent their institution with the utmost professionalism.  You have a first-class program.

                                                                                Sincerely,
                                                                                Marc M. Arce
                                                                                Head Track and Field Coach
                                                                                Findlay University


Comments:
Jon Hendershott loved this story and sent the following comment.  He claims it's off the top of his head and thinks there might be a few cobwebs in the way, but I checked it out and his memory serves him well.  GB

I really enjoyed the post on the two Div. II kids.  Class act all the way by the Central Missouri athlete to give his award to the Findlay athlete.  

Reminds me of the story from the ’08 Beijing Olympics when the sprinter from the Netherlands Antilles, Churandy Martina, ran a totally-unexpected 2nd in the 200 (behind some guy named Bolt). Wallace Spearmon of the US was 3rd. While the 3 medalists were on their victory laps, the word came down that Spearmon had been DQ’ed for running a couple of steps inside his lane line on the curve.

Then, when officials were checking video of the race, someone noted that Martina did the same.  So he too was DQ’ed.  From silver to nothing in just a short time. American Shawn Crawford initially finished 4th but was moved up to 2nd; American Walter Dix finished 5th but got moved up to 3rd.

Some time later, Martina got a message in his room at the Olympic Village saying there was a message for him on the main desk.  He went downstairs to get the message and found an envelope.  Inside was a silver medal and a message reading (paraphrasing) “This belongs to you; you earned it. Not me. Shawn Crawford.” 

I met Martina once in brief passing, but never got to ask him about that incident.  But it embodies the spirit of the Olympics to me.

My best, George — Jon.

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