Once Upon a Time in the Vest

Monday, July 22, 2019

V 9 N. 21 April 1968 Parts 1 and 2

It was September 21, 2018 since last our esteemed colleague in the corner office, Roy Mason, got off his octogenarian duff and did some work around here.  He sent this article to me a few months ago and finally added part 2 this past week.  It's been a pleasure looking for photos again and finding some background info to add to his work.  eg. the piece on Pat McMahon.    Roy has promised that he will begin the next month, May 1968 in the near future.  We've backburnered several other contributions including a piece from David Bailey on the gathering of 1500 meter runners in London, Ontario, a book review of a work by acclaimed crime fiction writer Lawrence Block about his race walking and ultra walking life, and a report on that cross country alumni meet held in Bob Schul's hometown of West Milton, Ohio.  While visiting my hometown Dayton, Ohio in May/June of this year I saw a guy running down old US 40, The National Road, who looked like he knew what he was doing.  I continued down that road a few miles til I saw a van parked alongside the highway.  It had a lot of advertisements and publicity pasted on the sides in French.

So I stopped and had a chat with the driver.  She was the wife of the guy running across the states from NYC to L.A.   His name is Patrick Malandain.  He has another guy who runs and walks with him and also rides a bike to accompany him.   This is his second run across the US.  His previous was the other direction in 2011.  When they finished the run to L.A. earlier in July, they drove the van up to Vancouver, BC and he started running back East across Canada.  He is 59 years old, covers around 100 Km per day.  Previously in France he has run 100Km for 100 consecutive days and some other long distance feats.  It takes all kinds to make a running world.
You can see his blog at Patrick Malandain.   It's in French but a translate brick comes up that you can click on.  Voila.  George

APRIL 1968 #1
This UPI photo was listed on E Bay by Historic Images  for $8.00. No longer available

The following is gleaned from Dick Drake's always readable On Your Marks column. Jim Ryun is on crutches, the result of a pulled hamstring muscle. By keeping his weight off it Jim hopes to be back in action faster than if he were still walking on it. He hopes to be back by next month's Kansas Relays. Is there reason to be concerned about his preparedness for the Olympic Games?.......An athlete with an even greater concern is Bob Steele, Michigan State's two time NCAA intermediate hurdle champion, who has broken his leg and will wear a cast for the next five weeks
Ste
Steve Seymour
photo by Henry Compton from a military meet in Frankfurt FRG, August , 1948. Stars and Stripes

.......You may be wondering what the record number of miles run on an indoor track by a man weighing 215 pounds or more is. Wonder no more. Steve Seymour, 1948 Olympic javelin thrower, just set it with 57 miles on the Los Angeles Athletic Club track. If that track is the standard 160 yard variety requiring 11 laps per mile, that would be 627 laps. Many of our readers are statistical purists. To save them hours of agonizing research, the previous records were also set by Seymour, 50 miles in 1965 and 52 in 1966.

Notes from Wikipedia on Seymour  Stephen ("Steve") Andrew Seymour (October 4, 1920, in New York City – June 18, 1973, in Los Angeles) was an American track and field athlete who competed in the javelin throw; he is regarded by track and field historians as America's original javelin technician.[1]
Following the Second World War, performance levels of elite U.S. javelin throwers lagged well behind the Europeans. Seeking to refine his skills, Seymour spent 1946 in Finland, training with that nation's world-class throwers. It did not take long for his meticulous research to pay dividends. In 1947, he established an American record of 75.80 meters (248' 8") at the U.S. AAU Championships; his mark was within ten feet of the global standard set by Finland's Yrjö Nikkanen in 1938.[2]
1948 was a memorable year in Seymour's career; he won a second consecutive national AAU title, and a silver medal at the Summer Olympics in London. In 1950, Seymour added a third national championship to his collection; and in 1951 he was the silver medalist at the Pan American Games.[3]


.......Marv Montgomery is 6'6” and tips the Toledos at 245. Seeing him exit the USC team bus, you could be forgiven for wondering why he isn't carrying his discus or shot. Surprisingly Marv is a hurdler and a pretty good one at that with a best of 14.3. Yes, this is the same Marv Montgomery who was a first rounddraft pick by the Denver Broncos and played 8 NFL seasons as an offensive guard. Your reporter feels confident in stating that a hurdle time of 14.3 is a record for an interior lineman at any level.
Denver Post  photo


....If your credentials include a gold medal in the 1952 Olympic 100 meters, where would that have taken you by this day in 1968? Would you be living off endorsements? How about living large as the owner of a chain of sporting good stores? Would you be traveling the country, giving well-remunerated inspirational speeches? Perhaps your fame would be sufficient to propel you to a political career. Lindy Remigino has used his considerable fame to far surpass any of those prospects. He is the head track coach at Hartford Public High School in Connecticut.
Regimino Winning the 100 in Helsinki






.....In answer to those who have complained about the lack of women's coverage in T&F News, Dick Drake points out that Women's Track and Field World doesn't cover men's track. Touche!
Rosemarie Ackerman on cover of Women's Track World  Jan/Feb, 1978

ed. note.   A little research brought us to a Jan/Feb, 1978 copy of Women's Track World of which Women's Track and Field World was the predecessor.  It was offered for $5.00 on Worth Point with the following explanation.   Women's Track World, published and edited by Vince Reel in Mentone, California. Published 10 times per year. Volume 1 number 1 dated January/February 1978. 56 pages.  First issue produced after a considerable absence with a new title, Women's Track World WTW. The last issue of WTFW being April, 1976. Thus, in this issue one will find the Athletes of the Year for 1976 Tatyana Kazankina (USSR CCCP) and 1977 Rosemarie Ackermann (East Germany DDR). extensive 1976 USA best performers lists, 1977 High School List, article Tatyana Kazankina by Ivan Berenyi, survey of Women's 800 meters race with all time list, extensive 1977 Cross Country results from around the nation, reports of the National AAU XC Championships and the AIAW Cross Country title meeting. WTFW reappeared after a nearly two years absence, with a new name yet with many of the same characteristcs, great lists, excellent reports and results

......As the world seems to be bent on transitioning from English to metric measurement, British officials have announced that mile races in the UK will now be run at 1600 meters. This decision has been met with such an outcry that it was quickly rescinded. Combined with the fact that virtually every track in the country is 440 yards, such a conversion would be an assault on the heroics of Roger Bannister.

.......Pat McMahon – described as an Irish Catholic attending Oklahoma Baptist – would have seemed to have won the Artesia (New Mexico) Marathon in a course record of 2:19:49, yet wasn't given credit for either achievement. Seems horses were also allowed to compete. Only one of the ten equine entries finished (no gender mentioned). Its time was 2:17. Sorry Pat, this is New Mexico.
ed. note.   McMahon was quite a find for Okla. Baptist U. coach Bruce "Bulldog" Drummond.  See story below from OBU archives.

....If you are Lee Evans or Gerry Lindgren, two strong Olympic hopefuls, how do you spend the months leading up to the Games? They will be counselors at Tracy Walters' Arrow Point Track Camp near Spokane, Washington. The two likely will not be cruising Spokane's hot spots in the evenings together as Jerry will work the distance portion from July 8-19 and Lee will toil at the sprint camp from July 22 – August 2. Give yourself one point if you remember Tracy as Jerry's high school coach. You get two points if you recall that Tracy was also an assistant at San Jose State where Lee has achieved his legendary status.

The outdoor season is just beginning but there are several marks of note. Gayle Hopkins had a successful Australian tour, jumping a legal 26-5 ¾ and a windy 26-8 ¼ . 

Image result for Paul Nash South Africa 100 meters sprinter
Paul Nash as he appeared in The Star  in 1967.  Not much can be found about this man of mystery.


The fastest 100 meter man is Paul Nash of South Africa who tied the world record of 10.0 three times in four days. 

Villanova sophomore Larry James has moved squarely into the Olympic 400 picture with a 45.2 clocking in a dual meet with Tennessee. This puts him in the number three spot on the all-time list behind only Tommie Smith and Adolph Plummer and equal to Wendell Motley and Theron Lewis.

The Florida Relays on March 30 produced top marks. Richmond Flowers of Tennessee, fresh off his NCAA indoor victory over outdoor WR holder Earl McCullough, took the highs in 13.6. Yale's Cal Hill, better known to us old-timers as Calvin Hill, added ten inches to his triple jump best with a winning 51-3 ¾ effort. Only through the crystal ball of history do we know the two were to become teammates on the Dallas Cowboys for the next three years. Also a winner that day was Bill Skinner of Tennessee who threw the javelin 247-3. Ah, but there is more to the story. Bill is a 28-year-old freshman who dropped out of high school eleven years earlier to join the navy. Completing his service in 1961, Bill worked as a welder, playing semipro football, boxing and weightlifting before discovering his talent as a javelin thrower. This issue has his photo with a caption of how he gave up a job which paid $12,000 a year to enter college. To put this in perspective, let's save you the trouble of researching this on the internet. Twelve grand in '68 is the equivalent of $88,000 in today's economy. How did this work for Bill? Hard to say, but he graduated with a degree in industrial education.



APRIL 1968 #2
Image result for steve prefontaine high school pictures

To quote directly from Fran Errota' story....”The outdoor season has barely begun in Oregon and Steve Prefontaine already ranks as the fourth fastest miler in the state's history. Steve clocked 4:13.8 in a five-way meet March 23 in Roseburg. The 5-9, 142 lb junior ran quarters of 64.0. 64.5, 64.0 and 61.3 in a race in which he was supposed to run three 64s and come home as fast as possible. 'I leave it all to my coach, Walt McClure,' says Prefontaine. 'What he says, I do.'  

Last weekend July 12, 2019, Sifan Hassan of the Netherlands set the world record in the women's mile with similar splits  2:09, 2:03   4:12.33


Only three Oregonians have ever run faster and they were all seniors who posted their fastest clockings at the end of their final season. They were Dave Deubner (North Eugene), 4:11.2 in 1962, Dave Korb (Corvallis) 4:11.4 in 1967 and Dyrol Burleson (Cottage Grove) former national record holder when he ran 4:13.2 in 1958.”


Fran goes on to tell us that Pre has run a relay 880 in 1:58.5 and a 9:42 two mile. His best mile as a sophomore was 4:29 although he had run a 4:17 time trial just before this meet. He also won the state 1A cross country championship this past fall.


On the same page of this issue just one column over Fran writes that Pre has dropped his two mile time to 9:14. We'll keep an eye on this kid and report more in our next summary. He might be a prospect.


As long as we are on the subject of high school, do you remember when dual meets were a big thing? Return with us now to the meet that decided the championship of the city of Compton, California. Compton beats Centennial 70-48, but the story is in the individual performances. 

Centennial's Edesel Garrison wins the 100 and 440 in 9.7 and 48.2 and anchors winning 41.8 and 3:18.9 relay teams, the last with a 46.7 split which makes up a 20 yard deficit. That 9.7 was necessary as three, count 'em, three other Centennial runners are timed in 9.8. Oh, yeah, there was an also ran Compton kid who ran 9.8 as well. Take a moment to imagine that you run 9.8 in a high school dual meet and finish fifth. May be time to take up golf or tennis.



Compton's Reynaldo Brown, a junior, jumps 6-10 to equal his PR but it is depth that wins the meet. The Tarbabes have kids who run 48.8n and 1:54.2 in the 440 and 880. Their hurdlers run 14.5 and 14.9 in the highs and 19.3 and 19.6 in the lows. That losing mile relay team is clocked in 3:19.2. The field events are passable also, a 53-1 shot put, 14-6 vault and 23-5 long jump.


The remainder of the season provided some solace for Centennial. The Apaches won the state meet with 26 points, doubling the total of the second place team, that's right, Compton.



A word of explanation is necessary. Tarbabes, the mascot for Compton High, has nothing to do with the Uncle Remus story of the Tar Baby. The name comes from the time that Compton High and Compton College shared the same campus. The college teams were the Tartars (Mongolian warriors) so the high school became the Baby Tartars. 



As long as we are rattling on, here is a question for our astute readers. What NCAA champion, world record holder and Olympic gold medalist graduated from Compton High and became the president of Compton College? You have five seconds....tick....tick....tick....tick .....tick. Sorry, times up. If you said Ulis Williams you get three points.



The Pat McMahon story:
Patrick J. McMahon: Distance Runner from County Clare

Patrick Joseph (Pat) McMahon from County Clare, Ireland, came to Oklahoma Baptist University in 1965 sight unseen. Neither McMahon nor OBU Coach Bruce Drummond knew much about the other. Within a few weeks, McMahon won the first of two NAIA national cross country championships and over the next few years developed into a premier long-distance runner.
10067As a young man McMahon ran barefooted through the Irish countryside. Before coming to OBU, he placed third in the All-Ireland Cross Country Championship.

In a 1968 interview with OBU student Bill Hickman, McMahon said that he wanted to go to college and compete as a runner. He learned that American schools offered scholarships to good runners and made contact with a coach in Texas. That coach talked with Drummond, who was able to offer McMahon a scholarship, even after the fall semester had begun.

"He must have been all set to come because he shocked me by showing up here so quickly," Drummond said. "He wasn't very big and I didn't know what we had." Four days later, McMahon won a three-mile race in a dual with Oklahoma Christian with a time of 16:01. Then he won the 6-mile Midwest Federation Cross Country event in Wichita, Kan., in 29:56.4, defeating a major name in track at that time—Jim Ryun of the University of Kansas who would win a silver medal in the mile in the 1968 Olympics. McMahon won these races running without shoes.

A few weeks later he captured the NAIA's National Cross Country Meet championship (4 miles) in Omaha, Neb., in 20:28.5. McMahon donned shoes for the first time that fall because of ice and snow on the course. And then he won the State Federation's 4-mile event in Stillwater in 20:10.5.

McMahon says that his biggest adjustments to Oklahoma were the heat and the food. He had never run in temperatures as warm as he encountered early in the 1965 schedule.

During the spring of 1966, McMahon won the 10,000 meters at the Kansas Relays in 30:19.3. He was third in the 6-mile event at the Drake Relays in 29:12.2. At the Oklahoma Collegiate Conference Meet he won the mile (4:23.4) and the 2-mile (9:50.8). In June, he ran 17th in the 6-mile at the National AAU Championship in New York City in 30:47.2.  In July, he was third in the 15,000 meters at the Michigan City (Ind.) Festival.

In the fall of 1969, McMahon again won the Midwest Federation Cross Country 6-mile in Wichita, Kan., in 29:51. He then won the 10,000 meters at the National AAU's Junior Cross Country Championship in Chicago in 29:54. A week after the Chicago race, he repeated as NAIA cross country champion in Omaha, Neb., covering the 4-mile course in 19:53.6, a record time for the title race. In early December, he tied for first in the Oklahoma Federation Cross Country 4-mile in Stillwater with 19:43.4.

In the spring of 1967, he won the Humboldt (Kan.) Marathon in 2:35:28. Then he won the 2-mile race at the Oklahoma Collegiate Conference Meet in 9:24.5. At the NAIA National Outdoor Meet, McMahon placed third in the 3,000-meter steeplechase.

In September McMahon finished second in the National Senior AAU 25,000-meter race in Albuquerque, N.M. in 1:24:23.4. In November, he finished fourth in the NAIA national cross country meet in Omaha with a time of 20:39.

In January 1968, he won the marathon in 2:21:14 at the World Masters in Las Vegas, Nev. A month later he was first in the College of Artesia (N.M.) Marathon in a time of 2:19:49.7. He won the 3-mile at the Fort Worth Recreation Meet in 14:06.6, and he tied for the mile championship at the Oklahoma Collegiate Conference Meet and won the 2-mile in 9:16.2. At the NAIA National Outdoor Championships he won the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 9:18.7.

In October 1968, McMahon represented Ireland in the Olympic Games in Mexico City. He finished 12th in the marathon in 2:29:21. Returning to OBU, he finished 14th in the NAIA National Cross Country Championship in Oklahoma City.
10068
At the World Masters in Las Vegas in January 1969, McMahon finished fourth in the marathon in 2:27:19. In April he entered the big one—the Boston Marathon. He finished eighth with a time of 2:23:24.

McMahon graduated from OBU with a B.S. degree in health, physical education, and recreation/education. During his OBU career he won three national championships—two in cross country and one in the 3,000-meter steeplechase. He won six NAIA All America awards—four in cross country and two in the steeplechase. He left holding the following OBU records: 2-mile, 9:02.0, 1967; 3-mile, 13:52.8, 1968; 10,000 meters, 28:53.4, 1967; 3,000-meter steeplechase, 9:18.7, 1968; marathon, 2:19:49.7, 1968; 4-mile cross country, 19:11.0, 1966; 6-mile cross country, 29:00.6, 1968. (The marathon time is the only record that he still holds.) And, he qualified for and placed 12th in the marathon in the 1968 Olympics.

His favorite memories of his days at OBU including winning the 1965 cross country championship for OBU and Coach Drummond and winning again in 1966 with Bison runners Willie Rios (10thplace) and Tommy Morris (12th place). "Willie and Tommy were great teammates," McMahon adds.

In 1966-67 McMahon's roommate in the men's dormitory was Al Tucker, Bison All American basketball player. McMahon was 5-7 and Tucker was 6-8—an interesting pair. "We were the best of friends," he says. "When Al was playing in the NBA, we would go the games in Boston to watch him and then spend time together."       After running everything from the mile to the marathon while at OBU, McMahon decided to concentrate on the longer distances. "My favorites were cross country and marathons," he says. "I had a hard time concentrating when I was running laps on a track."
 
McMahon moved to the Boston area and continued competitive running. According to the records of the Association of Road Racing Statisticians, in a three-month time span in the fall of 1969 he was first in the 10,000 meters in 30:50 in the Salem (Mass.) Race; first in the 10-mile event in 48:29 in the Sons of Italy Race in Haverhill, Mass.; first in the 25,000 meters in 1:29:57 in the Around the Cape Ann Race in Gloucester, Mass.; first in the 20,000 meters in 1:04:14 at the New England AAU Championship in Dedham, Mass.; third in the 18,600 meters in 1:00:07 in the Springbank Race in London, Ontario; and first in 30,730 meters in 1:38:20 in the Around the Bay Race in Hamilton, Ontario.

In the spring of 1970, he was first in the New England AAU in New Bedford, Mass., in 30,000 meters in 1:36:59; second in the AAU Championship at Rockville, Md., in 1:28:15; first in a 14,000-meter race at Brighton, Mass., in 43:19, and first in a 15,000-meter run at Wellesley, Mass., in 47:59.

In the 1970 Boston Marathon, McMahon finished third in 2:14:53. According to news reports, it was a rained-soaked, 44-degree day. Ron Hill of Great Britain won in a course record 2:10:30, and Eamon O'Reilly of Washington, D.C., was second in 2:11.3.

In May McMahon finished second in a 5-mile race in Brookline, Mass., in 25:51, and then won a one-hour race in Waltham, Mass., where he covered 19,624 meters. In June he won the 10-mile at Quincy, Mass., in 50:33. McMahon was first in a 20,930 meter race in 1:07:23.4 in Portland, Maine, in September, and first in a 15,000 meter race in 47:49 in Manchester, N.H. in October.

In 1971 he won the following races: Vigorade World Masters marathon in Anaheim, Calif., 2:18:47.4; Mardi Gras Marathon in New Orleans, La., 2:29:28.9; 14,480 meter race in Brighton, Mass., 44:15; and the Waltham, Mass., one-hour race in which he covered 18,617 meters; and a 4-mile race in Acton, Mass., in 18:53.

In the 1971 Boston Marathon, McMahon finished second to Vlvaro Mejia of Columbia. Mejia's time was 2:18:45, and McMahon's time was 2:18:50. Wikepedia's report on this race says, "Mejia finally pulled away from McMahon less than 150 yards from the finish. During the turn off Commonwealth Avenue, McMahon was shot into the crowd. The race director swore that Mejia had elbowed McMahon while running his way to the five-second win."

McMahon says that his second-place finish probably was more due to injuries, badly-blistered feet, and a crowd congestion on the street. He explains that he tried to cut inside his competitor and wound up in the crowd, perhaps due to their movement and perhaps due to a push.

He ran for Ireland in August 1971 in the European Games but injuries plagued him and he retired from running. McMahon says that in retrospect he ran too many races too close together and that he incurred injuries which never healed to the point he could run again.

He taught in Lowell, Mass., until 2001. Then he coached cross country at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School until last fall. He had taught or coached for 41 years. He lives in Maynard, Mass., and he and his wife, Kathy, have two sons and a daughter. They spend part of their time at home and part of their time in San Diego where their daughter and a son and their grandchildren live.

The little Irishman from County Clare may have come to Shawnee, Okla., sight-unseen, but, by the time he left four years later, he was certainly not an unknown. Pat McMahon was high profile on the OBU campus, well known in collegiate track and cross country circles, and very visible among national marathon runners.



George,
Good article about Pat McMahon.  He came to OBU at the same time I entered OU.
 He was the first imported phenom I ever raced against (behind).  He ran with a very 
quick cadence, which apparently made him very efficient over cross-country courses.  
One little quirk of his I've always remembered is that he would sometimes smoke a 
cigarette after enjoying a post-race meal in a restaurant.  His teammate Willie Rios
was from my hometown, Lawton, Oklahoma.  He ran with a trademark garter on his 
upper arm in high school and was fast enough to get away with it.  As a junior, he ran 
4:15.7, which in 1965, was the best time in Oklahoma.  I heard that he trained much 
harder his senior year, possibly trying to run workouts like Jim Ryun was running in 
Kansas.  The result: Willie had a best of 4:17.0 as a senior.
Bill Blewett

Bill,
I remember seeing Willie run in a high school meet in Norman and wearing that
garter.  I thought it was some Native American symbol.   He was way ahead of 
his contemporary Oklahoma highschool runners.   Later I read that he ran for Puerto 
Rico in the 1968 Olympics.  At age 19 Williefinished 10th in his 1500 heat in Mexico 
City in 4:14.47.  

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Being a former runner and fellow Clareman, I would like to make contact with Pat McMahon as I have been a fan of his since learning of his winning the Leinster Novice title in 1963.

George Brose said...

I have no info on Pat, but you could try contacting the Oklahoma Baptist University Alumni office. Often they have that information.

Paddy Brassil said...

Sorry, My name is Paddy Brassil address 39 Woodvale Road, Beaumont,Black, Cork City, Ireland

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