Heard today from Michael Solomon about the passing of Bill Nieder. After years of domination by Perry O'Brien, Bill Nieder brought shot putting to the next level. This was in the pre-PED era. He too was looking over his shoulder at the new kid on the block, Dallas Long. But when the cards were on the table in Rome in 1960, Nieder was the champ. After his days of throwing ended he had a very brief career as a boxer, and to his credit saw that some other form of work might be a good career move. Bill Nieder was 89 years old. George
A couple of comments have come in regarding my statement above concerning steroid and/or PED use. Those readers feel that PED's were in use by 1960. However no one claimed that Bill Nieder was juiced. And it was not as widespread as more recent times. For sure the Eastern bloc countries were a case of institutionalized cheating in that era and continued up into modern times.
I do remember that some of the football players at Oklahoma were going down to a gym in Baton Rouge, LA in the summer and coming back a bit larger than God intended.
Bill Nieder grew up in Lawrence
and won a gold medal in the 1960 Rome Olympics by putting the shot 64 feet, 6
3/4 inches, a world record. He was a 1952 graduate of Lawrence's Liberty
Memorial High School. Former Lawrence high school legend and University of
Kansas shot put standout Bill Nieder, who held significant records in the event
at both schools, died last week, his family confirmed to the Journal-World.
Nieder was 89. Known best for winning the gold medal at the 1960 Olympics in
Rome, Nieder might never have dabbled in the shot put if not for a football
injury during his sophomore season at KU. Taken out after the whistle on a play
against TCU in the season opener in 1953, Nieder tore up his knee and nearly had
to have part of his leg amputated. Doctors at the time told him his athletic
career had reached its end, but the fiery Nieder was undeterred. It might have
been the end of his football career, but so much still awaited him. “He always
told me that football was his main love,” his nephew, Mike Nieder, told the
Journal-World on Monday. “And maybe that’s what motivated him to do so well in
the shot because that was all he could do.” All he could do was pretty darn
good. A two-time Olympic medalist, Nieder won silver in 1956 in Melbourne before
winning gold four years later. But even that wasn’t a walk in the park. At the
Olympic trials leading up to the 1960 Olympics, a pre-trials injury led to
Nieder finishing fourth in the shot put and he qualified for the team as an
alternate. As Team USA prepped for Rome, Nieder responded by breaking the world
record in one of the final meets of the season. Mike Nieder said his uncle used
to tell him that one of the three team members came down with a “mystery
illness” that allowed Nieder to join the team and win gold. One other story Mike
Nieder recalled hearing was that of a bet between his uncle and KU legend Wilt
Chamberlain. Chamberlain, Mike Nieder recalled, bet Nieder that he could outdo
him in the shot put. He did. But there was a catch. Rather than using the
standard technique, Chamberlain stood backwards and used the leverage of his
long arms while launching the shot over his head with both hands. The throw
would have been illegal in a track and field setting, but Mike Nieder said it
won the bet. Long before he became an Olympic champion, Nieder set the shot put
record at LHS that stood for 59 years. Nieder always said he expected his high
school mark to be broken and that he would treat the LHS athlete who broke it to
a steak dinner. That happened in 2012, when Nieder flew from California to
Lawrence to treat former LHS track standout Blake Hocking to the meal. Hocking’s
record of 62 feet, 9 inches, was two feet better than Nieder’s mark. He became
the country’s first prep athlete to break the 60-foot barrier with a 12-pound
shot and, later, the first college athlete to break the 60-foot mark with a
16-pound shot. Nieder owned the world record three times before his career was
finished and he went into the National Track & Field Hall of Fame in 2006. After
he was finished competing, Nieder stayed close to the sports world, working for
3M to help develop the world’s first ever artificial athletic turf. He also
later helped sell synthetic track surfaces. According to the family, Nieder
passed away peacefully at his home in Angels Camp, California, where he lived
for the past two decades, splitting time between his home there and a home in
Maui. The family will host a celebration of life for Nieder on Nov. 13 at
Ironstone Vineyards in Murphys, California.
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