Here is a unique story about a father and son both on the same path in their running. Darryl Taylor was on one of the top high school 2 mile relay teams in 1959 with Excelsior High School. In those days no high school team (in Ohio, my home state)had yet broken 8:00 for the 4x880 yards. I only know that, because Dayton Roosevelt in my home town were the first in 1962 at the Ohio St. Relays April 23, 1962, and I knew and had run against them for several years before going to college. They were Warren Hand, Charles Reed, and cousins Lee Calhoun and Allen Payne. See photo below this article. Even today it is a feather in a team's cap to get an average under two minutes per man. These guys were the best in their day. In 1984 Darryl would be coaching at Rancho Alamitos HS and his son Greg would be running the same event with almost identical times. It is exceptional to see a son follow in his father's footsteps, although the new tracks don't leave footprints. Take that as a little dig from an old timer. I'm sure I'll be forgiven. Darryl Taylor the father in this story and I have become friends through this blog and even discerned that we ran against each other almost 60 years ago in this event in Albequerque. Darryl for Long Beach State and me for Oklahoma. I don't think we ran the same legs but we were breathing the same air that night and we both got to see Oklahoma State's team have their break out race that would start their journey to breaking the world record in the two mile relay. So here is Darryl's story
George Brose
A TALE OF TWO TAYLORS
A FATHER AND SON STORY 25 YEARS IN THE MAKING
My son Greg has his 54th birthday coming up today and I thought I’d look into something we both shared over a span of 25 years. After doing some initial research I was profoundly surprised at how very similar these two events actually were. Ever since the Mt. Sac Relays of 1984 were contested, I was much aware of how similar these two were on the surface, my race in 1959 and Greg’s race in 1984. The deeper I dug, the more intriguing the comparison became. Briefly in explanation, in 1959 I competed in the First Annual Mt. Sac Relays while wearing the uniform of Excelsior High School, Norwalk, California. Situated directly across the street from Cerritos College, over my four years at Excelsior I watched construction take place that would transform a well established dairy-land into a brand new Junior College that I would attend immediately upon graduation. Fast forward 25 years to 1984 and I was enjoying my 19th year as Track & Field coach of Rancho Alamitos High School in Garden Grove, California. Over those 19 years I had made yearly trips with my best distance runners to compete in what had become one of the world’s elite competitions for aspiring Olympic competitors as well as a great opportunity for high school runners to gather and match strides with some of the top prep programs in the country.
The event I competed with on a chilly night in 1959 was the 2-Mile Relay where four men ran 880 yards each. My 1984 Rancho Alamitos 2-Mile Relay had done well on the Invitational circuit, having won the event at the Santa Ana Relays, Tustin Relays and Katella Relays and in the process broke the former school record set the year before. Early in my search I realized how similar this team matched up with my own high school team some 25 years ago. Further research found even more similarities:
***Both teams had a TAYLOR running, in this case a father and his son
***Both TAYLORS set personal high school bests on this night of competition
***Both teams consisted of three SENIORS and a JUNIOR
***Both teams featured a pair of Sub-2:00 legs
***Both teams, while setting a new school record, placed 2nd at the finish line
***Both teams led the race until the final lap
***Both teams had to defeat several top Southern California teams in the process
***Both teams and their final times remain school records, Excelsior counting 61 years/Rancho 36 years
***Both teams won their event at the Santa Ana Relays 25 years apart with multiple wins over the season.
***Both Teams final times were nearly identical, Excelsior’s 8:02.0 and Rancho’s 8:02.4
***Each coach had a different approach to the race, my Coach Newman anchored with his fastest runner. Coach Taylor had his fastest runner lead off from a standing start.
***Excelsior’s team ran under perfect conditions at night while Rancho faced a stiff wind throughout a daytime competition that had the stadium flags flapping horizontally around the track.
***Excelsior’s team ran on a dirt track, albeit one of the best around in 1959, while Rancho ran on a state of the art All-Weather track.
FOR EXCELSIOR IN 1959
Don Pickering Darryl Taylor Chonito Perez Steve Bruhns
DON PICKERING: A senior coming into this competition Don had a best mile time of 4:49.7, had run in the State XC Finals in Modesto as a Junior and was returning as a regular Varsity member of the track team. His best 880 going to MT SAC was the 2:04.4 he had recorded while leading off our winning effort at the SANTA ANA RELAYS in March. Don would cap his running careen by reaching the CIF PRELIMS with a school record breaking 1:26.4 later in the season.
CHONITO PEREZ: A senior distance runner who, during the 1959 season, had taken down one of the school’s most cherished records in the mile, his 4:28.7 at the COMPTON CUP erasing Art Pitmans 4:28.8 as a Sophomore at Compton. Chonito also ran in the State XC Championships and prepared for this big event by posting a best of 2:03.7 as second man in the Santa Ana Relays.
STEVE BRUHNS: Steve was the only Junior on the team but had earned a spot on this team with several close finishes in dual meets at 880 yards as well as setting a Junior 660 record vs Bellflower at 1:25.1. Steve was a solid performer for the team running 2:01.5 at Santa Ana and 2:01.6 in the Bellflower Relays. Steve would go on to Coach at Gahr High School right down the street from Excelsior.
DARRYL TAYLOR: I was a senior on this night with ambitions to run beyond high school and hoping for a personal best at Mt.SAC. I had broken the Varsity 880 record as a junior running 1:57.7 at Compton as well as several clockings under 2:00 in dual meets and Invitationals the year before. I had earned my first CIF medal as a Junior, placing 3rd in the B-660 in 1958 after running 1:23.8 in League Finals. My best 880 of my Senior year was again at Compton where I ran 1:57.2 in a winning effort.
FOR RANCHO ALAMITOS IN 1984
Barry Baker Phil Porter Brent Stauter Greg Taylor
PHIL PORTER: This team’s only Junior but a future CIF Finalist and school record holder in the 440 with a sub 50.0 mark of 49.6. As their coach I was scrambling to find a fourth man for this concerted effort to run a fast 2-Mile Relay and after Phil helped clinch another Garden Grove League Cross-Country Championship with a sub 16:00 clocking at Mile Square Park I knew I had the right man for the job.
GREG TAYLOR: My son, who transferred from Edison High School to Rancho Alamitos after attending my Yosemite Running Camp since in the 2nd grade and in the process had close ties to several of Rancho’s best. Greg was Garden Grove League F/S Champion in his first year, hitting 4:41.0 and came to Mt. SAC with a best of 2:00.9 recorded at the Tustin Relays a few weeks before Mt. SAC. Two hours after this Mt. SAC record relay, Greg led off the Distance Medley Relay with a best ever 1320 of 3:16.8 handing the baton in first place.
BARRY BAKER: Barry had shown flashes of a fine half-miler right from his Freshman year running 2:05.5 before shocking us all with a sub 2:00 a year later to become only the 2nd 10th grader in Rancho history to break that magical barrier. Barry followed that up with 1:58.8 as a Junior and 1:58.6 as a Senior. Barry was also a prominent fixture on three Garden Grove League Cross-Country Championships and a strong team member or Rancho’s 3rd and 4th place team finishes in the CIF Finals.
BRENT STAUTER: Brent transitioned from a long jump/triple jump/sprinter to cross-country/middle distance runner after his Sophomore year. During the summer between his Junior and Senior year, Brent and Greg pursued a 1000 mile summer of long runs, spending a month on Kauai as part of that challenge. Having run 2:00.7 as a Junior, that summer of hard work paid dividends in his Senior year, as a few short days after this Mt. SAC Relays he broke the school record for the 800 meters, hitting 1:55.5, a record that remains after some 36 years of challenges.
BEST RELAY TIMES 1959 AND 1984 COMBINED
YEAR 1ST LEG 2ND LEG 3RD LEG ANCHOR PLACE TIME
1959: Pickering-2:03.8 Bruhns-1:59.8 Perez-2:02.6 Taylor-1:56.2 2ND = 8:02.0
1984: Stauter-1:57.6 Taylor-2:01.5 Porter-2:03.4 Baker-1:59.9 2ND =8:02.4
1984: Stauter-1;56.6 Taylor-2:00.9 Porter-2:04.8 Baker-2:01.6 1ST =8:02.6
1959: Pickering-2:03.4 Perez-2:02.7 Bruhns-2:00.5 Taylor-1:57.8 1ST =8:04.4
1959: Pickering-2:04.6 Perez-2:03.4 Bruhns-2:00.6 Taylor-1:58.0 1ST =8:06.6
1984: Stauter-1;58.4 Porter-2:03.2 Adams-2:06.2 Taylor-2:01.5 1ST =8:09.5
For the record, our team in 1959 had a much easier time breaking the school record. The standing record in 1959 for Excelsior High School had been established back in 1957 in the Long Beach City College Relays held on their campus track. On April 22, a team of two Sophomores, a Junior and a Senior earned a 4th place finish as the Varsity school record holder in the 880 at the time anchored the team in 8:25.0. I was one of the two 10th graders and I led off, running 2:05.7. I passed the baton to Junior Ernie Chadbourne who chipped in a 2:09.5. Next up was super-soph Art Pitman, a 4:28.7 miler already who ran 2:05.5 before handing off to Al Guzman, our only Senior and the school record holder at 2:01.0. Al ran the fastest time as he anchored in 2:04.3. Total time was 8:25.0.
That record stood for one year as in 1958 at the Santa Ana Relays a different line-up took almost three seconds off that record, running 8:22.5 while again, placing 4th. This time it was a single Sophomore, two Juniors and a Senior and for me, this meet marked my first time under the 2:00 barrier, a major objective for any high school middle distance runner. Splits came in like this: Soph Steve Bruhns opened strong in 2:03.3. Junior Chonito Perez followed in 2:08.6 as the future school record holder in the mile (4:28.7) tested the waters as a middle distance runner. Senior Ernie Chadbourne had an off day, running 2:10.6 which gave me a host of targets to aim for while chasing down those other runners. My 1:59.5 made my day as we moved up to 4th place just inside the medals. A return to the Santa Ana Relays showed some great strides as we finally won one early in the season, hitting 8:08.4 from Pickering’s 2:04.4-Perez’s 2:03.7, Bruhns’ 2:01.5 and my slightly faster 1:58.8 for a new record. Mt. SAC’s electric atmosphere gave us everything we needed to make one more big drop to make a splash inTrack & Field News.
The Rancho Alamitos team’s target was a much faster 8:06.9 record, recorded in 1977 which like our own challenge paired a couple of sub 2:00 marks. The 2-Mile Relay mark went back my 3rd year coaching when in 1968 we finally had a good group of hard working guys. A sophomore and three Juniors ran 8:19.5, Chevalier leading off 2:08.5, Soph Gary Cauble-2:07.6, Junior Ted Bechtel 2:02.0 before Junior Jim Carne anchored in 2:02.5. Seven years later in 1975 the record took a big hit to 8:11.3, a great time without a sub 2:00. Breggar Moore set the stage with a 2:02.3, future 1:56 man Steve Besaw 2:02.9, Mike Houghton’s 2:02.3 before Jeff Allison, only a sophomore finished in 2:03.8. A short two years later another new mark saw three half-mile specialists all Juniors getting closer to that 8:00 mark, Bill Bruton starting in 1:59.8, Pat Boles racing to a PR 2:02.5, Harold Besaw at 2:05.8 and Future CIF Finalist Lonnie Pyle grabbing a 1:58.8 on the anchor to take five full seconds while lowering the record to 8:06.9. The record dropped to 8:03.9 at Mt. SAC in 1983 with three of the 1984 record breakers assisting Senior Gary Ruddell in a nice improvement to 8:03.9: Stauter-2:01.4 to lead off, Gary Ruddell at 2:00.1, Greg Taylor 3rd man 2:04.3 and Barry Baker earning his fastest time as a Junior at 1:58.8. Our record foursome prepped for Mt. SAC at Tustin Relays in 8:02.1 with Stauter blazing 1:56.6, Taylor 2:00.9, Porter-2:04.8 and Baker racing 1:58.1 on anchor. So, the stage was set for a long lasting school record that stands today after 36 years at 8:02.4.
Here is that Dayton Roosevelt team (7:58.9) I mentioned in the intro.
I was able to find a newspaper article from Dayton saying that the Roosevelt team did get the national record for the 2MR in 1962 at 7:49.85. I didn't know the high schools were getting timed to 1/00 sec. and not sure where that race was run. Perhaps someone can find that for us. GeorgeThe following comment came from Tom Trumpler:
Your message brought back some fond memories. Growing up in Grand Rapids, Michigan, we never had much experience with events like the two-mile relay. The only two relays were the 880 relay, and the mile-relay. Things have change since, however. Nevertheless, Paul Wiegerink, our far-sighted track coach, entered us in the Spartan Relays (indoor) in 1966. I was part of a two-mile relay team that ran 8:29.7. (Our times, if I remember correctly were 2:07, 2:07, 2:09, and 2:05 plus the fractions). That had to have been a school record because it was the first time that we ever ran the event.). We didn't score any points although I think that we couldn't have been far off from 6th, which did score. If they had run that event in the City's dual meets, we would have won in a walk each time.
That 8:29 is still a respectable time for that event in high school, wouldn't you say?
Best wishes,
Bruce Geelhoed
And one more minor item I should have mentioned. In 1959 there were several schools that had already broken the 8:00 barrier, including Bellflower HS right over the riverbed from Excelsior. Ty Hadley and his Bellflower team mates lowered the National Record to 7:56 before he and a team mate enrolled at OCCIDENTAL COLLEGE where they also set a World Record outdoors. Ty Hadly was a 1:59 half-miler at Bellflower and took a full 11 seconds off that high school mark to run 1:48 for Occidental. Ty later spent a few years coaching at Long Beach State before I arrived on campus. I've always wondered what I might have run had we run under Coach Hadley. Again, thanks to both Tom and Chuck for their posting those fine Texas 2-Mile relay performances. Made me wonder if the anchor man LEE CALHOUN was related to the great Olympic hurdler of the '50s,LEE CALHOUN. I hope we get some further contributions.
1 comment:
George-I truly appreciate the comments from Tom and Chuck. Again, a minor comment or two. In 1959, the high school only Invitational was called THE COMPTON CUP which I believe was later changed to the COMPTON RELAYS. Another change was going to a day meet instead of racing at night, which also added another element of excitement for high schoolers. If you picture the Compton track and stadium, called RAMSAUR STADIUM I believe, we did indeed run out of the chute and finish on the opposite side of the track but the 880 took 3 turns to complete as 6 turns would go much beyond 88o. And, as a high school coach for 46 years I was well aware of the switch from yards to meters but didn't bother to mention it as it was the final time for the 4X800 meter relay vs the 2-mile relay that was remarkably similar. Had I either converted the 1959 race to meters, we would have run, according to T&F News, 7:59.2; had we converted the 4x800 to 4x880 the final time would have penciled out to 8:04.7 and the comparison, although still interesting, would not have matched up as well when staged side by side. All minor details in the end.
And one more minor item I should have mentioned. In 1959 there were several schools that had already broken the 8:00 barrier, including Bellflower HS right over the riverbed from Excelsior. Ty Hadley and his Bellflower team mates lowered the National Record to 7:56 before he and a team mate enrolled at OCCIDENTAL COLLEGE where they also set a World Record outdoors. Ty Hadly was a 1:59 half-miler at Bellflower and took a full 11 seconds off that high school mark to run 1:48 for Occidental. Ty later spent a few years coaching at Long Beach State before I arrived on campus. I've always wondered what I might have run had we run under Coach Hadley. Again, thanks to both Tom and Chuck for their posting those fine Texas 2-Mile relay performances. Made me wonder if the anchor man LEE CALHOUN was related to the great Olympic hurdler of the '50s,LEE CALHOUN. I hope we get some further contributions.
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