Athletics News

Casey Carrigan (1968): High School athletes who made the U.S. Olympic Team, from the Athletes Only Archives (2004), by Mark Winitz and James Dunaway

Casey Carrigan (1968): High School athletes who made the U.S. Olympic Team, from the Athletes Only Archives (2004), by Mark Winitz and James Dunaway

 

Remember how amazed everyone was when Sydney McLaughlin made the Olympic team as a high schooler in 2016 at the 400m hurdles, and Noah Lyles came oh so close, finishing 4th in the 200m in 2016?

High Schoolers have made the U.S. Olympic teams! We wrote about 12 of them!

This series was a hugely popular series in our publication, Athletes Only, sent to 500,000 high schoolers from 1996-2015, four times a year. 

As I was clearing out my Dad’s house, I found this 2008 copy of one of our magazines in his office. As I opened it, I found this excellent piece by Mark Winitz and James Dunaway, initially written in 2004, on 12 High school athletes who made the US Olympic team. Mark Winitz and James Dunaway were two of the writers who wrote for the most for American Athletics, American Track & Field, and California Track & Field News. From 2003 until 2014, near the time of his death, the late James Dunaway wrote, edited, mentored, and exchanged strange text messages and phone calls.

Many times there were messages like, ” You are probably going to fire me after this phone call, so call back soon.” Mark Winitz, one of the most prolific writers, was one of the few people who could calm James Dunaway down. James loved working with Mark.

I can think of no better way than to put these two men’s influential pieces on RunBlogRun. Please enjoy! The other 11 athletes will be added to RunBlogRun.

Our first story is on Casey Carrigan.

 

Casey Carrigan, 1968, pole vault, Orting, WA high school

In Orting (pop. 1,200), Casey Carrigan started pole vaulting at an age when most boys are still in Little League. He and his two older brothers lived on 40 acres near Mt. Ranier, and the boys made rope swings (think Tarzan), high jump, and pole vault pits in their “backyard”.

With plenty of wood available, they built their own jumping standards. At first, they even used willow trunks for vaulting poles. Mom and Dad drove the boys to competitions all over the state and bought Casey his first fiberglass pole in 8th grade! Never formally coached, Casey learned technique watching top vaulters in person and on TV, and his older brother Andy helped him iron out the kinks. Casey jumped 14-6 as a high schooler freshman in 1966, 15-8 as a soph (won State both years), and began to think, ” I might have a shot at the Olympic Trials.”

Next year, barely 17, he took third in the AAU (now USATF), setting a high school record at 16-8. He then went on to…

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