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This Day in Track & Field-February 8, Howard Drew, Eamonn Coghlan, Ajee’Wilson and Ellie Purrier St. Pierre! by Walt Murphy’s News and Results Service

This Day in Track & Field-February 8, Howard Drew, Eamonn Coghlan, Ajee'Wilson and Ellie Purrier St. Pierre! by Walt Murphy's News and Results Service

Walt Murphy is one of the finest track geeks that I know. Walt does #ThisDayinTrack&FieldHistory, an excellent daily service providing the true geek’s stories about our sport. You can check out the service for FREE with a free one-month trial subscription! (email: WaltMurphy44@gmail.com ) for the entire daily service. We will post a few historic moments each day, beginning February 1, 2024.

This Day in Track & Field–February 8

by Walt Murphy’s News and Results Service  (wmurphy25@aol.com), used with permission.

(c)Copyright 2024-all rights reserved. It may not be reprinted or retransmitted without permission.

 1916—USC’s Howard Drew set a World Record of 10-flat for 100-yards at the NYAC Games, which were held at the 22nd Regiment Armory (the current Armory).

Drew had been favored to win the 100-meter at the 1912 Olympics but pulled a muscle while winning his semi-final race in Stockholm. Ralph Craig, who had been beaten by Drew at the Eastern U.S. Olympic Trials, won the gold medal in the 100 (and the 200).

Read more about Drew here: http://www.howarddrew.com/

A 2nd World Record was set by future Hall-of-Famer Ted Meredith, who ran 59.8 for 500 yards.

         (For Subscribers):

            https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1916/02/09/100189843.html?pageNumber=8

1991–Competing at the Vitalis/Meadowlands Inv., where Eamonn Coghlan set the Mile World Record of 3:49.78 in 1983, 20-year-old Noureddine Morceli of Algeria fell short in his attempt to set a new mark (and collect the $100,000 bonus that was on the line). His winning time of  3:50.81 was still the 3rd-fastest in history, trailing only Coghlan, who had also run 3:50.6 in 1981.

        Only a year or two before that meeting, director Ray Lumpp received a call from his old friend, Ted Banks, who had been the head coach at UTEP during that school’s incredible NCAA run during the 1970s and early 1980s. Banks was now at Riverside Community College in California and was asking Lumpp if he had room in his mile for this promising young runner he was now coaching. Saying his field was packed, Lumpp politely turned down Banks’s request. The runner, of course, was Morceli!

Sports Illustrated Vault:

http://tinyurl.com/SIVaultMorceli91

2020—Three American Records were set in 70 minutes at the Millrose Games at N.Y.’s Armory.

Donavan Brazier ran 1:44.22 in the Men’s 800 to break his own-year-old mark of 1:44.41.

This record was totally unexpected, with…

CLICK HERE to Read the Full Original Article at runblogrun…