Walt Murphy’s News and Results Service (wmurphy25@aol.com)
This Day in Track & Field/X-Country–March 28
1903–The first-ever International X-C Championships were held in Hamilton, Scotland, and involved only one race (men–12.9k) among the 4 British “home” countries–England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales. England’s Alf Shrubb won the first of his two consecutive titles.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1903_International_Cross_Country_Championships
Wiki Bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Shrubb
1914—Elliot Ballistier, a junior at Morris H.S. in the Bronx, won the 880y at the Clinton Games in 2:04.8 to set the first of what would become a multitude of National High School Records at NY’s Armory over the next 100+ years.
The next time you visit the Armory, take the time to notice the small plaques on the wall as you walk up both sets of stairs to the track level. They commemorate every record (H.S., College, American, World) ever set at the Armory (the brainchild of Jack Pfeifer)!
1943 Cornelius “Dutch” Warmerdam jumped 15-8 ½ (4/79) in Chicago to set his last World Indoor Record in the Pole Vault. https://www.usatf.org/athlete-bios/cornelius-dutch-warmerdam
1959–In a great Shot Put competition in Santa Barbara that featured three past and future Olympic Champions (and World Record holders), 18-year old Dallas Long (1964 gold) equalled Parry O’Brien’s World Record of 63-2 (19.25m) to beat Bill Nieder (62-9 [19.12+m]/gold-1960) and O’Brien (62-1/4 [18.90+m]/gold–1952-1956).
1965—When Lieutenant Billy Mills, the winner of the 10,000-Meters at the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo, was told by U.S. Marine Corps Special Services that he had been invited to compete in a race appropriately called the Cinqui Mulini(Five Mills) Cross Country event in San Vittore Olona, Italy, he immediately accepted, since the event organizers had also invited his wife Patricia to join him on the trip, which would include some sightseeing in Rome.
But the AAU, the U.S. governing body at the time, wasn’t happy with the arrangement. Said Mills, “They informed me Patricia could not go! Our AAU would not allow her to accept her invitation and if she did I would lose my amateur standing and no longer be allowed to compete in the sport of track and field, cross country or road racing”.
When the hosts were told that Mills would now have to decline the invitation, they came up…
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