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Home Track & Field

Jim Grelle, 1936-2020, Oregon Mile Legend Jim Grelle Passes Away, Obit by Peter John L. Thompson

RBR AdminbyRBR Admin
June 16, 2020
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1 Jim Grelle becomes the fourth US athlete to run sub 4 minuites for the mile Mt SAC Relays 1962.jpgBreaking 4 minutes for the first time at Mt SAC in the Los Angeles Track Club singlet

2 Possibly winning NCAA Mile 1959.jpgRunning for Oregon – Possibly winning the NCAA Mile in 1959

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This obit of Jim Grelle was written at the request of the Grelle family, by Peter John L. Thompson. Jim Grelle was one of the finest American milers of any generation, and a man who loved his family, friends, university and his sport. That Jim Grelle was coached by both Bill Bowerman and Mihaly Igloi, is fascinating. That he excelled under both gives us just a peak into the amazing athlete that was Jim Grelle.

This obit is a fine way to learn more about this amazing man. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and friends.

We thank Peter John L. Thompson for this piece honoring the late Oregon Duck and Olympian.

Oregon Mile Legend Jim Grelle Passes Away

The world of Track and Field Athletics is deeply saddened by the news that Olympian, James Edward (Jim) Grelle, the fourth American to run under 4 minutes for the mile and a true running pioneer, passed peacefully on 13 June at the age of 83. He had been under home hospice care for some months and was surrounded by close family.

During his illustrious career, Jim Grelle set US Records in the mile with a time of 3:55.4 in 1965, the indoor mile with 4:03.6 in 1961 and in the 2-mile, a distance that he rarely ran, but in 1966 tied with Jim Ryun to record a time of 8:25.2. He was one of the first track and field athletes to have a ‘running career’ after college and benefited from being coached by two world-renowned and innovative running coaches, Bill Bowerman and Mihály Iglói.

3 Jim Grelle and Tommy Sullivan 1961 Compton Mile.jpegJim Grelle and Tommy Sullivan, Compton 1961

In Track and Field Athletics, the 1950s and ’60s was the time for the Mile, inspired by Roger Bannister’s breaking the 4 minute barrier in May, 1954. It was only eight years later, in 1962, that Grelle ran his first sub-4 minute mile. Such was Jim Grelle’s performance abilities that he raced the mile often and by 1967 had broken the 4 minute barrier on a prodigious 21 occasions, the most “sub-4s” of any athlete in the world at that time. He was part of a golden era for American miling when, in 1962, six of the top ten milers in the world were Americans. This global success has never been matched since.

Jim Grelle was born in Portland, Oregon on September 30, 1936 and growing up would play with running, setting himself against imagined adversaries, around and within his neighbourhood. But it was in 1952, as a Freshman at Portland’s Lincoln High School that Jim Grelle really discovered he could run competitively, despite never having previously heard of Cross-Country running. On the track, he chose the 880 yards run and ran well but, in that era, a Freshman could not run for Varsity, or in the State Championships. In his Sophomore year he recalls that he was, “3rd or 4th in the 880 at State.” His Junior year saw him improve to take his first State title at the 880 yards run, in “about 2:01”. He successfully defended his State title in 1955, his Senior year, reducing the State Meet Record time from 1:59.9, down to 1:58.0. The fourth-place finisher was a Cleveland High School senior, Phil Knight.

Oregon’s renowned coach, Bill Bowerman, recruited Grelle to run at the University of Oregon, where he was moved, unwillingly at first, to racing the mile. As an Oregon Duck, he quickly developed, having many well-known runners and track and field athletes around him, including, as a 3-year teammate and frat brother, Phil Knight. Grelle learnt through his own experience that Bill Bowerman, “… really knew how to get people ready for May and June. All my best races, the whole four years of college, were at the national championships.”

When the University of Oregon milers finished first or second, or both, in the NCAA Championships during nine straight seasons, Jim Grelle played a significant part in that heritage. He was called the most durable of the Ducks’ string of distance standouts. He was at his best in the big meets, placing second in the 1957 and 1958 NCAA Championships Mile, both times behind Ron Delany, the 1956 Olympic 1500m Champion. In 1959, he crowned his collegiate career by winning the NCAA Championships Mile in 4:03.9.

In 1960, Jim Grelle won the National Championships 1500m and later qualified, with a second-place at the US Olympic Trials in Palo Alto, CA , for the US Olympic Team to compete in the Rome Olympic Games. In this introduction to the Olympic cauldron, he made the 9-man 1500m final by placing second in his heat in 3:43.5. The final, however, was intense from the gun as Herb Elliott of Australia front ran to the title and a 3:35.6 World Record performance. Grelle finished in 8th place, with 3:45.0. and set his sights firmly on future seasons and the Olympic Games of 1964.

Following graduation from Oregon, Grelle had remained training in Eugene with Bill Bowerman but then in 1961 he decided to make a move to Los Angeles, the new epicenter for the mile. He joined the Los Angeles Track Club to be trained under the secretive and punishing regime of Hungarian coach, Mihály Iglói. According to author and fellow Oregon runner Kenny Moore, Iglói welcomed Grelle with 35 quarters in his first workout.

It is difficult to imagine, in these days of sponsored professional track and field athletes, what it must have been like to train so intensely and at such a volume twice a day, each day and work. Jim Grelle absorbed the training and was still able to hold down a demanding, full-time job with Colgate Palmolive. And, it proved productive when, in 1962, Iglói took his Los Angeles Track Club for a fabled tour of European meets, with Grelle running a personal best 3:56.7 in the mile. “Everybody said the American runner is lazy, don’t work,” Iglói told Sports Illustrated. “Now the American distance runner is the best in the world.”

Going into the 1964 US Olympic Team Trials, Grelle was confident in his abilities but perhaps overlooked the threat from a precocious 17 year-old high schooler, Jim Ryun. In the closest of finishes for the first four athletes, Dyrol Burleson won in 3:41.2, followed by Tom O’Hara (3:41.5), and Ryun just edged out Grelle to take 3rd place, both timed at 3:41.9 but leaving Grelle in a non-qualifying 4th place. With typical good humor and acceptance, he re-focussed his season and made a move back to Portland.

He started competing for Portland’s famed Multnomah Athletic Club and, now self-coached, continued to have competitive success up to and including the 1967 season, when he ran his 21st and final sub-4 minute mile. He had been coached by two of the world’s best coaches and when he returned to Portland in 1965, it was natural that he would begin coaching others as well as himself. He started coaching at the University of Portland, where he continued until 1972.

When people speak of Jim Grelle it is with a clear memory. His son, Jim, recalls, ” It was always said and said by all, that he enjoyed his running, competing against and the company of his fellow competitors.” He explains, “My father had a ‘Laser focus’. He was humble, gracious, gregarious and he took what he had from running and used it in his life. There was this balance of instruction and a quiet voice.”

A letter from a former competitor, Tom Sullivan, received by Jim and Jean Grelle in March of this year is perhaps illustrative of the stature and essential nature of the man. Tom wrote, “On June 2, 1961 I was invited out from Chicago to run in the prestigious Compton Invitational Track and Field Meet in Compton, CA. I was an 18-year old high school student who had the top prep half mile and mile times in the country at that time….. I surprised my self when I shot into the lead of the eight other runners in the race at the gun lap and could not believe I was still leading coming off the final turn with 100 meters to go. That is when you passed me and I still remember your encouraging words as you passed me. You said something like: “Come on Tommy, you can do it, follow me.” We both ran close together and you beat me by only 0.8 seconds.”

“I couldn’t figure out why all the reporters and officials hovered around me and not you at the finish line. One reporter said: “Do you know what your time was?” It was 4:03.5. I broke the National High School record by 5.4 seconds and also claimed the World Junior (under 19 years of age) mile record….. I will always remember that evening, your sportsmanship assistance and encouragement to me.”

In retirement, one of Grelle’s favorite weekly routines was meeting with a group of former runners and coaches “about my age and a little bit younger” for coffee. The group meets on Saturday mornings and conversation generally revolves around track and running.

4 Jim and Jean Grelle.jpgJim and Jean Grelle

Jim Grelle is survived by his wife, Jean and their two children, Jim and Leslie and two grandchildren. A Celebration of Life will be scheduled at a later date.

He was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 1981, the only Lincoln High School track athlete to achieve this honor. He was also inducted into the Mt. SAC Relays Hall of Fame in 1991 and to the University of Oregon Hall of Fame in 1994.

Peter John L. Thompson.

This obituary has been approved by the Grelle family.

For further information contact:

541-84-8163

runfree@btinternet.com

Attached Photos

  1. Breaking 4 minutes for the first time at Mt SAC in the Los Angeles Track Club singlet
  2. Running for Oregon – Possibly winning the NCAA Mile in 1959
  3. The 1961 Compton Mile showing Jim Grelle winning and with Tommy Sullivan 0.8 seconds behind in a US High School and World Junior Record (photo courtesy of Mike Fanelli, from private archives)
  4. A recent photo of Jim and Jean Grelle

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