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Home Athletics history

This Day in Track & Field, January 25, Glenn Cunningham outkicks Joe Mangan in Boston (1936), Born on this Day: Steve Prefontaine, by Walt Murphy

RBR Adminby RBR Admin
January 26, 2026
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Where does Nike running go from here?  (from the Archives, May 10, 2010, with updates)

Kenny Moore, Steve Prefontaine, 1974-1975, photo by Jeff Johnson, supplied by Walt Chadwick, and used with permission of both of these kind and thoughtful human beings.

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Walt Murphy’s News and Results Service  ([email protected])

This Day in Track & Field–January  25

RelatedPosts

2026 Winter Middle Distance Training (800m-5,000m), Monday, January 27, 2026, Week 4, Day 2, Tuesday is a Tempo Day!

This Day in Track & Field, January 24, In front of 10,000 fans, Joie Ray wins first of & 1 1/2 mile titles at Millrose (1917), by Walt Murphy

2026 Winter Middle Distance Training (800m-5,000m), Monday, January 26, 2026, Week 4, Day 1, An Easy Day!

1936–Virtually pushed into the tape by Joe Mangan of the New York A.C., Glenn Cunningham raced to victory in the K. of C. mile at the Boston Garden.

Some 10,000  spectators changed the Boston Garden into something resembling a madhouse as the pair stormed across the line in as thrilling a mile race finish as had ever been witnessed here.

Cunningham was booed by some fans, who thought he had fouled Mangan, but he expressed surprise when asked about it after returning to Iowa City, where he was attending graduate school at the University of Iowa.

“The first I heard about any foul was when I got back here and people began asking me questions”, said Cunningham. “Mangan came up unnoticed, and as I went out wide, Mangan’s head touched my shoulder. From then on to the finish, it was nip and tuck.”(From AP)

Glenn Cunningham, photo by University of Kansas History /Wikipedia

https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1928&dat=19360129&id=Ys4gAAAAIBAJ&sjid=6moFAAAAIBAJ&pg=4352,2176763&hl=en

1956--Australia’s Dave Stephens, running in the stadium that would be the site of the Melbourne Olympics  later in the year, won the 6-mile in 27:54.0 to break Emil Zátopek’s previous World Record of 27:59.2.  http://tinyurl.com/DaveStephens-6m

1963—Dave Tork set a World Indoor Record of 16-2  ¼ (4.93+) in the Pole Vault in Toronto

1968—Jumping before a Madison Square Garden crowd of more than 14,000 fans at the Millrose Games, Bob Seagren raised the World Indoor Record in the pole vault to 17-4  ¼ (5.29). Seagren, who would win gold at the Mexico City Olympics later in the year, first fulfilled a promise to Millrose Director Fred Schmertz by giving the meet its first 17-foot vault (17-1/4/5.19)

Villanova sophomore Larry James won the 500y in a quick 56.1 and contributed a 47.8 3rd leg split on the Wildcats’ winning mile relay (3:18.0). Teammate Dave Patrick finished 2nd to Preston Davis in a tactical Wanamaker Mile (4:03.9-4:04.4).

In a battle of past and future Olympic medalists, Australia’s Ralph Doubell beat Canada’s Bill Crothers handily to win the ½-mile in 1:53.2. Doubell would win gold in the 800-meters in Mexico City later in the year, while Crothers was the silver medalist in Tokyo in 1964.

Other winners included Martin McGrady (600y/1:10.1), John Thomas (High Jump/6-10), Byron Dyce (1000y/2:10.1), and George Young (3-miles/13:31.8).

This was the first of five major indoor meets held over the weekend (Oakland, Boston, Albuquerque, Portland) and would be the last Millrose Games held at the “old” Madison Square Garden, which was located in Manhattan at 50th Street and 8th Avenue.

(From T&F News)

(For subscribers?): https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1968/01/26/77166774.html?pageNumber=33

1969—A year to the day after setting the previous mark of 17-4  1.4 (5.29), Bob Seagren raised the World Indoor Record in the Pole Vault to 17-5  ¾ (5.33) in Albuquerque, the site of two of his other World Records!

1968 Olympic gold medalist (800m) Ralph Doubell set a World Indoor Record of 1:47.9 for 880-yards.

1969-Tennessee’s Hardee McAlhaney ran 1:08.1 for 600-yards, the fastest time ever run in the event, on the biggest track ever used for an indoor meet (banked/5-laps to the mile!) at Houston’s Astrodome.

Jamaica’s Lennox Miller edged Kentcky’s Jim Green in the 100-yard dash, with both being timed in 9.4, the fastest ever for an event seldom contested indoors.

In another rare indoor event, Willie Davenport won the 120y-hurdles with an indoor best of 13.5.

1974–North Carolina’s Tony Waldrop made long-time Millrose director Fred Schmertz very happy by running 3:59.7 to become the first man to break 4-minutes in the fabled Wanamaker Mile.

Marty Liquori appeared to be on the way to his 15th straight win at Madison Square Garden as he led going into the final lap, but Waldrop, admittedly still learning how to run the mile, raced into the lead on the backstretch and continued on for the win. Liquori (4:00.8) slipped to 3rd behind Len Hilton (4:00.7), with Byron Dyce finishing 4th (4:02.0).

Reflecting on the race years later, Waldrop said, “Actually that race was one in which I have many fond memories about. Not so much because I was the one who did it, but because the meet promoter at the time was a man named Howard Schmertz if I remember correctly, and his father (the previous Millrose director) was quite elderly at the time. He was worried that his father would not live long enough to see a sub-4 minute Mile. I remember Howard, the son, actually came down on the track and ran with me for a bit of it, for the victory lap, because he was so excited for his father.”

Ethiopia’s Miruts Yifter, who would go on to win the 5000-10,000 double at the 1980 Olympics, ran his first race ever on a banked-board track and won the 2-mile race in 8:28.0.

Making her Millrose debut was 15-year old Mary Decker (2:27.4), who fought off a challenge by another 15-year old, Robin Campbell (2:29.5), to win the Women’s 1000-yards. Decker (later Slaney), who would become a fan favorite at Millrose, went on to win the 1500-meters in 1980 and the Mile in 1982, 1983, and 1985. She was Howard Schmertz’s all-time favorite Millrose athlete.

The first boys high school mile was held, with Mark Belger winning in 4:18.2. The story goes that one of the daughters of Howard Schmertz, who would succeed his dad as Meet Director the following year, had a crush on Belger (they both attended Mepham H.S. on Long Island) and suggested the addition of the race to her father as a means of getting to know him better! Finishing a close 2nd to Belger was Gene McCarthy (All Hollows,NY), who would go on to become one of the leading executives in the running shoe industry!

Among the notable winners of the race over the years are Kevin Byrne (2-time winner set a meet record of 4:08.0 in 1978 that lasted until 2017, when Noah Affolder won in 4:07.24), Mike Stahr (1982,1983), George Kersh (1987), Bob Kennedy (1988), Seneca Lassiter (1995), Michael Stember (1996), Jonathon Riley (1997), Andy Powell (1998), Kyle Merber (2008), Robby Andrews (2009), Chad Noelle (2011), Josh Hoey (2018).

In a move welcomed by athletes (and others), fans at Madison Square Garden were asked (by PA Announcer Bob Hersh) to refrain from smoking during the meet!

From Liquori: “Here’s how I remember it. At the Mama Leone ‘s Track Writers luncheon before the games I was getting asked why there had not been a four minute mile in the Millrose Games. I said one of the reasons was by 10 o’clock at night, the place was filled with smoke. So Bob Hersh got up and said, ’ I will announce for people to not smoke and to go under the stands if they have to.’ Which he did. When I came out at 10 o’clock the place was clean as a mountain air-that’s one of the reasons I felt that I had to change my tactic and make sure we broke the four minute mile. As you know, that  strategy caused me to lose the race. I had no idea who Tony Waldrop was, and to hear him tell it in his post-race interview he had no idea who I was. So I consider this one of my greatest accomplishments in the sport! (This from a Hall-of Famer!)

NY Times (for subscribers?)

Highlights: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vodukVXjafw

2012 Article(Waldrop)

A Family Album (The Schmertz’s) https://www.nytimes.com/1984/01/22/sports/a-millrose-games-family-album.html

1985–It was another memorable Millrose Games, one witnessed by 18,328 fans at Madison Square Garden. Ireland’s Eamonn Coghlan won his 6th Wanamaker Mile to tie Glenn Cunningham as the event’s biggest winner. Coghlan, always a Garden favorite, ran 3:53.82 to beat Ray Flynn (3:54.70), John Walker (3:55.14), and Sydney Maree (3:55.15).

Coghlan’s choice as the winner of the meet’s coveted Outstanding Performer Award (Waterford Crystal) had as much to do with timing as with his performance. More than an hour after the final running event was completed, Jimmy Howard cleared 7-8 (2.34)  in the High Jump (before 300 hardy fans) to break the previous American Record of 7-7  ¾ (2.33), set by Jeff Woodard in 1981.  Howard’s record actually took place on the 26th, since the event didn’t end until after midnight!.

Another American Record fell in the Women’s 400, as Diane Dixon ran down 1984 double Olympic gold medalist Valerie Brisco to win in 53.07.  Other highlights included Mary Slaney’s win in the Women’s Mile (4:22.01),  and Carl Lewis’s win in the Men’s Long Jump 27-10  ¾ (8.50).

NY Times Coverage (for subscribers?)

1986–For the 10th time in his career, Billy Olson raised the Indoor World Record in the Pole Vault, jumping 19-3 ¾ (5.89) in Albuquerque. At the same meet, Jim Howard, his teammate on the Pacific Coast Club, raised his own American Record in the High Jump to 7-8  ¾ (2.36m).  Olson and fellow pole vaulter Brad Pursley currently work as bail-bondsmen in Abilene,Texas.

http://www.billyolsonbailbond.com/

1986—Germany’s Heike Drechsler set a World Indoor Record of 23-11 (7.29) in the Long Jump in Berlin

Wiki Bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heike_Drechsler

1998–Ethiopia’s Haile Gebrselassie, competing on what would become one of his favorite tracks, ran 7:26.15 for 3000-meters in Karlsruhe, Germany, to break his own World Indoor Record of 7:30.72, which was set in Stuttgart in 1996. Four of the eight fastest times in history (at the time) were run by Geb on the Karlsruhe track. He only had 12 days to enjoy his latest record, since Daniel Komen ran 7:24.90 on February 6.

Haile Gebreslassie, photo by adidas/Spainsports

2003—Junior Natasha Hastings (A.P.Randolph H.S.,NY) set a U.S. High School Record of 1:11.84 for 500-meters at the New Balance Games at NY’s Armory. (Since broken, still #10 All-Time)

Hastings would become one of America’s best 400-meter runners for more than a decade (2006-2017)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natasha_Hastings

https://www.worldathletics.org/athletes/united-states/natasha-hastings-187649

2014—Galen Rupp ran 8:07.41 for 2-miles at the Terrier Classic at Boston University to regain the American Record

from Bernard Lagat, who had run 8:09.49 the year before.

http://www.letsrun.com/news/2014/01/galen-rupp-breaks-american-two-mile-record-runs-807-41-boston/

2025—18-year old Australian Cam Myers made the most of his first indoor race by winning the Mile at the Dr.Sander Scorcher at NY’s Armory. His winning time of 3:53.12 broke the 16-year old World Junior/Under-20 Indoor Record of 3:55.02 that was set by German Fernandez in 2009.

Impressive as Myers was, he was hoping to run faster, saying, “It was pretty tough for me. I just didn’t get rolling in the middle laps, when I needed to be running 57s and 56s,” said Myers, who was targeting 3:50.00, the mile entry standard for the 1500 meters at this year’s World Athletics Championships in Tokyo. “It’s pretty good for the first time running indoors and we’ll hopefully get that down by the time of Millrose in two weeks.”

Returning to the track where she set Collegiate Records in the 1500, Mile, and 3000 in 2023 (and competed often during her high school career), Katelyn Tuohy held off a challenge from Oregon’s Wilma Nielsen (4:25.89), a senior from Sweden, to win the women’s Mile in 4:25.54. It was a happy return to top form for Tuohy, who was hampered in 2024 by an injury. “It was a year of growth for me, coming off a little bit of an injury cycle, something I’d never dealt with to that extent before,” she said. “Definitely learned a lot about myself and managing my emotions and learning what it takes to overcome adversity.”

She had strong support here from a large group of family members, including her parents and grandmother. And her younger brother Ryan finished 8th in the High School Boys 1000m.

Jeremiah Davis (26-3 [8.00]), the winner at last year’s U.S. Olympic Trials, won the Men’s Long Jump over Salif Mane (25-8 [7.82]), who was 6th in the Triple Jump at the 2024 Olympics.

Monae Nichols, the silver medalist at the 2024 World Indoor Championships (and 6th at the Paris Olympics) won the Women’s LJ      (21-2  ½ [6.46]).

A welcome addition to the collegiate portion of the meet were teams from Wisconsin and Brigham Young!

Watching his daughter Summer, a freshman at BYU, compete in the college long jump was none other than Steve Young, who was the quarterback for the Cougars before embarking on a NFL Hall of Fame career with the San Francisco 49ers!

(Steve Young Photo by John Nepolitan)

Working his way onto the Armory floor for the first time, Cameron “Cam” Myers,

Is flanked by Meet Director Ray Flynn (l), and manager James Templeton (r).

https://www.runnerspace.com/eprofile.php?event_id=577&do=news&news_id=670850

https://worldathletics.org/news/report/cameron-myers-world-u20-indoor-mile-record-new-york

Results: https://armorytrack.live/meets/38982/events/relay/266539

“Home Field Advantage”

Mile (M): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_w2sqwOZ_8E

Mile(W): www.nbcsports.com/watch/olympics/katelyn-tuohy-holds-on-to-win-the-womens-mile-at-the-dr-sander-scorcher

Additional Videos (For RunnerSpace Subscribers): https://armorytrack.live/meets/38982

Born On This Day*

Christian Olsson—Sweden 46 (1980)   Gold medalist in the Triple Jump at the 2003 World Championships and 2004

Olympics; 2-time World Indoor Champion (2003, 2004—equalled the World Indoor Record of 58-6 [17.83]);

Silver medalist at the 2001 World Championships, 6th in 2011

2-time European Champion—2002, 2006

2002 European Indoor Champion

PBs: 58-4  ½ (17.79/2004), 58-6i (18.03/2004/=#3 All-Time)

Wiki Bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Olsson

https://worldathletics.org/athletes/sweden/christian-olsson-14227931

https://www.facebook.com/EuropeanAthletics/videos/642858080042444/

Gabe Jennings  47 (1979)  2000 NCAA Indoor (Mile) and Outdoor (1500/2nd-2001) Champion-Stanford;

2000 Olympian (1500m/semi-finalist); competed in the first round of the 1500 at the 2001 World

Championships

2000 U.S. Champion-1500 (Olympic Trials)

2-time NCAA Indoor Champion-Distance Medley-2000 (lead-off 1200), 2001 (anchor)

2-time winner of the High School 1500 at the Penn Relays (1997,1998); Graduated from Oregon Law

    School in 2012

One of the great “Free Spirits” of the sport.

Born into the hippie culture. Some quotes from a pre-NCAA interview with CBS:

“My parents were my teachers”

“I expect to run with integrity. That means listening to my inner self”

“God, you’ve hit the nail on the head” (after it was suggested he views racing as a celebration)

“I try to hear the rhythm of the wind, the ocean”

Compares the mile to jazz-“Got to bend notes sometimes”

Often played bongos in the stands with others while teammates were competing in other events

In 2003, he embarked on a four-month, 6,000-mile solo bike trek to Brazil, where he

contracted hepatitis A and almost starved to death.

Inducted into the Stanford Hall of Fame in 2018 (Interview)

PBs:1:46.83 (2001), 2:18.33 (2006), 3:35.21 (2000), 3:58.54i (2001), 7:58.40i (2001), 13:44.60 (2000

2000 Interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ChoWROC984c

2000 O.T. Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zg-mKEyfI10

2005: http://www.sfgate.com/sports/article/A-lost-drummer-regains-his-beat-Runner-back-2637901.php

The Performance Artist: http://tinyurl.com/zsry2ub

2012: http://www.runnersworld.com/newswire/olympian-then-and-now-gabe-jennings

Wiki Bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabe_Jennings

http://www.olympedia.org/athletes/89139

Tanya Hughes 54 (1972)—4-time NCAA Champion (High Jump/Arizona)-Indoors (1991), Outdoors (1991-1993);

Finalist at the 1992 Olympics (12th) and 1993 World Championships (7th);

2-time U.S. Champion (1992,1993); 1994 NCAA Woman of the Year;

PB: 6-5  ½ (1.97/1992)

1994 NCAA Woman of the Year: http://www.ncaa.org/about/resources/events/awards/1994-ncaa-woman-year

Wiki Bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanya_Hughes

http://www.olympedia.org/athletes/77869

David Monti 66 (1960)  Publisher of Race Results Weekly, THE publication for coverage of distance running in the U.S. and

    around the world.

David and I (and his wife Jane) worked together on many Olympics and World Championships as part of NBC’s

    support crew.

He explains how he got started in the sport in this 2023 interview with Anna Lagnani, the former Deputy Director

    of Communications for World Athletics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KZ_LVPM-28

http://www.raceresultsweekly.com

Robin Campbell-Bennett 67 (1959)  2-time Olympian-800m (1980/boycott, 1984/semi-finalist); 5th in the 800 at the

  inaugural World Championships in Helsinki (1983); PB: 1:59.00 (1983)

Coached by Brooks Johnson, she was a teenage prodigy…won the Mile (4:50.7) at the 1974 U.S.

    Indoor Championships at the age of 15, won the 440y(!)  title the following year. Ran 2:02.40 for

  800-meters in 1974. Also ran 2:06.7 indoors that year.

Nat’l Records

440 54.2 2-23-75

600y 1:19.3 2-15-74 (still stands) Toronto. Had just turned 15.

600m 1:30.1 3-2-74 for 1st place in Soviet dual meet, Moscow, WR, lasted 27 years as HSR

1000y 2:30.7 Student at Hines JHS, age 14, 2nd at the Maple Leaf Games 2-2-73

1500 4:26.4 5th at the Olympic Inv at the Garden, 2-8-74

Wiki Bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robin_Campbell_(athlete)

http://www.olympedia.org/athletes/77783

Podcast (2022): https://www.startingline1928.com/pioneerstories/robin-campbell-bennett

Jürgen Hingsen—Germany 68 (1958)  Silver medalist in the Decathlon at the 1983 World Championships and 1984

  Olympics (2nd to Great Britain’s Daley Thompson on both occasions); 6’-6  ¾” (2.00), 225 (102kg)

Traded World Records with Thompson:

(with adjusted points)

8704 (8732)- Thompson-May 23, 1982

8723 (8741)- Hingsen-August 15, 1982

8743 (8774)- Thompson-September 8, 1982

8779 (8825)- Hingsen-June 5, 1983

8798 (8823)- Hingsen-May 9, 1984

8847 (new tables)-Thompson August 9, 1984

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jürgen_Hingsen

WR Progression: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decathlon_world_record_progression

  https://www.olympedia.org/athletes/70290

World Rankings: https://trackandfieldnews.com/index.php/rankings

Rivals Reunited(2012):

www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/olympics/article-2178449/London-2012-Olympics-Daley-Thompson-Jurgen-Hingsen-reunited.html

Deceased

Steve “Pre”  Prefontaine  24 (1951-May 30, 1975)  The Legend

4-time NCAA Champion on the track: Oregon/3-miles (5k in ’72) 1971-1974

3-time NCAA X-Country Champion (1970,1971,1973)

2-time U.S. Champion-3 miles (1971, 1973)

Set American Records at distances from 2000-meters to 10,000-meters

Previous H.S. Record holder at 3000-meters and 2-miles (outdoors) (Marshfield H.S.-Coos Bay,OR)

4th in the 5000-meters at the 1972 Olympics.

Advocate for athletes’ rights

PBs: 3:38.1h (1973), 3:54.6 (‘73), 5:01.4h/2k (‘75), 7:42.6h (‘74), 8:18.29 (‘74), 13:21.87 (‘74), 27:43.6h

(’74)

www.nytimes.com/1975/05/31/archives/prefontaine-24-killed-in-crash-prefontaine-track-star-is-killed-in.html

https://bringbackthemile.com/news/detail/40_years_of_prefontaine

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Prefontaine

Runner’s World Articles: https://www.runnersworld.com/steve-prefontaine

http://grantland.com/features/steve-prefontaine-death/

https://www.amazon.com/Pre-Americas-Greatest-Running-Prefontaine/dp/0875964575

Tribute Site:

http://myhero.com/myhero/hero.asp?hero=Prefontaine_Fredricksberg_Academy_03

“Without Limits”-Behind the Scenes:

http://without-limits.warnerbros.com/cmp/realaudio/main.html

Videos:

1972 OG: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_iKt8_pkHgY

Feature: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xesXzetlrE

“Fire on the Track”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u7O5tGsBZrA

What It Takes To Be Great: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=58JSUuE_-MA

1973 L.A. Times Mile: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA3nFaaptKo

Google Steve Prefontaine for much more

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2025 Winter Indoor Racing/Training Program, February 11, 2025, week 6, day 2, sixth week of year, building mileage, it’s Tuesday!
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This Day in Track & Field–January  26, Mel Sheppard sets the WIR at mile (1906), Steve Prefontaine breaks AR (1974), Born This Day, Jeanette Pickens-Bolden (1960), complied and edited by Walt Murphy

This Day in Track & Field, January 26, Mel Shepard sets World Indoor Record of 4:25.2 (1906), by Walt Murphy

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