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Bob Mathias

Bob Mathias (born 1930) was the youngest person ever to win the gold medal in the Olympic decathlon, a feat he accomplished in 1948 at the age of 17. He was also the first person ever to win two Olympic decathlons.

Bob Mathias was born on November 19, 1930, in Tulare, California, the second of four children born to Dr. Charles Milfred and Lillian (Harris) Mathias. With her first child a son, Lillian Mathias had her hopes set on a baby girl for her second child; it is said that she cried when she heard that her new baby was another boy. Even as a baby, however, Mathias displayed a phenomenal level of coordination, a hint of his future talent in sports.

Overcame Anemia to Become Star Athlete

When Mathias was 11 years old, he was found to have a shortage of red blood cells, and his father treated him for anemia. He had to take iron pills, eat a special diet, and take frequent naps to conserve his strength. By the time he entered Tulare High School, however, he had recovered from this illness and joined the football, basketball, and track teams. Within a short time, he was a star in every event he participated in.

By his senior year Mathias had gained a reputation as the best prep football fullback on the West Coast and had a nine-yard average per carry. On the basketball team he scored 18 points per game during his senior year and was an All-Stater. In track and field he was a winner in the shot put, discus, and 220-yard high hurdles; he also won the anchor leg on the winning relay team and tied for second in the high jump. Mathias further distinguished himself by winning the high and low hurdles at California's State High School Track Meet in 1948.

Mathias's coach at Tulare, Virgil Jackson, noted the young man's all-around talent and pegged Mathias as a natural for the decathlon, an event in which athletes compete in ten track and field events. The events include the 100-meter dash, long jump, shot put, high jump, and 400-meter dash, all held on one day, followed by the 110-meter hurdles, discus throw, pole vault, javelin throw, and 1,500-meter run on the second day. Each event is scored according to a point system, and the athlete with the highest number of points after ten events is the winner. In the Encyclopedia of World Sport Frank Zarnowski noted that "Patience, a rigorous training regime, and long-term goals are necessary for multi-event success."

Became World's Best in Three Weeks

Jackson and Mathias didn't have time for any long-term training, because the Southern Pacific Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) Games in Los Angeles were only three weeks away, but Jackson was confident that Mathias could learn the events and compete successfully. Mathias had never pole vaulted, thrown a javelin, long jumped, or run distance races, but he trained for the three weeks and won. Shortly after this, in late June of 1948, Mathias amazed onlookers by winning the National AAU championship and Olympic trials at Bloomfield, New Jersey. In doing so, he defeated experienced decathlete and three-time national champion Irving "Moon" Mondschein. His score of 7,224 points was the best in the world since 1940.

Competed in 1948 Olympics

On his way to the 1948 Olympics in London, Mathias was the youngest member on any U.S. Olympic track and field team ever. He worked hard right up to the event, spending most of his time training. Unfortunately, training without allowing his body any recovery time caused elbow and knee injuries. These injuries, as well as the high caliber of the competition, made Mathias's prospects for a medal look dim.

At 7 a.m. on August 5, 1948, Mathias breakfasted on steak and orange juice, then headed to London's Wembley Stadium, where 70,000 spectators waited in a cold rain. Although he was not allowed to warm up before running his first event, the 100 meters, he managed to race the distance in 11.2 seconds, a tie with his own personal record for the event. On the broad jump he went over 23 feet, but fell backward. On his next try, he only made 21 ″ 8 1/2 ″ . This score was very low, putting him near the bottom of the field of 35 contenders. For the shot put, Mathias threw a distance of over 45 feet. However, because he unknowingly violated a technical rule in the way he stepped out of the shot put circle after the throw he was forced to settle for a distance of 42′ 9 1/4″.

Between events the rains continued, and Mathias waited for his high jump event wrapped in a blanket. Missing his first two tries, the young man began to worry. If he missed a third time, he would be disqualified. On the third try, however, he made it, sailing over at 6 ′ 1 1/4 ″, his best height ever. His last event, ten hours after the start of the day's competition, was the 400-meter run, which Mathias finished in 51.7 seconds. After a long, cold, wet, and exhausting day, the high school student from Tulare, California, found himself in third place in the Olympic decathlon.

On the second day of competition, a stiff and sore Mathias awoke to find that it was still pouring. His first event of the day was the 110-meter hurdles, which he almost botched by losing his balance. Losing speed during his balance mishap, he poured on the speed to complete the run, finishing with a personal worst time ever of 15.7 seconds. He threw the discus 145 feet, but competitor Mondschein's discus skidded across the wet grass, knocking Mathias's marker from the place where his discus had originally landed. For half an hour Olympic officials wandered over the field arguing about where Mathias's marker had been before positioning a new marker a foot and a half short of his actual throw. Despite this, the new distance of 144 ′ 4 ″ was good enough to put Mathias in first place, with a 48-point lead.

At noon Mathias was exhausted, cold, soaking wet, and hungry. However, officials refused to let him go to lunch, saying he might have to do his pole vault soon. They then divided the athletes into two groups, with Mathias in the second group. It would be six hours before it was his turn to vault. All the contenders had encountered difficulty with the pole vault because the pole and runway were slippery due to the rain. Mathias waited until the bar was over ten feet to take his turn. By now, it was twilight, the only light coming from the Olympic torch, flickering through the rain and a string of 50-watt bulbs lighting the stands. Although the contest became almost dangerous in these conditions, Mathias continued vaulting on higher and higher bars until he cleared 11 ′ 5 3/4 ″ . By now he was in second place, with only Ignace Heinrich of France ahead of him.

The next event was the javelin. It was night, and Mathias threw by the light of an official's flashlight, even losing his javelin in the dark. By the end of the event, however, he was only 189 points behind Heinrich. If he could win the 1,500-meter run, he would also win the gold. Exhausted, hungry, and suffering from pain in his foot and his stomach, a determined Mathias won the run with a time of 5 ′ 11 ″, earning 354 points to make his point total 7,139 compared to Heinrich's 6,974. As recorded by James D. Whalen in Biographical Dictionary of American Sports, sportswriter Allison Danzig commented of Mathias's performance: "In rain, on a track covered with water, in failing light, and finally under floodlights, it was an amazing achievement."

Barefoot, Mathias sloshed to the stands and hugged his mother, as his father and two brothers cheered him. According to Cordner Nelson in Track's Greatest Champions, he assumed that all decathlons were held in such grueling conditions, and told his father, "No more decathlons, Dad ever again." After the win, according to Larry Schwartz of ESPN.com, a reporter asked Mathias what he would do to celebrate. Mathias replied, "I'll start shaving, I guess." He then immediately went to sleep, and had to be awoken the next day so he could participate in the victory parade. He received a congratulatory telegram from President Harry S Truman, was besieged by a crowd of 5,000 people at the airport on his return home, and was the star of a victory party in his hometown of Tulare.

Continued Athletic Career

After winning the Olympic decathlon, Mathias graduated from high school and enrolled at Kiski Preparatory School in Saltsburg, Pennsylvania. He intended to make up for his lack of scholastic achievements, which did not match his athletic ability. Mathias was at Kisco for only a year before he was flooded with offers of college scholarships, based on his outstanding athletic ability. In 1949 Mathias enrolled at Stanford University, but didn't play football until his junior year. In that year, he led the team to its first Pacific Coast Conference title in 11 years. From there he went to the Rose Bowl, which Stanford lost to Illinois. According to Nelson, when Stanford coach Jack Weiershauser was asked how Mathias could be so good at so many events without much training, he responded: "He just does it, that's all. Especially when we need it. It's all in his mind."

At the national AAU championships in 1950, Mathias set a world record with a win of 8,042 points. Officials later revamped the point system, revising his total to 7,444 points, but still a world record. Two years later, at the 1952 AAU championships held at Tulare, Mathias was determined to win again. This event was the final trial to determine who would be on the U.S. Olympic team at the 1952 games, to be held in Helsinki, Finland. He won with a world record-setting score of 7,829 points, far beyond his previous record of 7,444.

"I've Never Been So Tired in My Life"

At the 1952 Olympics, the veteran Mathias was favored to win, and he did. He beat his own world-record decathlon score by earning 7,887 points, 912 points ahead of second-place contender Milton Campbell, also from the United States. According to Whalen, Mathias's comment after winning was, "I've never been so tired in my life."Although often compared to famed U.S. decathlete Jim Thorpe, Mathias beat all of Thorpe's decathlon event records except for the 1,500-meter run.

A year after his second Olympic victory, Mathias retired from amateur competition, remaining undefeated in the decathlon. He married Melba Wiser, a drama major at Stanford. The couple had three daughters. Mathias served two-and-one-half years in the Marine Corps and later became a member of the U.S. Marine Corps reserve. He appeared in four films, one of which, The Bob Mathias Story, was about his own life. He also was a star of a television series. In 1961 Mathias and his wife founded a sports camp for boys, and started a similar camp for girls in 1969. Remaining a popular figure in his state, Mathias served as a Republican representative to the U.S. Congress from California's 18th District from 1967 to 1974. After serving in Congress he was appointed director of the U.S. Olympic Training Center at Colorado Springs and eventually headed the National Fitness Foundation. He was also president of the American Kids' Sports Association. In 1974, he was inducted in the National Track and Field Hall of Fame as a charter member. He also became a member of the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame.

Books

Biographical Dictionary of American Sports, edited by David L. Porter, Greenwood Press, 1988.

Encyclopedia of World Sport, edited by David Levinson and Karen Christensen, ABC-Clio, 1996.

Hanley, Reid M., Who's Who in Track and Field, Arlington House, 1973.

Hickok, Ralph, A Who's Who of Sports Champions, Houghton, Mifflin, 1995.

Nelson, Cordner, Track's Greatest Champions, Tafnews Press, 1986.

Online

"Boy-Wonder Mathias Elevated Decathlon," ESPN.com,http://espn.go.com/ (December 20, 2000).

 
 

(born Nov. 17, 1930, Tulare, Calif., U.S. — died Sept. 2, 2006, Fresno, Calif.) U.S. decathlete. He suffered from anemia as a child and turned to athletics to gain strength. In 1948, at age 17, he won a gold medal in the Olympic decathlon, becoming the youngest athlete to win a gold medal in an Olympic track-and-field event. He won a second decathlon gold medal in 1952; that same year he played fullback on Stanford University's gridiron football team. He won all 11 decathlon competitions he entered in his career. Mathias later served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1967 – 75). In 1983 he was inducted into the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame.

For more information on Bob Mathias, visit Britannica.com.

 
WordNet: Bob Mathias
Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: United States athlete who won Olympic gold medals in the decathlon (born in 1930)
  Synonyms: Mathias, Robert Bruce Mathias


 
Wikipedia: Bob Mathias
Olympic medal record
Men's athletics
Gold 1948 London Decathlon
Gold 1952 Helsinki Decathlon

Robert Bruce Mathias (November 17 1930 - September 2 2006) was an American decathlete, two-time Olympic gold medalist, and United States Congressman.

Early life and athletic career

Bob Mathias on the cover of the July 21 1952 issue of TIME magazine
Enlarge
Bob Mathias on the cover of the July 21 1952 issue of TIME magazine


Bob Mathias was born in Tulare, California and took up the decathlon at the suggestion of his coach at Tulare High School early in 1948. During the summer, he qualified for the United States Olympic team for the 1948 Summer Olympics held in London.

In the Olympics, Mathias' naïveté for the decathlon was exposed[1]. He was unaware of the rules in the shot put and nearly fouled out of the event. He almost failed in the high jump but was able to recover. Mathias overcame his difficulties and won the Olympic gold medal easily.

Mathias continued to fare well in decathlons in the four years between the London games and the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki. In 1948, Mathias won the James E. Sullivan Award as the nation's top amateur athlete, but because his scholastic record in high school did not match his athletic achievement, he spent a year at The Kiski School, a well respected all boys boarding school in Saltsburg, Pennsylvania. He then entered Stanford University in 1949, played college football for two years and was a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. Mathias set his first decathlon world record in 1950 and led Stanford to a Rose Bowl appearance in 1952.

At Helsinki, Mathias asserted himself as one of the world's best athletes. He won the decathlon by 912 points, an astounding margin, becoming the first to successfully defend an Olympic decathlon title. He returned to the United States as a national hero. In 1952, he was, therefore, the first person to ever compete in an Olympics and a Rose Bowl the same year.

After the 1952 Olympics, Mathias retired from athletic competition. He later became the first director of the United States Olympic Training Center, a post he held from 1977 to 1983.

In 1954 a film about his early life called The Bob Mathias Story was released, in which he and his wife Melba played themselves. He also starred in a number of mostly cameo-type roles in a variety of movies and TV shows throughout the 1950s.

Political career

Between 1967 and 1975, Matthias served four terms in the United States House of Representatives as a Republican, representing the northern San Joaquin Valley of California. In 1974, he was defeated in his election bid for a fifth term in Congress. From June through August of 1975 he served as Deputy Director of the Selective Service. Mathias was also involved in the unsuccessful 1976 presidential election campaign of president Gerald Ford.

He died in Fresno, California on September 2 2006 at the age of 75 from cancer.

Timeline

Year Comment
17 November 1930 Bob Mathias was born, the second of four children to Dr. Charles and Lillian Mathias.
1948 At age seventeen, graduated from Tulare high school after an illustrious prep career. Wins National Decathlon Championship at Bloomfield, N.J.

Won gold medal in decathlon at Olympics in London.

After huge celebration and parade in Tulare, presented with "Key to the City" by Mayor Elmo Zumwalt. Enrolls at Kiskiminetas Prep School, Saltsburg, Pa. Honored with the James E. Sullivan Award, presented each year to America's top amateur athlete.

1949 Won National Decathlon Championship at meet staged in Tulare.

Enrolled at Stanford, where he would star in track and football.

1950 Won National Decathlon Championship at meet staged in Tulare.
1951 1 January, plays fullback for Stanford in the Rose Bowl.

Played football during junior and senior years at Stanford. In USC-Stanford football game, Mathias returns Frank Gifford's kickoff 96 yards for a touchdown.

Spent summer at U.S. Marine Corps boot camp in San Diego.

1952 Won National Decathlon Championship at meet staged in Tulare.

Won gold medal in decathlon at Olympics in Helsinki.

1953 Graduated from Stanford. Drafted by the Washington Redskins, though never played in NFL.
1954 Married his first wife, Melba. They later had three daughters, Romel, Megan and Marissa. Mathias and his wife starred in the movie "The Bob Mathias Story."

Entered active duty in the Marine Corps as a second lieutenant.

1954-56 Visited more than forty countries as America's Good Will Ambassador.
1956-60 Continued work for the State Department as a Good Will Ambassador to the world.

Acting career took off, employed by John Wayne. Starred in the movie "China Doll" with Victor Mature, the TV series "The Troubleshooters" with Keenan Wynn, as King Theseus in the movie "Theseus and the Minotaur" and in the movie "It Happened in Athens," opposite Jayne Mansfield.

1966 Elected to U.S. Congress as a Republican, serving four terms.
1974 Lost election for fifth term.
1976 Mathias and wife, Melba, divorced.
1977 Appointed director of U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs. Bob and Gwen married. They later had a daughter, Alyse, and a son, Reiner.

Tulare high school stadium renamed in Mathias' honor.

1983 Appointed executive director of the National Fitness Foundation.
1988 Returned to the Valley, where he builds a home in rural Fresno County.
1996 Sim Iness died. He was Mathias' high school classmate and winner of the discus gold medal during the 1952 Olympics.

Doctors discovered a cancerous tumor in Mathias' throat.

June 6 1998 "Across the Fields of Gold," a tribute dinner honoring Mathias on the 50th anniversary of his first Olympic medal, was held in Tulare. More than 300 people attended, including Olympic medal-winners Sammy Lee, Bill Toomey, Dave Johnson and Pat McCormick, and Sim Iness' widow, Dolores.

See also

References

  • "The Bob Mathias Story" by Bob Mathias with Robert Mendes;
  • "Bob Mathias, Champion of Champions," by Jim Scott;
  • "Bob Mathias: The Life of the Olympic Champion," by Myron Tassin;
  • "Bob Mathias, Across the Fields of Gold," by Chris Terrence;
  • Tulare Historical Museum;
  • Advance-Register archives and staff reports.

External links



Preceded by
Dick Kazmaier
Associated Press Male Athlete of the Year
1952
Succeeded by
Ben Hogan
Preceded by
Harlan Hagen
United States Representative for the 18th Congressional District of California
1967–1975
Succeeded by
William M. Ketchum

 
 

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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bob Mathias" Read more

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