 |
| Frank Shorter during Shorter Track Dedication, February 12, 2005.
Photo by Sam Rubin '95, Yale Sports Publicity Department. |
He started
a running revolution after winning Olympic gold in the marathon, but the
roots of Frank Shorter's gold-medal journey began with the inspiring words
of a Hall of Fame coach at Yale University.
Frank Shorter
was settling into a routine as he was just days away from the biggest
race of his life. It was 1972 and he was back in the city of his birth
-- Munich, Germany -- for the Olympic Games.
The organizers
of the Games were determined to show the world a new Germany, as well
as a stark contrast to the lasting visions of flags bearing swastikas
waving in the breeze at the 1936 Berlin Games. At these Games, called
the 'Serene Olympics,' the guards at the Olympic Village didn't want to
ruffle feathers. Passes were not checked closely. Shorter's roommate,
Dave Wottle, was recently married and his wife -- using a fake pass --
was staying in the Village with him.
To give them
privacy, Shorter took to sleeping on a mattress on the balcony of the
apartment. That's where he was when he heard the shots on the morning
of Sept. 5. The shots woke him up, but he was unsure what he had heard.
Listening intently and hearing nothing else, he wondered if he had simply
heard a slamming door. Shorter drifted back to sleep as Arab terrorists
took Israeli hostages less than 100 yards away.
After a day
of demands and negotiations, the terrorists took the remaining hostages
to Furstenfeldbruck airbase. About 20 hours after the drama began, the
hostages were killed by the terrorists after a failed rescue attempt by
German police.
The athletes
back at the Olympic Village were devastated. In this confusing and sad
time, Shorter wasn't sure that competing even made sense. He had a difficult
decision ahead.
"At
first we thought it would be better to just go home," said Shorter.
"Nothing is more important than a human life. After the memorial
service we all began to realize that we had to go on and compete, because
otherwise the terrorists would 'win.'"
For Shorter
the 1972 Olympic marathon was to be the culmination of an unexpected journey.
Heading into his senior season at Yale, he had never won a Heptagonal
Championship [Ivy League plus Army & Navy] event. Not in cross country,
not indoor, and not outdoor. He had been good enough to twice finish second
at the cross country championships, but both times a distant second to
Harvard's Doug Hardin.
He asked
his coach, Bob Giegengack, how good he could become and his legendary
mentor told him that he could have a future in running. Encouraged by
the response, Shorter redoubled his efforts, training harder than ever
before for his last year of collegiate competition.
He may have
been the nation's most improved runner that year. He had the fastest indoor
times in the nation in both the mile and two-mile and took second in the
two-mile at the NCAA Indoor Championship. Shorter finally had his first
Heps title at the outdoor championship at Franklin Field that May, winning
the two-mile. He also took second in a photo finish against Harvard's
Royce Shaw in the mile.
At the outdoor
NCAAs in the spring of 1969, Shorter's confidence was matched by his performance.
He won the first final of the meet, the six-mile run, by more than 250
yards. With that victory Shorter became the first trackman from Yale to
win an NCAA title in 20 years. Two days later Shorter almost took another
national title, losing the three-mile run to Ole Oleson of Southern Cal
by about a second.
Those events
led Shorter to pursue his Olympic dreams, dreams that had been nurtured
by Giegengack, the coach of the 1964 U.S. Olympic track team. "He
would always regale us with stories of what it was like to be at the Olympics,"
Shorter once wrote. "Listening to him made me want to get there,
and to have the kind of experience they had. I wanted to have the Olympic
experience, to mingle with people from other countries. And I did. That
was the way it really turned out to be."
After realizing
his potential in the spring of 1969, Shorter spent three years establishing
himself as the best distance runner in the United States. In 1970 he won
national championships in the 5,000- and 10,000-meter runs as well as
cross country. The next year he repeated in both the 10,000 and cross
country. He also claimed the 10,000 and the marathon at the Pan American
Games in 1971.
The 1972
U.S. Olympic Trials featured a distance revolution, spearheaded by Shorter
and a young phenom from Oregon -- Steve Prefontaine. Those two went out
so fast, other runners would run to exhaustion trying to keep up. Prefontaine
took the 5,000 at the Trials -- held at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore.
-- while Shorter claimed both the 10,000 and the marathon.
As the Olympics
approached, Shorter was primed to become the first American to win a medal
in the marathon since 1924. Following the tragic events and the International
Olympic Committee's decision to resume the Games, Shorter was ready.
"There
were other athletes who were really thrown off by the delay, their routines
and superstitions were broken up. There were some people who I knew wouldn't
be a factor in the race because they were so troubled by the delay, and
the way it disrupted their training patterns. I told myself as I covered
the course of the race that I would not think about what had happened,
and I never did."
Shorter --
who called the marathon "a battle against slowing down"-- took
the lead around the nine-mile mark and never again trailed, handing Belgian
Karel Lismont his first marathon loss. Yet Shorter's entrance into the
Olympic Stadium was odd. A man posing as a runner had entered the stadium
before Shorter and the crowd was jeering and booing the imposter as Shorter
appeared. But nothing could take away his gold-medal performance.
On the bus
back to the Olympic Village after the medal ceremony, Shorter had a chance
meeting with Giegengack, whom he had not seen in two years. "He said
to me, simply, 'Your life will never be the same.' He was right."
"I dont
think I understand [the impact of his performance] yet, but that makes
sense because I trained and competed to see how good I could get. There
was never a grand business plan to capitalize on the achievement and use
it to implement social change."
Yet that's
exactly what happened. There were magazine covers, including three appearances
on Sports Illustrated, and he was credited with causing the nation's first
running boom. Runners World's John Brant wrote, "The boom, so often
linked to Frank Shorter winning the 1972 Olympic Marathon, inspired thousands
of Americans in the early 1970s to run seriously for the first time."
While running
dominated Shorter's life, he also continued to prepare for his post-competition
life. "I have always tried to remember that one can go on from major
accomplishments and still do more with one's life," he said.
He prepared
for the 1976 Montreal Olympics while earning a law degree from the University
of Florida. Shorter would take home the silver medal in the marathon from
those Games and, soon after, open his own successful sportswear company
-- Frank Shorter Sports. He also served as an Olympics commentator and
became the chairman of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. All the while, he
continued to run... and run. In fact, he estimates that he has logged
more than 180,000 miles in his running lifetime.
Known for
training hard, he explained it by saying, "It's just more fun to
run fast."
In 2003,
Shorter was asked his fondest memory of Yale track and he replied, "Running
the two-mile at indoor track meets in Cox Cage. I can still smell the
wet cinders and feel the closeness of the spectators."
That track
is no longer a bed of cinders and -- since February 2006 -- it has been
known as the Frank Shorter Track. At the official ceremony to rename the
track, Shorter's Bulldog teammate and long-time Yale coach Mark Young
said, "Frank revolutionized running in America. I'm excited and delighted
he is being honored in this way."
Shorter was
quick to talk about Coach Giegengack -- who, like Shorter, is a member
of the Track & Field Hall of Fame. "His spirit is one that pervades
this facility," he said. "He would teach you how to coach yourself
and that's what I did."
It served
him well.
Source:
Ivy League Sports Website
|