Brooks Johnson honored with Giegengack Award Legendary coach and USA Track & Field Board of Directors member
Brooks Johnson has been honored with the organization's Giegengack
Award. Johnson will receive the award at Sunday's Closing General
session of the 2004 USATF Annual Meeting.
Named in honor of former Yale University coach and 1964 Olympic
Team head coach Robert Giegengack, the award goes to an individual
who has made an outstanding contribution to the development and
success of USA Track & Field and the larger community of the sport. In
the past, the award has gone to coaches, officials, Association leaders,
administrators, and others from all segments of USATF. The USATF
Board of Directors votes to select each year's winner.
The former head coach at Stanford University (1979-1992) and
California Polytechnic-San Luis Obispo (1993-96), Johnson was the
1984 Olympic Team women's head coach in Los Angeles. Before
moving into college coaching, Johnson was a teacher, coach, and
athletic director at St. Albans School in Washington, D.C., where in 1970
he founded the Skip Grant program for students from traditionally
underrepresented backgrounds. He began his track career as an athlete
at Tufts University in the 1950s, where he was a record-setting sprinter.
Most recently, Johnson was director of the ARCO Olympic Training
Center and is currently the High Performance Division chair for USATF,
in which capacity he serves on the Board of Directors. Since 2003 he
has been National Relay Teams coach for USATF, guiding the USATF
National Relay development program. He was inducted into the United
States Track Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 1997.
"The service to our athletics community by Brooks is legendary," said
USATF President Bill Roe. "He has been Olympic coach, collegiate
coach, development chair - among other USATF posts held throughout
our history - current High Performance Division chair, and retiring
Olympic Training Center director. Brooks has held critical positions, set
lofty goals, and achieved positive - if not spectacular - results."
USATF honors Belk with Pacesetter Award
Philanthropist and track and field aficionado Irwin "Ike" Belk has been
honored by USA Track & Field with the prestigious Pacesetter Award.
The announcement was made Friday evening at the Jesse Owens
Awards and Xerox Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, held in
conjunction with USATF's Annual Meeting.
The Pacesetter Award is one of the highest honors given by USA Track
& Field and is awarded only on special occasions to individuals who
embody the highest ideals of the organization. Through his dedication to
making the sport accessible to Americans through the donation of track
facilities, and through his continued devotion to the future of the sport,
Belk has been chosen to receive the award. Jim Beatty, the first man
ever to run under 4 minutes for the indoor mile and a fellow North
Carolinian and friend of Mr. Belk's, presented the award to Mr. Belk's
granddaughter, Jamee Wallis.
Mr. Belk has carried his love for track & field from his days as a high-
school record holder into the State House and the boardroom. The one-
time half-mile state record holder in North Carolina, Mr. Belk has gone
on to be perhaps the biggest individual philanthropist in the sport,
building 28 tracks throughout the country and serving as a Board
member for the USA Track & Field Foundation. He also is the largest
individual donor to the U.S. Olympic Committee.
Mr. Belk is President of The Belk Group, Inc., and retired president of the
Belk Group of Stores, which operates 250 department stores throughout
the Southeast. He is a former North Carolina State Senator, serves on
the Board of Directors at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte,
and was appointed by President Clinton as the United States Public
delegate to the 54th United Nations General Assembly in 1999.
"Ike Belk is an example of how an individual's love for the sport can
manifest itself in many ways," said USATF CEO Craig A. Masback. "He
has been an athlete, philanthropist and contributor who has truly made
a difference. The sport of track & field and the Olympic movement owe
Mr. Belk a huge debt of gratitude. With the Pacesetter Award, we offer
him a token of our profound thanks."