Legendary coach and women's track and field advocate Dr. Bert Lyle
has been honored with USA Track & Field's Giegengack Award. Dr. Lyle
received the award Thursday night at the Jesse Owens Awards and
National Track & Field Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony in Jacksonville,
Florida. The event was held in conjunction with the 2005 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.
Dr. Lyle was born in Tupelo, Mississippi. He earned his bachelor's
degree from Duke University, a master's degree from Southern
Methodist University, and a doctorate from the University of Texas at
Austin.
His Texas Women's University track & field teams garnered three AIAW
national championships, including the inaugural event, and his teams
also won two track & field federation championships.
As well as serving as track & field coach from 1965 to 1988, Dr. Lyle
also served as athletics director and a member of the faculty. Dr. Lyle
was coach of the United States sprint, hurdle, and relay teams at the
1992 Summer Olympic Games in Barcelona, Spain. He has had a
tremendous impact on track & field as Women's Development sprint
subcommittee chair and as the elite sprint coordinator for the U.S.
women.
Since his retirement from T.W.U. in 1988, Dr. Lyle has resided in
Denton, Texas, where he continues to turn out a prodigious amount of
material on the science of sprinting and hurdling. Dr. Lyle and his wife
Pris celebrated 50 years of wedlock last February.