One of the greatest all-around athletes in track and field
history, two-time Olympic gold medalist Robert "Bob"
Mathias died Saturday in Fresno, CA. He was 75. Born on November 17, 1930 in Tulare, CA, Mathias arrived
on the world track and field scene in spectacular fashion,
winning the decathlon gold medal at the 1948 Olympic
Games (7,139 points) while still only 17 years old. That
made him the youngest ever winner of an Olympic track and
field event and also earned him the 1948 A.A.U. Sullivan
Award as the nation's top amateur athlete.
Exhausted after finishing the final event (1,500 meters),
Mathias was asked about his experience in the decathlon.
"Never again," he said. When asked how he would
celebrate his victory he replied: "I'll start shaving, I guess."
Already a member of the football, basketball and track
teams at Tulare High School, Mathias took up the decathlon
following the urging of his prep track coach Virgil Jackson,
though he had never even seen a javelin. According to The
History of Track & Field Athletics by Mel Watman, Jackson
convinced him to give the decathlon a try by saying to his
prot&g&e': "I've just heard about some event
called the decathlon that will be included in a meet in Los
Angeles in about a week after you graduate," he said. "It'll
give you something to do after you get out of school."
Mathias learned quickly. Despite his inexperience, he
qualified for the 1948 Olympic team and won the gold medal
in London. Upon his return to the small farming community
of Tulare, Mathias was a full-fledged hero. Looking back on
his victory in London many years later he said: "I was just
too young to be intimidated. I really didn't understand what
the Olympics were all about. Don't forget, there had been no
Games for 12 years, and there was no television then."
While at Stanford University, Mathias set the first of his three
decathlon world records in 1950. He capped his brilliant
career by repeating as Olympic champion at the 1952
Games in Helsinki, winning by the largest margin in
Olympic history and setting another world record at age 21.
His total of 7,887 points was an astounding 912 points
more than that of second-place finisher and fellow American
Milt Campbell, who won the event four years later. Never
defeated in the decathlon, Mathias was a four-time national
champion in the grueling ten-event challenge.
Also a star fullback for the Stanford football team, he played
in the 1952 Rose Bowl, making him the only person ever to
compete in that event and an Olympics in the same year.
After his competitive days, Mathias was a member of the
U.S. Congress from 1967 to 1975, and from 1977 to 1983
he was director of the U.S. Olympic Training Center in
Colorado Springs. A movie about his life "The Bob Mathias
Story," was produced in 1954, with Mathias starring in the
lead role. He was elected to the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame
in 1983 and the National Track & Field Hall of Fame in 1974.
Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 6,
at the Tulare United Methodist Church in Tulare, Calif.