Statistics of Championships

STATISTICS OF CHAMPIONSHIP

MEETINGS HELD UNDER THE

AUSPICES OF THE SAAA

1883 – 1932

Prior to 1883 amateur athletic meetings with “Championship” events included in the sports programme were promoted by local bodies, eg “West of Scotland Amateur Athletic Association”, etc   Complete details of such meetings are not now available.   The tabulated results given in the following pages begin with the first Championship Meeting promoted by the Scottish Amateur Athletic Association in 1883.

It will be observed in many instances that third placings are not given.   Officially only the first two placings are recorded in all Championship events, but an endeavour has been made, wherever possible by means of research among Annual Reports of the SAAA, contemporary Press reports and annotated sports programmes to make the tabulations as complete as possible.

Up to the year 1892 the best Championship performance recorded in each event is that over  the period 1883 – 1892.

Wherever appropriate, footnotes have been appended relating to records.    A particular record printed in small capitals indicates that the performance has been  subsequently bettered.   The use of Clarendon type means that the record still stands at the date of publication.

Whilst every care has been taken to ensure the accuracy of the following data, errors may have occurred.   The Editors therefore claim the indulgence of their readers, and will be grateful for any corrections where such may appear necessary.

[ 1883 – 1890 ]   [1891 – 1900 ] [ 1901 – 1910 ] [ 1911 – 1920 ]   [1921 – 1930 ] [ 1931 – 1932 ]

Scottish Records:

All Comers Records

Scotland v Ireland

Foreword

FOREWORD

Y50 I Colq

In writing the foreword to Fifty Years of Amateur Athletics in Scotland, I am conscious of the value of the work both as a record of past endeavour and as a guide to future policy.

Our first introduction to athletics is generally gained at school, and it is interesting to remark the extraordinary progress that has been made in cultivating that fertile ground since the inception of the Scottish Amateur Athletic Association in 1883.   At the present moment organised games and sports are as much an accepted feature of school curriculum as are arithmetic or history, and are generally admitted to be of equal importance.

There are those who consider that undue stress is laid upon the physical side of scholastic life, but for myself I cannot admit it.   The average boy is full of a superabundance of energy which must find an outlet.   If that energy be directed into a proper channel, it can be made a vital factor in the building of the boy’s character.   If it be not so directed, it will find an egress in ways altogether undesirable.   The Victorians visualised high spirits as a waste product, which must be eliminated by disciplined suppression.   Our modern view teaches that boyish energy is a by-product of infinite value which can be used with results altogether beneficial, and that games and athletics supply that anchor-hold, that definite background during the critical period of adolescence without which the majority of us would give Satan a congenial task in finding “mischief still for idle hands to do”.

It is difficult to realise the extent to which sport I its many branches has influenced the character of the British nation.   They have given to us, in my view, a balanced judgment, a complete immunity to panic, and a good humoured tolerance which must surely be the despair of the agitator and the revolutionary.

I hold that at the moment Great Britain is the only country where a natural democracy exists.   Democracy demands a common meeting ground, a community of interest.   Sport provides that, and I know of nothing that could take its place.

If we value flattery, then we may claim that the world has accorded us the sincerest form by imitating our methods, by accepting our standards and our valuations with an enthusiasm that we can only marvel at.    What the effect on the diverse mentalities of other races than our own will be, we can only surmise, for national character is not formed in a generation.   Perhaps the lessons they learned from sport will differ from those we have absorbed.   However that may be, I feel they cannot be bad, but, on the contrary, must be good and beneficial in the highest degree.   This book contains a record of Scotland’s contribution to the world of amateur athletics – and indeed it is not a small one.   In it are names honourably known far beyond the Scottish borders, names of men in every walk of life, wh have upheld the high traditions of our race on the athletic field.

We can look in retrospect on that first meeting under Scottish Amateur Athletic Association rules, held in 1883, and trace the rapid growth and development in everything pertaining to the sport until the present day.

We cannot compare the champions of old with the present day athlete – and who wants to?   Their times may have been greater and their distances less, but the conditions under which they competed were inferior in every respect.   Let us, then, leave them that niche they ever hold in the memory f their countrymen; for their hearts were in the right place, which, indeed, is all that matters.   In achieving the position that it holds today, the Scottish Amateur Athletic Association has had no easy road to travel, and all praise is due to those who have guided its destinies along the thorny path of control.

The Editors of this publication have earned the thanks of all Scottish sportsmen for their meticulous care in chronicling events of so great an interest, and for leaving us a record of the traditional and characteristic athletics of our country, and of those who gained fame in the fields of high endeavour.

IAIN COLQUHOUN

Editor’s Note

EDITOR’S NOTE

It has been truly written that “of the making of many books there is no end”, and in issuing this volume in commemoration of fifty years of activity in the administration and development of amateur athletics in Scotland, the Scottish Amateur Athletic Association adds itself to the increasing numbers of those who desire through the medium of the printed page to mark an important epoch in their life-story.

Owing to the loss of the minute books of the earliest years of the Association it is not possible to give a complete narrative of its origin; nevertheless an endeavour has been made to present a coherent story of its fifty years of existence.   The Editors beg to acknowledge with gratitude the contributions made to this publication by Messrs W Reid (“Diogenes”), JK Ballantyne of Walkerburn, W Maley and WA Whitton, Inverness.   Further acknowledgement is also gratefully made to athletic club officials and others for facilities given by them for the reproduction of many of the illustrations.

Especial thanks are also due to Messrs J Gilbert, T Jack, and J McCulloch (All ex-Presidents of the SAAA) for their valuable contribution to the compilation of the statistical section.

To those whose privilege irt is to gaze down through the mists of the past years this book may help to illumine the memories of their youth, whilst to those whose vision is directed towards the future may it prove a real inspiration to carry on a service so ably begun and to sustain a tradition so worthily created by their predecessors.

Kenneth Whitton

David A Jamieson

Joint Editors

SAAA Office Bearers and Committee

Sports Miscellany: 22nd July 1912

[Published the day after the Olympics closing sessions]

Melvin Sheppard, JE Meredith and H Braun were running at Berlin yesterday.   Their next appearance is at Buda Pest, after which they journey to Scotland where they hope to spend a couple of weeks.   Then they go to England, and after running at Manchester, return home for the American championships in September.

*

The Rangers FC are holding a two-day meeting after all – a decision which will be greatly appreciated by all our athletes, who on the whole have not been over-employed all season.   Monday will, as usual, be given over largely to football of the five-a-side order, and six of the leading teams will be invited to take part in the competition.   Besides the usual handicaps there will be several invitation races, the distance of which will be settled when it is known who will be coming to Glasgow for this meeting.

*

Kilbirnie Ladeside Football Club are running a sports meeting on Saturday.   The programme will consist of the orthodox handicaps, with the addition of a three miles event, in which all the better known distance runners will take part.   Duncan McPhee, the discovery of the season, will run, and it will be interesting to see how he fares with the shorter marks he is sure to get in view of his recent successes at Beith and Ayr.   At neither of these meetings was he stretched, and it just about time his resources were subjected to a severer test than he has yet been asked to face.   His win in the mile at Ayr involved little more than a canter.   At some stages, in fact, he had to put the drag on, so as not to win by too much.   No runner has ripened so rapidly as Duncan McPhee of Clydesdale Harriers.

*

JHD Watson, who has come into prominence  as a long jumper this season (he scored a brilliant win in the international at Powderhall on Saturday) will captain Edinburgh Academicals in the rugby field next season in place of  JMB Scott who is said to have retired from the game definitely, which of course remains to be seen.   Watson is a fine all-round sportsman, being good at almost everything he takes up, and he has a variegated career as while representing Scotland as he did against Ireland on Saturday, he is said to have declined a Rugby decoration from the Scottish Football Union owing to his English associations.   Watson will make an excellent successor to Scott, and the fine rugby traditions of the Academicals will certainly not suffer in his hands.

*

 The announcement that Hannes Kolehmainen is to run at Rangers FC Sports has given great satisfaction in athletic circles, and the ‘light blues’ are to be congratulated on their enterprise.   Of the many imposing figures at Stockholm, Kolehmainen was by no means the least; as a matter of fact he has been exalted to the highest position among Olympic winners through having secured three firsts.  The Finn is great over distances ranging from two to ten miles, and is in this respect another Shrubb, whose records at Ibrox Park in 1904 still hold the field.   Kolehmainen still has designs on Shrubb’s figures and it is just possible that Rangers will include a distance race in their programme    with a view to affording this great runner an opportunity of dispossessing Shrubb’s times of the pre-eminence they have so long enjoyed.

*

The Celtic directors met on Friday afternoon and reviewed the arrangements made by Mr William Maley for the sports next month.    These, it is scarcely necessary to say,  are on a very enterprising scale – as enterprising as in 1908 when several American Olympic champions ran at Parkhead.   It is understood that Messrs Lippincott, Meredith and Sheppard are certain starters, and it is just possible that there may be others.   These are all record smashers.   Lippincott and Meredith will be strangers but Sheppard has been both at Ibrox and Parkhead and few will forget his performances at these grounds.   Sheppard is as great as ever over distances ranging from 440 yards to a mile; indeed, we should say that he has no equal anywhere over these distances.   It is rare to see a man who is first-class over 440 yards also first-class at a mile.   Sheppard embodies this threefold distinction and, though he does not come to Glasgow as Olympic champion, as in 1908 he comes as one who figured with great distinction in all three events at Stockholm.

*

The suggestion thrown out by the racing reporter of “The Herald” that the executive of the Ayr Racecourse should include Fair Saturday in their July programme has caused something like consternation in the ranks of the Ayr United Football Club who have had that day for the last twenty years for their sports.   No other day in the summer calendar will suit them and the Race Committee know what will inevitably flow from any attempt on their part to appropriate Fair Saturday.   As it is, the races during the Glasgow holiday week have taken largely from the interest hitherto shown in the sports, and it is believed that an enlargement of the programme on the lines suggested by the racing reporter of “The Herald” simply means death to the sports.   Up to the present Mr Shaw has worked cordially with the Ayr United FC Sports Committee and in more ways than one has shown an interest in the sports.   But, however tempting an increase from two to three days racing may seem, there is reason to believe that in the meantime at least the executive have no intention of falling in with the suggestion to annex Fair Saturday.

*

There are over 100 entries – to be precise the number is 1033 – for the Army Championships at Aldershot on Wednesday and Thursday of this week.   It is only natural such a portentous list should include many whose names are well known in athletic and other sporting circles.   Lieut RJ Simson, the rugby three-quarter back for instance, will run in the 100 yards,over which he had a good reputation  at Edinburgh Academy, and there are others who have also distinguished themselves in the football field.   Lieut Alan Patterson, one of Great Britain’s Olympic team, will figure in the quarter-mile and half-mile, both of which he should win.    Lieutenant Halswell has held these championships, but Army form, as of today, is not of the superlative excellence to which Halswell brought it.   Corporal Hutson, the AAA Four Miles champion, and Sergeant O’Neil of Irish international note, are the leading lights in the distance races.   Hutson, of course, is a great runner, and if he does not win the one mile, the three miles looks a good thing for him.   The Army Championships are a great sporting and social function and Aldershot ill in consequence be a scene of much gaiety and joyous mirth this week.

*

The racing at the supplementary meeting of the Ayr United FC was quite up to expectations.   Evening sport, strange to say, is always of a higher standard than afternoon sport, and the Ayr meeting was no exception in this respect.   Douglas McNicol of Polytechnic Harriers, did not win the 1000 yards but he got second, being only half a dozen yards behind the winner in the fast time of 2 min 17 1-5th sec.   It was a North of England runner who beat McNicol.     The sprints were extra good, the final of the 100 yards resulting in a perfect finish; the proverbial lady’s handkerchief would have covered the lot at the post.

D Macintosh of Bellahouston Harriers (six yards) was the winner.   His maiden win was at the Queen’s Park sports three years ago, and he has broken the tape several times since, though somehow he always hovers on the same mark or thereabouts.   The walk was very diverting, and many would like to see this item more widely recognised by sports clubs.   Everyday athletics are far too serious and austere, and it is events like walking and jumping and obstacles that impart the necessary hilarity.   The cycle races were both interesting and exciting, although Vic Johnston was not in as good form as we have sometimes seen him at Somerset Park.   F Boor, who is coming to the Celtic Sports, beat him in the scratch five miles invitation race after a display of fine racing judgment.   The home riders did well in the open handicaps claiming five out of six prizes.

Jimmy Curran

James Curran

James Curran was an athlete from the Scottish Borders who emigrated from Galashiels in 1910 and only two years later  trained the 1912 Olympic 800 metres champion in Stockholm, Ted Meredith.   Meredith not only won but  broke the world record in the Stockholm Olympic final.    Curran went on to become a legendary coach in the US, training several Olympians over 50 years. Curran is acknowledged as one of the top track and field coaches in US athletics history.

*

Originally Jimmy Curran had been a member of Gala Harriers – indeed he was captain of the club – and ran well in half-mile and mile races.   Living in the Borders where there was always a thriving pro scene, he knew he was good enough to make some money as a professional and left the amateur ranks in 1905 to run in the Hawick Common Riding Sports.   Like many professionals did, even well into the twentieth century, he ran under a pseudonym – in his case ‘G Gordon’.   He did well and at New Year, 1907 running in the half-mile at the Royal Gymnasium Grounds he won from a mark of 15 yards and returned in the three following years.   In 1907 he went to America for a short spell but came back to race in Britain again.   He also won the Powderhall 300 metres Sprint in 1910 before emigrating permanently to the United States later that year at the age of 30  to become coach at Mercersburg University.

His biggest contribution to Scottish athletics, however, was probably through his work with Wyndham Halswell.   William Reid was an athletics journalist under the title of Diogenes at the start of the 20th century, and in “Fifty Years of Athletics” (1933)  commented that “A short  while ago I got a letter from Jimmy Curran, a Galashiels man, who has for almost a quarter of a century been one of the most distinguished athletic coaches in American school and college athletics.   He went on to say that Curran found Halswell and gave an outline of the relationship.   As we will note later, Curran was a great letter writer.

Halswell

Wyndham Halswell

Curran had been in South Africa with the Highland Light Infantry during the Boer War (1899 -1902) where he met Lieutenant Wyndham Halswell.    On his return he induced the young lieutenant to start training seriously and is generally recognised as the first man to recognise the outstanding talent.  They were a real contrast, an unlikely pairing – the tough, uncompromising professional who had fought through the War, and an officer and a gentleman.   There is a lot of good information on the duo, and on Curran’s philosophy generally, in John Bryant’s excellent book ‘The Marathon Makers’ from which the following comments are taken:

Given Curran’s approach to both the practicalities and the theories of human performance, it is little wonder that he wanted to apply his knowledge and experience to the gifted Halswell, but this team of amateur and professional was bound to lead to tensions.  

‘It’s no use learning to run like a deer if you let others make you a target, and  cut you down with cunning,’ Curran would warn.   ‘There is no justice in sport,’ he would growl,’ ‘If you think you will win because you were better, or because you did everything right, or that you will lose because the other man deserves it, then you are a loser.   You win by outwitting your opponent with luck, or because of his mistakes.   If they give you half a chance to win, then beat ‘em.’

With his experience as a professional, Curran could explore that fine line between out-and-out cheating and being cagey.   In some cases, he realised these were part of the game, even a big part – sharpening the buckle of a belt and using it to scuff a cricket ball, or keeping your mouth sht when the referee fails to notice that you have beaten the starter’s gun.   ‘These things go on,’ Curran would say, ‘Sometimes if you want to win, and you think you can put one past them, then you’ve got to try.’  

Halswell would hear those views and he didn’t always agree with them or the philosophy they carried, but one thing he was sure of was that his visits to the track could teach him much.   Curran taught him the secrets of the punchball for speed, of distance work for stride length and dumb bells for strength.

‘Keep your body fresh,’  he would advise, sharing that nineteenth century preoccupation with how the human body might react to being pushed to the extreme.

*

Curran realised that once Halswell got in front in a race he was unbeatable but he still had to learn to fight in a tight corner.  

‘Your job is to win, right?’ So concentrate and do what’s necessary now.   If you are thinking, I failed in the past, and I’m going to get beaten now, then go home and don’t bother to compete.   I’m not saying it’s bad to lose, but it is bad to give up when you’ve still got a chance.   ‘

‘Courage,’ Curran would tell him, ‘is a form of stubbornness.   It’s a refusal to quit when you want to quit because you are tired or broken.   You need it in everyday life and often everyday courage is more important than the great deeds sort of courage.’

We well know how successful Halswell was, and the philosophies expounded by Curran went with him to Mercersburg.   It was a comparatively new college, founded in 1893, and one of the coaches before him had been a hard act to follow: Alvin Kraenzlein had won four Olympic golds at the 1900 Olympics and was known as the ‘father of modern hurdling’ and as a pioneer of the straight lead leg in hurdling.   But Curran he threw himself into the sport in America straight away and was thrilled by the standard of athlete he encountered.   In Olympic year he wrote letters home to several newspapers (The Daily Telegraph was one of the first and the Glasgow Herald was also on his list) about the talent that abounded there.   In May, 1912,the following note appeared in the ‘Sports Miscellany’ column of the Glasgow Herald:

“An old Scottish runner in an interesting communication on American athletes to an English paper, supplies the following particulars of the running of John Paul Jones who would seem to be the ‘last word’ in distance racing:

“You have no doubt heard of John Paul Jones of Cornell.   He is all he is cracked up to be and a little bit more.   I have seen him run only once and that was when he beat Billy Paul a grand little runner who did 4:1 4-5th making all the running himself and who should have gone faster the next year if everything had broken right for him.   In the last mile of the four mile relay in Philadelphia last April, Jones  was clocked in 4:22 and had a lot in hand.   He ran in the mile two weeks later in 4:12 4-5th beating Paul out on the home stretch by five yards on the same track.   Then he finished up by winning the Inter-Collegiate mile in 4:15 2-5th.   College runners say he could have run 4:12 if pushed.   I should like to have seen Tincler at his best against him.   I do not say he would have beaten George but he certainly would have given him a great race.   I hope he visits England after the Olympiad, then Englishmen will see some of the best distance running they have ever seen – if the climate agrees with him.   There are several more who can get inside 4:20; I should say about four or five.”

The old Scots runner was clearly Curran and this appeared in the Glasgow Herald on 10th June that year, just before the Stockholm Olympics, he wrote to the ‘Glasgow Herald’.

“America’s chances at Stockholm look brighter than ever.   Some wonderful performances have been recorded in dual meets these last two weeks, though this is the worst Spring I have ever seen for getting a team in shape.   Mike Murphy says he has been in the game for 30 years and a worse spring he has never encountered.   Look out for records this year when the boys get into condition.   America will send over the greatest team this year that has ever been gathered together.   It will take 12 feet 6 inches to win a berth in a team of pole vaulters, and about 6 feet 3 inches for the high jumpers.   I saw Mercer of Pennsylvania, do 23 feet 6 inches broad jumping last Saturday, and he is not the best long jumper in America by a long shot.   If the track at Pennsylvania Relays had been in good condition, I feel that Gutterson of Vermont University would have done close on 25 feet.   He did 24 in mud.   I should not be surprised to see four men do 24 feet.   No wonderful time has been done in the sprints as yet, but that is owing, I think, to the cold weather.   In the 440 and 880 some great running will be done.   All the 440 men who leave here will do 49 sec and the half-milers will make Melvin Sheppard run his best.   My boy Meredith will do 1:54 or better and at least 48 3-5th sec for the quarter.   This is for the full distance – 440 and 880 yards  – and when you consider the Olympic distances the times will be correspondingly lower.   The milers will all do 4 min 20 and Barns of Cornell, who ran the two miles in 9 min 17 sec  two weeks ago, will need some watching in the longer distances.” 

Sounds almost too good to be true and the Herald commentator was moved to say “All this reads like a romance, and if Curran’s predictions are fulfilled, Britain would seem to have small chance of success in any of the pedestrian events at Stockholm.   But much the same tale was told at the time of the last Olympics at London, and it may be remembered that the Union Jack was hoisted at some events over which the Stars and Stripes were expected to wave merrily.   And history often has the knack of repeating itself.”

Whether Curran’s optimism was justified or not can be seen from the fact that USA won gold in 100m, 200m, 400m, 800m, hurdles, 4 x 400m, 3000m team race, long jump and pole vault; silver in 100m, 200m, 800m, 1500m, 10000m, sprint hurdles, long jump, high jump, shot, discus and two in the pole vault; bronze in 100m, 400m, 800m, 1500m, hurdles, high jump, long jump,  pole vault, shot, discus and hammer.

In particular the success of his 800m runner, ‘ my boy’ Ted Meredith, in winning gold and setting an Olympic record of 1:52.8 must have fired him up even further.   Meredith had come to Mercersburg as a good quality runner but Curran sharpened him up considerably.   Some of the run-up to the Olympics was described in the Mainline Today:

In April 1912, Meredith was back at the Penn Relays as anchor of the Mercersburg team, which won its event by 50 yards. Two weeks later, he set world interscho­lastic records in the quarter- and half-mile, covering the latter in 1:55. “Meredith doesn’t seem to know how fast he can run,” Curran said. “But I know he’s the fastest runner the world has ever seen.”

Curran thought the Olympic trials at Harvard University would be a good experience for Meredith. He made the team after winning the first 800-yard heat in 1:53 4/5—the same time run by Mel Sheppard in a subsequent heat. Sheppard, of Deptford County, N.J., had been the top U.S. runner at the 1908 Olympics, where he won four gold medals.

Curran later claimed that, in the trials, he deliberately put Meredith in the 880 rather than the 440—which, with weaker competitors, he could have run “in a walk.”

“I told him to run his own race in the final,” wrote Curran in Recreation magazine, “as he would be sure of the team now, and see if he could beat Sheppard in the sprint, a thing no runner had been capable of doing when Sheppard was fit.”

From the time he arrived he started making changes.   For instance the Williams Trophy was awarded for a pentathlon competition – 110m hurdles, 400m, 1600m, long jump and shot putt – but Curran changed it so that it was a selection process for his team.   There was no doubt that the successful college team was Curran’s team.    The USA college athletics scene is a hectic one with athletes competing wherever, whenever the college requires them to and Curran was at the heart of it.    The detailed programme for the 80th Annual Eastern States Track and Field Invitational programme says in its introduction:

“It was in 1934 that the Amateur Athletic Union first held an interscholastic meet at the old Madison Square Garden on 50th Street and 8th Avenue. There had been a “national”championship held earlier at the Newark Armory under the auspices of the St. Benedict’s Prep, a charter member of the New Jersey Catholic Track Conference, but it is from the Garden meet that the meet you’re attending today – The Easterns – draws its lineage.   The meet remained at the Garden until 1965, when the AAU decided to take its championships on the road for a couple of years. The 1934 meet had just one division, won by Jimmy Curran’s team at Mercersburg Academy, located in remote, rural Central Pennsylvania, about 75 miles southwest of Harrisburg. It was under Curran’s tutelage that several world-class athletes developed at Mercersburg, including 800-meter run world record holder Ted Meredith.”

Note the ‘located in remote, rural Central Pennsylvania’ bit: it is still not uncommon for a coach to lament that there are no good athletes in a particular area, and yet coach Arthur Lydiard produced a squad of world beaters whereever he went from New Zealand, via Europe to Mexico.   There are many examples of coaches who continuously produce good class athletes from small areas.  Nearer home there are coaches who move around the country and have almost all-star squads in every location.   Curran went on in remote Pennsylvania for half a century delivering the goods.

He was to be at Mercersburg for 51 years – ie until he died in 1961 at 81 years of age – and in all that time he coached or developed 13 Olympians including

* Ted Meredith, double Olympic gold (800m, 4 x 400m) in 1912 at Stockholm;

* Bill Carr, double Olympic gold (400m, 4 x 400m) in 1932 at Los Angeles whose career was cut short by a car accident in 1933;

* Charles Moore, double Olympic gold, (400m hurdles, 4 x 400m relay), 1952 Helsinki;

* Alan Woodring, Olympic gold (200) in 1920 at Antwerp.

An article in the Mercersburg yearbook 0n 20th December, 2010, under the heading “Olympic Medals Find A Home At Mercersburg’ quotes Charles Moore and it reads as follows:

“Olympic gold medallist and USA Track & Field Hall of Fame member Charles Moore has donated the gold and silver medals he won at the 1952 Summer Olympic Games to Mercersburg.  The medals will be displayed in the school’s renovated Nolde Gymnasium.   Moore won the 400m hurdles in the record setting time of 50.8 at the 1952 Summer Games in Helsinki and also ran the third leg of the mile relay for the silver medal winning USA team.  He was an NCAA champion in the 220-yard low hurdle and 440 yard dash at Cornell University.   He also won four straight AAU titles in 400-meter hurdles from 1949 to 1952.   The US Olympic Committee named Moore as one of its 100 Golden Athletes in 1996.  

I owe everything in my Mercersburg career to Jimmy Curran, who simply turned to this kid who had never – ever – run and said, “Here, let me help you.”   More says.”

An Article on Allen Woodring on the Family Search website says “For his education Woodring attended several prestigious academic institutions including Peddie Institute in Hightstown, NJ, then at local Bethlehem Park, and finally to Mercersburg Academy, graduating in the class of 1918.   At Mercersburgh, under the tutelage of coach Jimmy Curran, he began to develop his championship potential as a sprinter on the track team.   

Competing on the high school level, Woodring topped the state list in both the 220 and 100 yard dashes in his junior and senior years.   Setting the state record 0f 21 3/5th seconds in the 220 yard dash as a senior in 1918, he was named first-team All-American.   Also in his senior year, Woodring was the National inter-scholastic champion in the 70-yard dash.   Undefeated as a senior in major inter-scholastic meets in both the 70-yard and 100-yard dashes, he led both national lists for the year, and also led the nation in the 100 during his junior year.”

As for Carr,

“1932 Olympics, USA Track & Field: Bill Carr was the second Mercersburg track athlete to win two gold medals in an Olympics, racing to the top of the podium in one of the most noted 400 meter races in Olympic history and anchoring the triumphant 4 x 400 meter relay team at the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California.   …   Carr, a member of the US Track Hall of Fame, was never beaten in a one-lap distance.”

The track at the college is still, in the twenty first century, called the Jimmy Curran Track and his name still appears college publications, indicative of the fact that he is still highly regarded there, 50 years after his death.    I quote from two fairly recent   references to him.      On 4th April 2016 – note the year – in an article in the “On Track” series in the college publications, there is an interview with coach Nikki Walker who is the current head coach for both girls and boys outdoor track and field teams.

“Question:   But isn’t track also an opening for a kid who really may not have excelled at any other team sport but discovers that he or she can really run?    Walker’s response: Yes, and that was the sole philosophy of our storied track coach, Jimmy Curran: if you come out for track, I’ll make you better.   CharlieMoore ’47 is a perfect example of a kid who had no background and went on to become an OIlympic gold medallist, and it all started out for him right here at Mercersburg under Jimmy Curran.”

Back a bit, in August 2008, the Track and Field News had a poll to find the five greatest USATF Coaches of all-time and among the nominations was Jimmy Curran.   He was right there with Tom Tellez, Bill Bowerman, Jumbo Elliott, Brutus Hamilton, Payton Jordan, Mike Murphy and the top men of all time.

Nor has he been forgotten back in Scotland:  Curran was inducted into the Scottish Borders Sporting Hall of Fame in 2008.    In addition, the European Coaches Association is considering awarding Curran a place in its own hall of fame in recognition of a lifetime of achievement in track and field coaching.   Curran is possibly the Scottish Borders’ greatest ever Olympic coach and it is said that, despite achieving global success, in a career at Mercersburg Academy that lasted 51 years he never forgot his roots.

Sports Miscellany: 15th July, 1912

HJ Christie has won the medal generously presented to the West of Scotland Harriers by Mr William Maley of the Celtic club, for the most number of points in connection with the evening meetings which that club has held during the summer months at Parkhead.    Christie last Wednesday won the handicap 300 yards in dashing style.   No one seems to have profited more than Christie from these handicaps and his success is an example and incentive to all who go in for track enjoyment and recreation.    It is the intention of the West of Scotland Harriers to hold one or two more evening meetings ere the season closes.

*

The Scottish Amateur Athletic Association will entertain the Irish team and friends after the international match on Saturday in Milne’s Hotel in Edinburgh.   Mr Thomas Jack will be in the chair.   This is always a highly interesting function, the Irishmen making it so with their quaint humour and fine feeling, and no doubt there will be a pleasant revival of these and other features at the banquet on Saturday evening.

*

Queen’s Park FC are making an interesting departure early in August in connection with their confined sports.   They will include either two or three handicaps open to all comers.   It is just possible the meeting will be sandwiched between the Rangers and Celtic functions with the hope, no doubt, of getting one or two of the big guns who are coming to Glasgow for these meetings to show their paces.   The Queen’s Park, to the great dismay of many of their warmest supporters, dropped their meeting in June, and it is by way of compensating for that disappointment that they are including a few open races at their club games next month.   If the American and other Olympic competitors are in Glasgow in the first ten days of August, it will be interesting to see if they are allured by the Hampden bait.

*

The Ayr Football Club hold supplementary sports at Somerset Park this evening.   By an arrangement with Mr Shaw, the Ayr races will begin earlier than usual, so as not to interfere in any way with the sports at Somerset.   The entries show a falling off compared with last year, but the quality is as good if not better in some events, particularly in the cycle events and quality is preferable at any time to quantity.   Indeed, if we had fewer entries there would be less monotony in everyday amateur games.   We are never crestfallen when we see limited fields so long as the quality is above the average.   There will be no invitation sprint handicap this evening, and we think that the Ayr committee have made a mistake here.   They should cater as liberally for home runners as they do for strangers, however eminent.   Douglas McNicol, the SAAA Mile champion, will run in the 220 yards and 1000 yards handicaps.   He has seven yards in the sprint and is scratch in the distance race.

*

Every thing points to a keen contest between Scotland and Ireland at Powderhall on Saturday.   Indeed the feeling is gaining ground that Ireland may pickup winning points, and if she does, no one will be greatly hurt for it is well that the honours should go round as frequently as possible.   Ireland, of course, has a very considerable lead though of late years Scotland has done uncommonly well.   HM Macintosh of Cambridge University AC has cried of and small wonder.   He has been more or less in harness since the beginning of the year and any little staleness he has been showing lately must be put down to that fact.   Six months constant training, which involves much self denial if it is to be effective, must have a staling influence, and the withdrawal of the old Glenalmond boy, while regretted, will be regarded as the inevitable result of his long and assiduous devotion to track preparation.   RC Duncan will run in his place.  It is to be hoped that WA Stewart and GLR Anderson, and other Olympic representatives will find it convenient to  be present.   Most of them will reach London on Wednesday and it is understood one or two will make tracks for Edinburgh without spending any time in the Metropolis.   There is always a most illuminating and educative display of athleticism at the matches between Scotland and Ireland and the one on Saturday is not likely to prove an exception in that respect.

*

Cycle racing is always an important item in the programme of the Celtic Sports which always attracts the leading riders from England and Ireland as well as a full representation of native talent.   The following well-known cyclists among others, have intimated their intention of competing at Parkhead on 10th prox.:   RL Player, Cambridge, Victor Johnston, Birmingham,  FA Bamforth, Goole, F Boor, Cambridge, WP Murray, Belfast, E Payne, Worcester, CW White, Scunthorpe, TM Bancroft, Manchester, A White, Scunthorpe, and WH Kerr, Belfast.   With those and a number of the competitors in the Olympics present, the meeting will be more than usually international in character.

*

It is gratifying to find the names of well-known athletes bulking so largely in recent medical passes and class honours lists at Edinburgh University.   GV Bogle, hon secretary of the Edinburgh University Athletic Club and a “triple blue” and SBB Campbell, the Irish international forward, have passed with distinction for degrees in medicine and surgery, and ordinary pases have been obtained by JM Elliott and E StJ Seelby (hockey internationals), TP Herriot (cricket international), G McConnell (Irish international forward), GG Marshall (Dalkeith Cricket Club), AWS Sichel (University Rugby Club) and W Ross Stewart (Edinburgh Academicals).   The following have also passed in less advanced examinations: AS Taylor (the Irish international three-quarter back), AW Gunn (the Scottish international half back), RM Hume (Edinburgh Harriers), LG Thomas and ARC McKerrow (University rugby blues), W Bird and MP Inglis (athletic blues), AR Hudson and HD Wright (cricket blues).   Class honours have been taken by WL Hunter, winner recently of the Edinburgh University athletic championships, EG Pyott (Watsonians), HJ Davidson, JHD Watson, AM Stewart and GD Ferguson (Edinburgh Academicals)JH Hood and P McCallum (athletic blues), AH Budler (cricket blue), A Cleland (golf gold medallist of the University), RHH Newton (hockey internationalist), S Arnott (rugby blue), GM Levack, FG Foster, RW Russell-Jones and JRS Mackay (Edinburgh Wanderers) and TA Fuller, RF Cesari, and C Dundee (Edinburgh University  A fifteen).

*

Berlin has been chosen as the venue for the Olympic Games in 1916.   There is a feeling, growing in volume and influence, are coming too frequently and many would like to see the interval extended from four to ten years.   And Games every ten years would comply with all the objects and conditions laid down by the Olympic Association as fully and beneficially as as Games every four years.   The question of expense, too, is beginning to be felt by some of the countries.   Even England, with all its love of sport, and limitless financial resources, is finding it difficult to finance these Games, and unless something in the shape of a government grant is made, there will be a shortage of funds for the Berlin function of 1916.   The cost of sending a team to Sweden is enormous, and unless the British Olympic Association funds are amply replenished, the enthusiasm regarding the Berlin venture four years hence will be less fervent than it has been regarding the venture now in full swing in Stockholm.   The future of the Olympic Games, in fact, is bound up in the question of finance, and this has been discovered long ago by those who know something of the inner life of athletics, not only in Britain but in other countries as well.

*

Sports Miscellany: 1st July, 1912

James T Soutter will make the International Match between Scotland and Ireland his last appearance for the season.   Mr Crichton extended an invitation for him to run at the Rangers Sports, but he had to decline for academic reasons.

*

A party of Scottish competitors for the Olympic Games sailed from Granton on Saturday afternoon, including, among others, RC Duncan (West of Scotland Harriers, R Burton (Berwick Harriers) Miss Bella Moore (Glasgow), GT Cornet (Inverness), W Pearson (Paisley),  W Kirkwood (Paisley) and the team of cyclists who are to take part in the great 200 miles road race.

*

Lord Desborough , who is taking a very keen interest in the Olympic Games, has just created what must be regarded as a rather novel kind of record.   His election for the presidency of the Four-in-Hand Driving Club brought the number of natinal governing bodies in sport  of which he is president to nine, as follows – MCC, Amateur Fencing Association, British Olympic Council, Lawn Tennis Association, Croquet Association, Thames Punting Club, Four-in-Hand Driving Club, Coaching Club, Eoyal Life-Saving Society and Wimbledon Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club.

*

At the summer meeting of the London Athletic Club last week, HM Macintosh, the old Glenalmond boy, won the 100 metres in 11 sec., beating among others D MacMillan and AED Anderson.   This is Macintosh’s best effort, and is in striking contrast to his poor performance at the AAA’s championships.   RFC Yorke won the 1000 yards in 2 min 17 sec which is an LAC record.   Yorke is a popular member of the London Scottish and a runner who can cover the 1000 yards in a time that ties with Scottish record is one upon whom the SAAA should keep a  watchful eye.

*

George Hepburn, the old West of Scotland Harrier, shares the honour of having discovered JA Howard of Winnipeg who is expected to do something impressive at the Olympic Games.    He is a negro, stands six foot three inches and scales twelve stone.   With practically no training, Howard ran Meyers, of the New York AC, a very close race at Winnipeg last season, and the very fact that he is Canada’s first string for the sprints at Stockholm would seem to indicate that he is a first class runner.   Howard is employed at a dairy farm, the owner of which is an old West of Scotland Harrier.   It is possible therefore that he may visit Glasgow at the end of the Stockholm Games.

The Rangers FC are going to have a high class meeting this season.   GH Patching, WA Stewart, WG Applegarth, CN Seedhouse, GRL Anderson, AED Anderson, E Owen, Douglas McNicol and H Braun have all promised to come to Ibrox on Aug 3rd.   This will be Braun’s only appearance in Scotland.   It is just possible one or two of America’s Olympic representatives may also take part in the Rangers meeting.   Melvin Sheppard has pleasant recollections of his visit to the Rangers ground four years ago, and doubtless he will be keen to cement old friendships.   In the meantime it is the Rangers intention to confine their sports to one day with football a strong feature.   No meeting should exceed three hours, and the Rangers would do well to bear that in mind when making their final arrangements.   There is such a thing as sporting dyspepsia.

*

Beith Football Club have the field all to themselves on Saturday first, and the success of their meeting is assured if one is to judge of the number of entries already received.   There was a representative of the committee at the Hamilton Academicals Sports on Saturday, and the manner in which entry forms were taken up was proof, if any were wanted, of the popularity of the Beith function among Western amateurs.   W Law of Bellahouston Harriers will make his first  appearance for the season at Beith.   He is one of the best sprinters in the District, and as Halswell’s ‘mascot‘ was a prominent figure on the path when that great runner was charming us with his marvellous speed gifts.   Last year Goodwin of Ayr FC was discovered at Beith; he won the 100 yards very cleverly, and confirmed the genuineness of his sprinting by holding his own at other meetings.   Goodwin is expected to take part in the sports at Beith on Saturday, and there are other Ayrshire runners who are coming to the support of the Beith club.

*

Ireland will be represented by the following athletes in the contest with Scotland at Powderhall on 20th July:

100 yards flat race: S McCombe (Belfast, JH McVey (Belfast)

220 yards flat race:   FR Shaw (Dublin University), JH McVey (Belfast)

440 yards flat race:   J Gray (Limerick), JM Hill (Queens Park Harriers)

880 yards flat race:   JM Hill (Queens Park Harriers), R Hales (Bandon)

One Mile flat race:   R Hales (Bandon), FI Ryder (Dublin).

Five Miles Flat Race:   H Murphy (Hallamshire Harriers), FIO McNeill (Dublin),  FI Ryder (Dublin).

120 yards hurdles:   CR Dugmere (London), F Kirwan (Waterford).

Putting the Shot:   J Irwin (Dublin).

Throwing the Hammer:   JJ Flanagan (Kilmallack), D Carey (Dublin).

Long Jump:   F Kirwan (Waterford), T O’Donghue (Liverpool)

High Jump:   T Carroll (Kinsale), T O’Donoghue (Liverpool)

*

England carries the palm for high-class performances at championships.   Except in the hammer she heads the list in every event, and in somethe superiority is more marked than in others.   With the 100 yards captured by a South African, the 880 yards by a German, the hurdles by an Anglo-Scot, the broad jump by an Irishman, the hammer by a Scotsman and the shot by an Irishman, England however does not have a great deal to boast of, and in a triangular international with Scotland and Ireland the fight would be much closer than some people are prepared to concede.   Something of a novel kind is required to quicken public interest in athletics, even in London, and thatsomething might be provided in a triangular international match.   The following table gives the championship results for the season:-

Events                                  England                 Scotland                 Ireland                Wales

100 yards:                             9 4-5ths                10 1-5th                  10 2-5ths             10 3-5ths

220 yards:                            22 secs                  23 1-5th                  23 4-5th               23 3-5ths

440 yards:                            49 4-5th               51 4-5th                   51 4-5th               56 3-5ths

880 Yards:                          1 min 58 1-5th      2 min 1 4-5th        2 min 2 sec          2 min 6 4-5th

Mile:                                     4 min 21 2-5th      4 min 31 4-5th      4 min 32 3-5th   4 min 30 3-th

Four Miles:                         20 min 10 4-5th     20 in 46 sec          20 min 52 sec              –

Hurdles:                               15 3-5th                    17 1-5th                 17 sec                     19 3-5th

High Jump:                         6ft 0 in                      5 ft 9 in                 6ft 1 in                   5 ft 5 in

Broad Jump:                       23 ft 2 1/2in            20 ft 9 in                22 ft 3 in               19 ft 5 in

Hammer:                             162 ft 3 1/4 in          150 ft 3 1/2in        165 ft 8 in                       –

Putting:                                44 ft 10 in                 48 ft 2 in                46 ft 10 1/2 in

*

Owing to the large number of entries for the fencing events at the Olympic Games, the period of time allotted to them has been extended.   It was originally decided that they should begin on July 6th and conclude on July 14th but they will now begin on July 4th and finish on July 17th,   There will be adequate representation of the UK at the Olympic Games so far as numbers are concerned, the revised entries to date being as follows:

Wrestling … 12

Football … 18

Swimming … 32

Gymnastics … 34

Fencing … 24

National Rifle Association … 34

Clay Bird Shooting … 9

Athletics … 74

Cycling … About 20

Modern Pentathlon … 3

Rowing … 20

Horse Riding (Military) … 4

Grand Total   284

The yachting entries have to be added to the above and competitors and officials from the United Kingdon will number well over 300.

*

Sports Miscellany: 24th June, 1912

HM Macintosh, the runner-up in the SAAA 100 yards championship will be able to make the journey to Sweden but cannot assist Scotland against Ireland at Powderhall Grounds, Edinburgh, on July 20th.

T Jack, President of the SAAA who has run and won his last championship, cannot get to Stockholm for the Olympic Games.   The British team will be all the poorer for the absence of one of the most genuine amateurs who has ever adorned the cinder track

When in Glasgow DF McNicol, the SAAA Mile champion, indicated that owing to business reasons, he would probably withdraw from the Olympic team, and CFR Ruffell of Highgate Harriers may also for similar reasons decline the invitation of the AAA.   Both are outstanding runners, and the British team will be all the poorer should they not be able to go to Stockholm.

Scotland’s reserves for the match against Ireland at Powderhall next month have now received the publicity they deserve.   George Dallas, Maryhill Harriers, will run in the quarter in the event of his services being required.   Eric Macdougall, West of Scotland Harriers, and Nicol Whitlie, Edinburgh Southern  Harriers, are the half mile reserves, WM CRabbie, Edinburgh Academicals, the mile; JC Thomson Edinburgh Harriers and Harry Hughes, West of Scotland Hariers, the three miles.

The relay race at the London Athletic Club this evening over eight furlongs should be one of the best ever seen in this country.   The LAC will select their men from Messrs Stewart, Haley, Skeet, McMillan, Seedhouse, AE Anderson, Russell, Brown, Lilly, Gunton and  Palmer – all well-known South of England runners.   Skeet is at one of the London hospitals and some idea of his pace will be gained when we mention that in a 220 yards race some ten days ago he beat WA Stewart, the Scottish sprint and furlong champion.   Skeet I an Australian but for some regrettable reason has not been asked to represent the Commonwealth nation at the Olympic Games.

Hamilton Academicals are on Saturday reviving what was one of the best amateur meetings in the Western District.   That was when WW Tait, TG McConnell and others of pleasant memory were ornaments of the track, and if we mistake not, Mr DS Duncan who has acted so long and with such acceptance as honorary secretary of the Scottish Amateur Athletic Association, has one of the best miles standing to his credit under the auspices of the Hamilton Academicals.   At all events there are interesting recollections in connection with amateur athletics at Hamilton, and the Academicals are to be congratulated on reviving the function.   The arrangements are in the hands of Mr Thomas Moore who is well up in sports managements, from which point of view as well as others, the meeting on Saturday will be all that the most fastidious could wish.    There being no counter attractions of a similar kind in the Western District, all the best runners will be competing.

The Glasgow Police Sports is one of the sporting institutions of the city.   They have a long and honourable tradition and there is no one in the whole force who does more to add to the prestige of the gathering than Lieutenant Mennie of the Northern.   He has held the convenership for a long number of years, more than he now cares to admit, and there is always something fresh in his arrangements.   Much has been written about dropping the field events for all comers, but the step, we are assured was not taken without the most careful consideration.    Professional heavy men will no doubt feel the loss of these events but they may be revived next year.   The fact is, there is a growing feeling within the force that, if it were possible, it would be better in every way if the meeting were run under SAAA Rules.   There have been informed discussions on the subject by leading gentlemen of both sides – the SAAA and Police Athletic Club – but the obstacles are formidable, and prejudices so strong that in the meantime no forward step can be taken.

The Territorial Championships are to be held at the Marine Gardens on Saturday.   These should appeal to the Edinburgh imagination where volunteering has always been popular.   The London Scottish, now known as the 14th Battalion, won the London championship a few days ago with 23 points, the 12th Battalion being second with 17 and the 28th Battalion third with 12.   There are a number of good athletes in the London Scottish, one of the best being RFC York who won the mile as he liked in 4 min 36 2-5th sec York is a member of the London Athletics Club and he takes part regularly in open meetings, and if he comes North this week, as he is almost certain to, both T Jack and WM Crabbie, if they are again running, will not have matters all their own way.   It was at one of the Territorial functions that Crabbie formed a taste for open athletics, and the fact that he was provisionally chosen for the Olympic Games and is now reserve for the mile in the match Scotland  v  Ireland , would seem to indicate that his powers are held in high esteem by officials in the East of Scotland.   The twelve miles go-as-you-please in marching order , will most likely again end in a struggle between the “Greys” of London, and the “Greys” of Glasgow for first honours, with a preference for the former, who the other day broke their own record.   They would seem to be invincible at this form of athletic exercise and there would be no small excitement, even in Edinburgh, were the old 1st Lanark who have been training most assiduously, to break the continuity of triumph which has attended the London Scottish since marching of this kind was introduced into the Territorial Army.   The “team” at Parkhead on Tuesday were not particularly brilliant, but placing the results alongside the London Territorials, Glasgow should pick up a number of points, while Edinburgh, which has a strong University corps, including DS Campbell and others, may be trusted to guard the interests of the Scottish capital.

Sports Miscellany: 10th June 1912

A Glasgow High School boy draws our attention to the interesting fact that at the recent sports of the Glasgow University AC as many as eight firsts out of eleven were captured by old pupils of that school.

Either three or four of Australia’s Olympic team, all of whom claim Scottish blood, will take part in the Scottish championships on Saturday.   Murray, who has put up great times as a walker, is one and Hill, a very fine mile runner, is another.

Harry Hughes (West of Scotland Harriers) described by an English paper as “the greatest distance runner in the country for his weight, 7 st 1 lb” may take part in the four miles SAAA championship on Saturday.   He has been doing excellent work on the track lately, his win in the three miles handicap at the Clydesdale Harriers sports demonstrating that there are great possibilities in this “physical marvel.”

JA Campbell, who won the SAAA broad jump championship in 1902 with 21 ft 3 1/2 inches and in 1904 with 21 ft 9 inches, is home on a visit from South Africa.   Mr Campbell was schooled at Watson’s College, at whose sports he more than once distinguished himself; and whilein Glasgow he ran under the West of Scotland Harriers colours.   Mr Campbell’s interest in athletics is still keen and he hopes to witness the SAAA Championships at Ibrox this week.

Clydesdale Harriers are holding sports at Clydebank on the 22nd.   They draw a lot of members from that district which is ripe for the introduction of amateur games of the class associated with the name Clydesdale Harriers.   A local colouring will be given in the programme, and possibly the Clydebank Football Club  will be asked to lend their help; at any rate, the sports will be held on their ground.

At one time Bellahouston Harriers contemplated running an evening meeting, but they have now decided to confine their efforts in that direction to a few races for members of the club, and these will be brought off, probably next month.   Bellahouston Harriers have never made anything from their sports, and they are not disposed in the meantime to increase their liabilities – a very sensible resolution in view of the scant interest taken in athletics by the citizens of Glasgow.

Babcoick and Wilcox Athletic Club are holding open sports on their ground at Renfrew on Saturday, and although clashing with the Championships at Ibrox, they are hopeful of getting a good entry.   The short mark men will of course be at the championships, and in their absence the others should run with an irresponsibility that in other circumstances they would not have the chance to display.   The B&WAC has done good work for athletics since it was formed, and the fact that they are holding an open meeting is an indication that they are fully alive to their responsibilities.

HM Macintosh of Cambridge University has entered for the Scottish Championships this week.   In view of the reputation he has earned in English athletic circles, it may be interesting to mention that Macintosh was born in Kelso, and lived near Glasgow for 10 years before going to Glenalmond School.   Macintosh is 19 years of age.   Macmillan, also of Cambridge, will not be a competitor at Ibrox.   His connections with Scotland are not so strong as Macintosh.   Macmillan’s father was Scotch and his mother English, and his home is in the South of England.   He was at Felstead School before going to Trinity College.

WA Stewart (holder of the Scottish 100 yards championship), who is studying at one of the London hospitals, has decided to run for Australia at the Olympic Games, and his place in the 400 metres will be taken by DH Jacobs (Herne Hill Harriers).   FG Black, who ran in the Scottish trials at Parkhead, has withdrawn his name from the English team and his place in the 1600 metres relay race will be taken by GRL Anderson.   Black, it may be remembered, made a very disappointing display in the 400 and 800 metres at Parkhead, and possibly that, combined with other reasons, has caused him to withdraw from the British team.     Neither JJ Flanagan nor D Horgan is in the official list of entries sent to Stockholm, and if TR Nicolson of Kyles of Bute does not go to the Games, Britain will be very weak in the field events.

If all, or only a few of the crack Scotsmen who have been enriching the fame of English athletics this season come North for the Scottish Amateur Athletic Association Championships at Ibrox on Saturday, there should be some very fine performances.   Last year the Anglo-Scots were very prominent at Hampden Park, while the year previous we all have cherished recollections of what GRL Anderson of Oxford University accomplished in the hurdles and quarter mile.   Anderson has enhanced his reputation greatly in the interval, and as he is a certain starter in the hurdles and quarter this week he should appeal to the sporting imagination as impressively as did Lieutenant Halswell a few seasons ago.    There are others of equal note over different distances such as DF McNicol, WA Stewart and RA Lindsay, all holders of Scottish honours, and if the ambition to retain these is as burning as it was to become possessed of them, they are all certain to be at Ibrox on Saturday.   The entries do not close until today with Mr Copeland, and we hope to give the names in tomorrow’s “Herald”.   Never, perhaps, will so many first-class athletes have taken part in a Scottish Championship meeting, and as a number of the competitors are among the chosen for the Olympic Games, we are therefore promised a foretaste of what will be disclosed at Stockholm next month.   The Glasgow public will belie its reputation for broadminded sporting taste if it does not turn out in large numbers on Saturday.

James Curran, an old Scottish amateur who was well known in the Border shires, in an interesting contribution on American athletics, says:-

America’s chances at Stockholm look brighter than ever.   Some wonderful performances have been recorded in dual meets these last two weeks, though this is the worst Spring I have ever seen for getting a team in shape.   Mike Murphy says he has been in the game for 30 years and a worse spring he has never encountered.   Look out for records this year when the boys get into condition.   America will send over the greatest team this year that has ever been gathered together.   It will take 12 feet 6 inches to win a berth in a team of pole vaulters, and about 6 feet 3 inches for the high jumpers.   I saw Mercer of Pennsylvania, do 23 feet 6 inches broad jumping last Saturday, and he is not the best long jumper in America by a long shot.   If the track at Pennsylvania Relays had been in good condition, I feel that Gutterson of Vermont University would have done close on 25 feet.   He did 24 in mud.   I should not be surprised to see four men do 24 feet.   No wonderful time has been done in the sprints as yet, but that is owing, I think, to the cold weather.   In the 440 and 880 some great running will be done.   All the 440 men who leave here will do 49 sec and the half-milers will make Melvin Sheppard run his best.   My boy Meredith will do 1:54 or better and at least 48 3-5th sec for the quarter.   This is for the full distance – 440 and 880 yards  – and when you consider the Olympic distances the times will be correspondingly lower.   The milers will all do 4 min 20 and Barns of Cornell, who ran the two miles in 9 min 17 sec  two weeks ago, will need some watching in the longer distances.” 

All this reads like a romance, and if Curran’s predictions are fulfilled, Britain would seem to have small chance of success in any of the pedestrian events at Stockholm.   But much the same tale was told at the time of the last Olympics at London, and it may be remembered that the Union Jack was hoisted at some events over which the Stars and Stripes were expected to wave merrily.   And history often has the knack of repeating itself.

Students of comparative form should be interested in the adjoined table.   It gives the English and Scottish Olympic trials and the Olympic records, thus showing at a glance what our athletes have to do in the way of practice ere they can hope to become possessed of the guerdons which are to be put up for competition at Stockholm in July.   The Scottish performances are by no means glowing, and yet it is admitted that they are much better than they seem.   The conditions at Parkhead were against anything in the way of sensational sport, but even allowing for that, better results might have been achieved in the 400 and 800 at least.   The Scottish performances, with the exception of TR Nicolson’s hammer throw, are far behind those of England, while in turn the English performances fall short of Olympic ideals as symbolised in the records.   English officials however are well satisfied with the recent trials at Stamford Bridge, and the feeling is that with a month’s training, the performances at the championship meeting should touch a higher standard than has been the case for some years.   That being so, the “times” given in the following table should undergo a process of transformation.

Event            English                  Scottish                  Olympic Records

100m                 11 sec                      11 4-5th sec                    10 4-5th sec

200m                22 2-5th                 23 4-5th sec                   21  3-5th sec

400m                49 1-5th sec           52 sec                              48 2-5th

800m                1m 57 3-5ths          1m 59 3-5th                   1m 52 4-5th

1500m              4m 6 1-5th              4m 23s                            4m 3 3-5ths

5000m              15m 13 3-5th             –                                            –

Hurdles             15 4-5th s                  –                                       15.0 sec

Hammer            134′ 8 1/2″             140′ 10″                             170′ 4 1/2″

Weight               41′ 10 1/2″                –                                        48′ 7″

SB Jump            5′ 6″                           –                                        11′ 4 1/2″

RB Jump           22′ 4″                        20′ 10″                              24′ 6 1/2″

RH Jump           6’11”                          6′                                        6′ 3″

SH Jump            4’8″                           –                                          6’4 1/4″

Hop Step&J       43’10”                       –                                          48′ 11 1/4″

Pole Vault            –                               –                                           12′ 2″

Javelin                137′ 3 1/2″               –                                          179′ 10 1/2″

Discus                 134′ 5 1/2″               –                                          134′ 3″