1932 NCAA Track and Field Championships

The 1932 NCAA Track and Field Championships was the ninth NCAA track and field championship. The meet was held at Chicago, Illinois in June 1932.[1]

1932 NCAA Track and Field Championships
DatesJune 1932
Host cityChicago, Illinois
University of Chicago
VenueStagg Field
1931
1933

Team championship

1. Indiana - 56 points
2. Ohio State - 49¾ points
3. Minnesota - 31½ points
4. Marquette - 23¾ points
5. Michigan - 23 points
6. Iowa - 19 points
7. Illinois - 18½ points
8. Oklahoma - 17 points
9. Illinois State - 15 points
10. Georgia - 14 points
10. Kansas - 14 points

Track events

100-yard dash
1. Ralph Metcalfe, Marquette - 9.5 seconds (equals world record)
2. Donald Bennett, Ohio St.
3. Jimmy Johnson, Illinois St. Normal
4. Hudson Hellmich, Illinois
5. Harold Thompson, Minnesota
6. Ralph Pierce, North Dakota

120-yard high hurdles
1. George Saling, Iowa - 14.1 seconds (new world record)
2. John Black, Ohio St.
3. Jack Keller, Ohio St.
4. Charles Scheifley, Minnesota
5. Edward Roden, Wisconsin
6. H. Hinckley Kansas St.

220-yard dash
1. Ralph Metcalfe, Marquette - 20.5 seconds (new world record)
2. Jimmy Johnson, Illinois St. Normal
3. Donald Bennett, Ohio St.
4. Harold Thompson, Minnesota
5. Peyton Glass, Oklahoma Aggies
6. Hudson Hellmich, Illinois

220-yard low hurdles
1. Jack Keller, Ohio St. - 22.7 seconds (new world record)
2. George Saling, Iowa
3. Charles Scheifley, Minnesota
4. C. Mears, Ohio Wesleyan
5. Charles Crouch, Indiana
6. Oliver Duggins, Northwestern

400-meter Hurdles
1. Eugene Beatty, Michigan Normal - 59.9 seconds
2. John Lewis, Detroit City College
3. Clyde Blanchard, Arizona
4. I. Thurston, Iowa
5. C. Mears, Ohio Wesleyan
6. G. Crank, Loyola of Chicago

440-yard dash
1. Alex Wilson, Notre Dame - 48.1 seconds
2. Ivan Fuqua, Indiana
3. R.A. Arnold, Michigan Normal
4. Edwin Russell, Michigan
5. Roger Keast, Michigan St.
6. R. Burns, Butler

880-yard run
1. Charles Hornbostel, Indiana - 1:52.7 (equals NCAA record)
IE[2] Glenn Dawson, Oklahoma
IE E. Gray, Abilene Christian
2. Edwin Turner, Michigan
3. Adolph Schiller, Texas
4. D. Dunkin, Missouri
IE N. Rhodes, Kansas State Teachers (Emporia)
5. Earl Labertew, Iowa St.
6. Lyle Hutton, Illinois St. Normal

One-mile run
1. Glenn Cunningham, Kansas - 4:11.1 (new NCAA record)
2. Henry Brocksmith, Indiana
IE[2] Russell Zaser, Butler
3. Larry Kenney, Purdue
IE D. Smith, Kansas State Teachers (Pittsburg)
4. John Simmons, Abilene Christian
5. Lyle Chapman, Iowa St.
6. Pearson, North Dakota

Two-mile run
1. Charles Shugert, Miami - 9:16.7 (new NCAA record)
2. Henry Brocksmith, Indiana
3. Cloyd Julian, DePaul
4. James Currell, Minnesota
5. Mike Pilbrow, Grinnell
6. William Hill, Michigan

Field events

Broad jump
1. Lambert Redd, Bradley Tech - 25 feet, 6⅜ inches
2. John Brooks, Chicago
3. Armin Dreusicke, Elmhurst
4. J. Morris, Oklahoma
5. Charles Crouch, Indiana
6. Rowens, Georgia

High jump
IE[2] Willis Ward - 6 feet, 7½ inches
1. Bert Nelson, Butler - 6 feet, 5¾ inches
2. Ted Shaw, Wisconsin
IE V. Murphy, Notre Dame
IE R. Schroeder, Kansas State Teachers (Pittsburg)
3. Howard Spencer, Geneva
3. William Newblock, Oklahoma
3. Worth Watkins, Abilene Christian
6. Ralston Russell, Ohio St.
6. D. Windau, Marquette
6. Robert Darling, Notre Dame
6. Nelson Schrier, Western Michigan

Hop, step and jump
1. Lambert Redd, Bradley Tech - 48 feet, 3½ inches
2. Meinert, De Paul
3. John Weatherly, Monmouth
4. J. Morris, Oklahoma
5. Portmess, De Paul
6. Charles Crouch, Indiana

Pole vault
1. Bryce Beecher, Indiana - 13 feet, 10 inches
IE[2] Irving Seely, Illinois
2. Dick Schram, Marquette
2. Elton Hess, Minnesota
2. John Wonsowitz, Ohio St.
2. Don Zimmerman, Tulane
2. J. McKinley, Michigan Normal
2. Ernest Lennignton, Illinois

Discus throw
1. Frank Purma, Illinois - 156 feet, 4¼ inches
2. Booker Brooks, Michigan
3. Graham Batchelor, Georgia
4. K. Thornhill, Kansas
5. N. Mountain, Penn College, Oskaloosa, Iowa
6. Alfred Howell, Oklahoma

Javelin
1. George Williams, Hampton Institute - 215 feet, 0 inches
IE[2] Dwight Purvis, Purdue
2. Charles Sample, Arizona
3. Graham Batchelor, Georgia
4. Harold Smith, Ohio St.
5. Ben Marks, Oklahoma
6. Glenn Novotny, Wisconsin

Shot put
1. Hugh Rhea, Nebraska - 52 feet, 5¾ inches (new NCAA record)
2. Clarence Munn, Minnesota
3. Alfred Howell, Oklahoma
4. LeRoy Dues, Detroit City College
5. Fred Blanck, Drake
6. Graham Batchelor, Georgia

Hammer throw
1. Grant McDougall, Penn - 159 feet, 9¾ inches
2. Noble Biddinger, Indiana
3. Gantt Miller, West Virginia
4. Earl Johnson, Ohio St.
5. Roderick Cox, Michigan
6. William Youngerman, Iowa

gollark: Why not just, well, route stuff over the server? You can then enjoy the security benefits of HTTPS/WSS and also no distance issues.
gollark: So the server is just to encrypt stuff?
gollark: I have an open websocket rebroadcast thing you can use, though it's not very secure or sophisticated.
gollark: <@236628809158230018> That's symmetric and not asymmetic encryption.
gollark: Ring LWE also exists, though I don't see why you'd want that.

See also

References

  1. "METCALFE BREAKS THREE WORLD MARKS: Glen Cunningham Runs Fastest American Mile". Los Angeles Times (AP wire story). 1932-06-12.
  2. The "IE" designation identifies athletes who were not eligible for further college competitions but who were permitted to participate solely for purposes of the Olympic trials.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.