Lee Evans (sprinter)

Lee Edward Evans (born February 25, 1947) is an American Olympian from the 1968 Summer Olympics where he ran track and was part of the boycott and black power movement.

Lee Evans
Evans in 2008
Personal information
Full nameLee Edward Evans
BornFebruary 25, 1947 (1947-02-25) (age 73)
Madera, California, U.S.
Alma materSan Jose State College
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight78 kg (172 lb)
Sport
SportAthletics
Event(s)100–800 m sprint, hurdles
ClubSanta Clara Valley Youth Village
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)100 m – 10.9 (1966)
200 m – 20.4 (1969)
400 m – 43.86 (1968)
880 yd – 1:52.0 (1966)
440 ydH – 50.5 (1970)[1]

Early life

Lee Evans was born on February 25, 1947, in Madera, California. At the age of four, Evans moved to Fresno where he would attend Madison Elementary School for eight years. In his last year at Madison Elementary, he trained for his first race by racing his friends at school. Evans went to Central Union High School where he was classified in the C class for the 660 yd dash due to his height, weight, and age. Due to his mother contracting Valley Fever the Evans’ family moved to San Jose, California, during Lee's sophomore year.[2] While running for Overfelt High School, Evans was undefeated in his high school career, improving his 440-yard time from 48.2 in 1964 to 46.9 in 1965. Evans was granted the prestige of being a Fulbright Scholar. He attended San Jose State, where he was coached by Hall of Famer Lloyd (Bud) Winter. As a freshman, he won his first AAU championship in 440 yd (402.34 m) in 1966. He won the AAU title four years in a row (1966–1969) and again in 1972 and added the NCAA 400 m title in 1968.[3] His only defeat during that streak came at the hands of San Jose State teammate Tommie Smith. The two were so competitive, Winter could not let them practice together. Lee Evans achieved his first world record in 1966, as a member of the USA national team which broke the 4 × 400 m relay record at Los Angeles, the first team to better 3 minutes (2:59.6) for the event. The next year he broke the 4 x 220 yd (201.17 m) relay world record at Fresno in a time of 1:22.1. In 1967, Evans won the 400 metres at the Pan American Games, in an automatic time of 44.95, which (in the era of hand times) was the first bona fide automatic time to break 45 seconds.[4]

Olympics

Evans was an influential leader in regards to the black power movement. The Olympic Project for Human Rights began with black students protesting in order to have equal housing opportunities and was made into the black power movement after a Tommie Smith interview. Tommie Smith and John Carlos were the face of the movement, but Smith and Evans were the driving forces behind the movement. Carlos was said to have not even come to any of the meetings of the group, but when it came time to be in the spotlight he took his chance and claimed his spot in the history books.[5] The black athletes of the 1968 Mexican Olympics chose not to protest the Olympics as a whole, instead they chose to protest by wearing an article of black clothing during every event in which they participated.[2] Evans wanted the world to understand the way he felt about the Mexican Olympic Games but did not want to take away from the winners and the sports themselves. In regards to the South African Olympic Ban, Vince Matthews asked Evans what would happen after the verdict because of his position as OPHR organizer. Evans replied by saying that it was unclear as to what the International Olympic Committee would decide, but whatever the decision was the United States Olympic Team would stick together.[6] Evans received death threats prior to and during the Olympics and claimed that had he not had these threats on his mind he probably could have run faster than he did, even though he broke a world record.[7] Evans won the 1968 Olympic trials at Echo Summit, California with a world record 44.06 and demolished it in the Olympic final, winning in 43.86 seconds aged 21 years and 8 months, from which he still stands as the thirteenth best performer in history. Evans won a second gold as the anchorman on the 4 × 400 m relay team, setting another world record of 2:56.16. Both the times stood as a world record for almost twenty years (the relay, for almost 24 years). While accepting the relay Gold medal Evans, with fellow African-American medalists Larry James and Ron Freeman, received their medals wearing berets in imitation of the Black Panther Party.[8] After winning the AAU 400 m titles in 1969 and 1972, Evans finished only fourth in the 1972 Olympic trials, but was named a member of the 4 × 400 m relay team once more. However, the United States couldn't field a team because Vincent Matthews and Wayne Collett were suspended by the IOC for a demonstration at a medal ceremony similar to the one staged by Tommie Smith and John Carlos in the previous Olympics.

Post Olympics

Evans became a professional after the 1972 season joining the International Track Association (ITA) tour. He had some success on the ITA tour notably setting a 600 m indoors world best at the first meet in Idaho State University's Minidome.[9] The ITA folded in 1976 and Evans was reinstated as an amateur in 1980 and ran a 46.5 in one of his few appearances that year, at the age of thirty-three. Evans went on to head the national athletics programs in six different African Nations before accepting a position as head cross country/track & field coach at the University of South Alabama.Upon fulfilling his contract, Evans plans to return to either Africa or Mexico where "you are truly free – not like this fake freedom America has everybody believing in." Evans' college and amateur careers as well as his involvement in the Civil Rights Movement is chronicled in Frank Murphy's The Last Protest: Lee Evans in Mexico City. Evans was inducted into the United States National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1983.[3] He was banned from coaching for four years in 2014 when a 16-year-old Nigerian girl he was coaching tested positive for a banned steroid after he advised her to take supplements.[10][11]

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References

  1. Lee Evans. sports-reference.com
  2. Hargas, Desire. "Lee Evans". Stark Center Archives. Stark Center. Retrieved March 10, 2017.
  3. Lee Evans. USATF. Retrieved on July 15, 2015.
  4. JC First sub-45 sec 400m. Run-down.com (August 23, 1947). Retrieved on 2015-07-15.
  5. Henderson, Simon (2013). Sidelined: How American Sports Challenged the Black Freedom Struggle. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. pp. 96–97. ISBN 978-0-8131-4154-1.
  6. Henderson, Simon (2013). Sidelined: How American Sports Challenged the Black Freedom Struggle. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-8131-4154-1.
  7. Henderson, Simon (2013). Sidelined: How American Sports Challenged the Black Freedom Struggle. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. pp. 113–115. ISBN 978-0-8131-4154-1.
  8. Lee Evans. NNDB (July 17, 2008). Retrieved on 2015-07-15.
  9. Reid, Ron (March 12, 1973) "It Wasn't Small Potatoes In Pocatello", Sports Illustrated.
  10. Wharton, Dave (April 1, 2014). American track coach Lee Evans banned in PED case involving a minor. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2014-06-27.
  11. Olympic champ Lee Evans banned. ESPN (April 1, 2014). Retrieved on 2014-06-27.
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