Brian Oldfield
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| Nationality | American |
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| Born | June 1, 1945 Elgin, Illinois, United States |
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| Died | March 26, 2017 (aged 72) Elgin, Illinois, United States |
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| Height | 196 cm (6 ft 5 in) |
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| Weight | 125 kg (276 lb) |
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| Sport | Athletics |
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| Event | Shot put / discus |
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| Club | Chicago Track Club |
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Brian Oldfield (June 1, 1945 – March 26, 2017)[1] was an American athlete and personality of the 1970s and early 1980s. A standout shot putter, Oldfield was credited with making the rotational technique popular. With his "Oldfield spin," he set the indoor and outdoor world records in the sport many times. However, due to his status as a professional athlete, and due to the lack of official control of his achievements by athletic authorities[2] as well as later steroid-related investigations,[3] his records were never officially recognized.
Life and career
Oldfield was born in Elgin, Illinois, and began his career at Middle Tennessee State University where he won the Ohio Valley Conference championship three times. The University recognized his achievements by inducting him into their athletic Hall of Fame in 2000. Following graduation, he worked as a teacher until he moved to San Jose, and began training for the 1972 Olympics.[4]
Oldfield set his sights on achieving stardom in the shot put as an Olympian. In 1972, he made the United States Olympic team, but finished in sixth place.[5] He bounced back less than a year later by setting his first world record, with a throw of 21.60 m (70 ft 10½ in). However, this record was not official due to his affiliation with ITA professional track and field.
In 1975, his throw of 22.86 m (75 ft) set another unofficial world record due to him being a professional, which at that time was not allowed.[6] Though unofficial, Oldfield's accomplishment did not go unnoticed. After setting this mark, he had earned a cover spot on Sports Illustrated, and also made an appearance in a 1975 issue of Playgirl. In his Sports Illustrated interview, he confidently asserted that he expected to be throwing over 80 ft before 1980.
Oldfield won the British AAA Championships titles in both the shot put and discus throw at the 1980 AAA Championships[7][8] and in 1984, at age 38, he finally set an official record with a throw of 22.19 m (72 ft 9 in) to set a new American mark. When asked by a commentator how he was able to do it at the event, he responded, "I had a 'throw-gasm.'"[9]
But Oldfield was perhaps at least as well known for his unconventional persona and on-field antics as he was for his athletic performance. Unusual for track athletes at the time, he wore his hair long in a style he dubbed the "Oldfield Mop" and occasionally sported a beard. Oldfield would sometimes smoke cigarettes in between throws at competitions to show that he could beat anyone, even while smoking. He was known for wearing flamboyant outfits, including tie-dyed shirts and Speedo-style shorts. These stunts served not only to raise Oldfield's profile, but frequently unnerved his opponents. At the 1972 United States Olympic Trials, an opponent was quoted as saying, "I will retire the day that I lose to someone like Brian Oldfield." Not surprising for the man who said in the September 1, 1975 Sports Illustrated article about him, "When God created man, he wanted him to look like me."
Oldfield competed in the World's Strongest Man contest in 1978, finishing seventh in a field of ten competitors.[10] He also competed in Scottish Highland Games in the 1970s. Utilizing his experience in the shot put, he set many field records in the Stone put. His career-best throw of 63 ft 1 in in the light stone, accomplished at 1979 still stands today.[11]
Oldfield also starred in the 1989 film Savage Instinct, later renamed They Call Me Macho Woman! as Mongo, the crazed drug lord. In the film, Oldfield wears a special spiked headgear that his character uses to head-butt people to death. The movie was unsuccessful.[12]
Near the end of his life, injuries from his time in competition reduced the athlete to walking with a cane and using a wheelchair.[13]
Personal records
- Shot put – 7.3 kg (16 lb) for 22.86 metres (75 ft 0 in) (1975) (former world record)
- Open Stone – 11.4 kg (25 lb) for 14.15 metres (46 ft 5 in) (1979) (World Record)[11]
- Open Stone – 7.7 kg (17 lb) for 19.23 metres (63 ft 1 in) (1979) (World Record)[11]
- Weight over bar – 25.5 kg (56 lb) over 5.06 metres (16 ft 7 in) (1979) (Former World Record)
Death
Oldfield died on March 26, 2017, at his home in Elgin, aged 71.[14]
References
- ^ "Brian Oldfield - Biography". Archived from the original on 2018-05-02. Retrieved 2007-07-10.
- ^ McNab, Tom (1980). The Complete Book of Track and Field. Exeter Books. p. 145. ISBN 0-89673-049-2.
- ^ Cf. see Anavar, Primobolan and Deca-Durabolin-related issue in the Commission of Inquiry Into the Use of Drugs and Banned Practices Intended to Increase Athletic Performance, 1990, p. 245.
- ^ Houde, George (March 29, 2017) [March 29, 2017]. "Brian Oldfield, larger-than-life shot put champion, dies at 71". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on October 1, 2024. Retrieved October 1, 2024.
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Brian Oldfield". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
- ^ "Oldfield Puts Shot 75 Feet, World Best". The New York Times. 11 May 1975.
- ^ "AAA, WAAA and National Championships Medallists". National Union of Track Statisticians. Retrieved 12 June 2025.
- ^ "AAA Championships (men)". GBR Athletics. Retrieved 12 June 2025.
- ^ Video on YouTube
- ^ The World's Strongest Man Archived September 12, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c "STRENGTH RECORD, Section 06 - Throwing". www.strengthrecord.com. Retrieved 10 April 2025.
- ^ "They Call Me Macho Woman! (1989) - IMDb". IMDb.
- ^ "Ex-Olympian coaches new breed". Chicago Tribune. 28 January 2009.
- ^ Olympic shot putter from Elgin, IL dies at 71
External links
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| 1876–1939 |
- 1876–1913: Not held
- 1914: Armas Taipale (FIN)
- 1915–19: Not held
- 1920: Patrick Quinn (IRE)
- 1921: Oscar Zallhagen (SWE)
- 1922: Vilho Niittymaa (FIN)
- 1923: George Mitchell
- 1924–26: Paddy Bermingham (IRL)
- 1927: Kálmán Marvalits (HUN)
- 1928: Ernst Paulus (GER)
- 1929: Harald Stenerud (NOR)
- 1930: Jules Noël (FRA)
- 1931: Endre Madarász (HUN)
- 1932: Paddy Bermingham (IRL)
- 1933: Endre Madarász (HUN)
- 1934: Paddy Bermingham (IRL)
- 1935: Harald Andersson (SWE)
- 1936: Bernard Prendergast (JAM)
- 1937: Nikolaos Syllas (GRE)
- 1938: Adolfo Consolini (ITA)
- 1939: Nikolaos Syllas (GRE)
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| 1946–59 |
- 1946–47: Reindert Brasser (NED)
- 1948: Cummin Clancy (IRL)
- 1949: Ferenc Klics (HUN)
- 1950: Raymond Kintziger (BEL)
- 1951: Giuseppe Tosi (ITA)
- 1952–53: Mark Pharaoh
- 1954: Ferenc Klics (HUN)
- 1955–56: Mark Pharaoh
- 1957: Mike Lindsay
- 1958: Fanie du Plessis (SAF)
- 1959: Mike Lindsay
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| 1960–2006 |
- 1960: Mike Lindsay
- 1961: Elfranco Malan (RSA)
- 1962: Jay Silvester (USA)
- 1963: Dave Weill (USA)
- 1964: Roy Hollingsworth
- 1965: Lars Haglund (SWE)
- 1966–70: Bill Tancred
- 1971: Les Mills (NZL)
- 1972–73: Bill Tancred
- 1974: John Powell (USA)
- 1975: John van Reenen (RSA)
- 1976: John Powell (USA)
- 1977–78: Pete Tancred
- 1979: John Powell (USA)
- 1980: (USA)
- 1981: John Powell (USA)
- 1982: Brad Cooper (BAH)
- 1983–84: Robert Weir
- 1985: Juan Martínez (CUB)
- 1986: Richard Slaney
- 1987–89: Paul Mardle
- 1990: Abi Ekoku
- 1991–92: Werner Reiterer (AUS)
- 1993: Robert Weir
- 1994: Kevin Brown
- 1995: Nick Sweeney (IRL)
- 1996–2000: Robert Weir
- 2001: Glen Smith
- 2002: Robert Weir
- 2003–04: Emeka Udechuku
- 2005–06: Carl Myerscough
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| 1876–1914 |
- 1880: William Winthrop
- 1881: Maurice Davin (IRL)
- 1882: George Ross
- 1883–84: Owen Harte (IRL)
- 1885: Donald McKinnon
- 1886–87: James Mitchell (IRL)
- 1888: George Gray (CAN)
- 1889: William Barry (IRL) & R.A. Greene
- 1890: R.A. Greene
- 1891–92: William Barry (IRL)
- 1893–99: Denis Horgan (IRL)
- 1900: Richard Sheldon USA
- 1901–02: Wesley Coe USA
- 1903: Tom Nicolson
- 1904–05: Denis Horgan (IRL)
- 1906–07: Tom Kirkwood
- 1908–10: Denis Horgan (IRL)
- 1911: James Barrett (IRL)
- 1912: Denis Horgan (IRL)
- 1913: Einar Nilsson SWE
- 1914: Armas Taipale FIN
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| 1919–39 |
- 1919: Bertil Jansson SWE
- 1920: Raoul Paoli FRA
- 1921: Bertil Jansson SWE
- 1922: Ville Pörhölä FIN
- 1923: James Barrett IRL
- 1924: Reginald "Rex" Woods
- 1925: Herb Schwarze USA
- 1926: Reginald "Rex" Woods
- 1927: Georg Brechenmacher GER
- 1928: Édouard Duhour FRA
- 1929: József Darányi HUN
- 1930: Jules Noël FRA
- 1931: József Darányi HUN
- 1932: Harry Hart SAF
- 1933–34: Zygmunt Heljasz POL
- 1935–36: Aad de Bruyn NED
- 1937: Hans Woellke GER
- 1938: Angiolo Profeti ITA
- 1939: Aad de Bruyn NED
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| 1946–59 |
- 1946: Aad de Bruyn NED
- 1947–48: David Guiney IRL
- 1949: John Giles
- 1950: Petar Šarčević YUG
- 1951: Gunnar Huseby ISL
- 1952–54: John Savidge
- 1955–56: Barclay Palmer
- 1957–59: Arthur Rowe
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| 1960–2006 |
- 1960–61: Arthur Rowe
- 1962: Jay Silvester USA
- 1963: Mike Lindsay
- 1964–65: Vilmos Varjú HUN
- 1966: Jan Botha RSA
- 1967: Dawid Booysen RSA
- 1968–69: Jeff Teale
- 1970–71: Les Mills NZL
- 1972–73: Geoff Capes
- 1974: Al Feuerbach USA
- 1975–79: Geoff Capes
- 1980: USA
- 1981–82: Mike Winch
- 1983: Mike Carter USA
- 1984: Mike Winch
- 1985–86: Billy Cole
- 1987: Paul Edwards
- 1988–89: Simon Williams
- 1990–92: Paul Edwards
- 1993: Matt Simson
- 1994: Paul Edwards
- 1995: Mark Proctor
- 1996: Matt Simson
- 1997: Steph Hayward
- 1998–99: Mark Proctor
- 2000: Steph Hayward
- 2001–02: Mark Proctor
- 2003–06: Carl Myerscough
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USA Indoor Track and Field Championships winners in men's shot put (8 lb, 12 lb, 16 lb, 24 lb) |
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| 8-lb shot put | |
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| 12-lb shot put |
- 1910: Russell Lawrence
- 1911: Russell Beatty
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| 16-lb shot put | |
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| 24-lb shot put | |
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| Notes | |
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1876–1878 New York Athletic Club | |
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1879–1888 NAAAA |
- 1879–80: A.W. Adams
- 1881–86: Frank Lambrecht
- 1887: George Gray/Frank Lambrecht
- 1888Note 1: Frank Lambrecht
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1888–1979 Amateur Athletic Union | |
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1980–1992 The Athletics Congress | |
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1993–onwards USA Track & Field | |
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| Notes |
- Note 1: In 1888 both the NAAAA and the AAU held championships
- OT: The 1920, 1928, 1932, and since 1992, championships incorporated the Olympic Trials, otherwise held as a discrete event.
- 2020 OT: The 2020 Olympic Trials were delayed and held in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Italian Athletics Champions in men's indoor shot put |
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- 1970: Renato Bergonzoni
- 1971: Renato Bergonzoni
- 1972: Renato Bergonzoni
- 1973: Marco Montelatici
- 1974: Michele Sorrenti
- 1975: Lukas Vassilios (GRE)
- 1976: Angelo Groppelli
- 1977: Marco Montelatici
- 1978: Marco Montelatici
- 1979: Angelo Groppelli
- 1980: Angelo Groppelli
- 1981: (USA)
- 1982: Luigi Sintoni
- 1983: Fernando Baroni
- 1984: Marco Montelatici
- 1985: Alessandro Andrei
- 1986: Marco Montelatici
- 1987: Fernando Baroni
- 1988: Leonardo Lazzeri
- 1989: Giorgio Venturi
- 1990: Alessandro Andrei
- 1991: Alessandro Andrei
- 1992: Alessandro Andrei
- 1993: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 1994: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 1995: Corrado Fantini
- 1996: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 1997: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 1998: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 1999: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2000: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2001: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2002: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2003: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2004: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2005: Marco Dodoni
- 2006: Marco Dodoni
- 2007: Marco Di Maggio
- 2008: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2009: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2010: Marco Di Maggio
- 2011: Marco Di Maggio
- 2012: Paolo Dal Soglio
- 2013: Marco Dodoni
- 2014: Daniele Secci
- 2015: Daniele Secci
- 2016: Daniele Secci
- 2017: Sebastiano Bianchetti
- 2018: Leonardo Fabbri
- 2019: Leonardo Fabbri
- 2020: Leonardo Fabbri
- 2021: Leonardo Fabbri
- 2022: Nick Ponzio
- 2023: Leonardo Fabbri
- 2024: Zane Weir
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| Qualification |
- 1972 United States Olympic trials (track and field)
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Men's track and road athletes | |
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Men's field athletes | |
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Women's track athletes |
- Iris Davis
- Debra Edwards
- Mable Fergerson
- Barbara Ferrell
- Pam Greene
- Kathy Hammond
- Patty Johnson
- Wendy Koenig
- Francie Kraker
- Francie Larrieu
- Madeline Manning
- Mildrette Netter (r)
- Lacey O'Neal
- Mamie Rallins
- Mattiline Render
- Jackie Thompson
- Cheryl Toussaint
- Martha Watson
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Women's field athletes |
- Kim Attlesey
- Roberta Brown
- Sherry Calvert
- Olga Connolly
- Gale Fitzgerald
- Jane Frederick
- Cindy Gilbert
- Sandi Goldsberry
- Kate Schmidt
- Maren Seidler
- Jan Svendsen
- Martha Watson
- Deanne Wilson
- Willye White
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| Coaches |
- Bill Bowerman (men's head coach)
- Ted Haydon (men's assistant coach)
- Hoover Wright (men's assistant coach)
- Stan Wright (men's assistant coach)
- Nell Jackson (women's head coach)
- Randall Lambert (women's assistant coach)
- Ron Sorkness (women's assistant coach)
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| Authority control databases: People | |
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