Don Bragg
 Don Bragg in 1960 |
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| Born | (1935-05-15)May 15, 1935 Penns Grove, New Jersey, U.S. |
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| Died | February 16, 2019(2019-02-16) (aged 83) Oakley, California, U.S. |
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| Height | 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) |
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| Weight | 89 kg (196 lb) |
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| Sport | Pole vaulting |
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| Club | Villanova Wildcats |
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Donald George Bragg (May 15, 1935 – February 16, 2019) was an American athlete who competed mainly in the pole vault and won a gold medal in that event at the 1960 Summer Olympics.[1]
Life
Bragg grew up in Penns Grove, New Jersey, where he attended Penns Grove High School.[2]
Bragg was the last of the great pole vaulters to use an aluminum pole. From 1954 until 1960, he was always world ranked and capped a championship career in 1960 by setting a world record of 15' 9+1⁄4" (4.80 m) at the Olympic Trials and winning an Olympic gold medal with a vault of 15 ft 5 in (4.70 m). He set a world indoor record of 15' 9+1⁄2" (4.81 m) at Philadelphia in 1959 and, like Hall of Famer Cornelius Warmerdam, vaulted better indoors than outdoors.
At 6' 3" and 197 pounds, Bragg was one of the largest vaulters in history. He had to stay on a 1,200-calorie (5,000 kJ) diet to stay at that weight — any more and the aluminum alloy poles would crumple under the strain.[3] The aluminum pole had another disadvantage: While taking it aboard a train in Philadelphia, Bragg hit an electrical line and was nearly electrocuted.[4]
While at Villanova University, he won the NCAA pole vault championship in 1955 and was the IC4A champion, both indoors and outdoors, from 1955 to 1957. He also tied for the AAU indoor championship. After graduating in 1957, Bragg again tied for the AAU indoor championship in 1958, then won the event from 1959 through 1961. He was also the AAU outdoor champion in 1959.[1]
Nicknamed "Tarzan" because of his size and strength, Bragg's goal was to play that role in the movies. Few have so actively pursued a role. He toured Europe and Africa for the U.S. Department of State as a goodwill ambassador, climbing trees and swinging from vines.[2] He met Johnny Weissmuller, who agreed that Bragg would be perfect as Tarzan. When he won the gold at the 1960 Olympics he did the infamous Tarzan yell from the podium, shocking the crowd. He was offered the role twice, but was injured and missed both opportunities. His dream went unfulfilled.
He later became athletic director at Stockton State College in New Jersey, the owner of a summer camp, and the author of A Chance to Dare: The Don Bragg Story.[1] His time running a summer camp is chronicled in Kamp Olympik by Don and Theresa Bragg, as told to Patricia Doherty.
In August 2010, Bragg made a speech in Rome at a ceremony commemorating the fiftieth anniversary of the 1960 Summer Olympics. He concluded this speech with his Tarzan yell.[5]
His younger sister, Diane Bragg, also learned how to pole vault by watching her brother. In 1952, long before women were pole vaulting competitively, Diane set the women's world record that stood for over 25 years.[6]
Bragg died at his home in Oakley, California, from the effects of Parkinson's disease, diabetes, and a stroke on February 16, 2019, aged 83.[7][8]
Records
- World record: pole vault — 4.80 m (July 2, 1960)[9]
Championships
- 1955 NCAA: Pole Vault (1st)
- 1957 AAU Indoors: Pole Vault (1st)
- 1958 AAU Indoors: Pole Vault (1st)
- 1959 AAU Indoors: Pole Vault (1st)
- 1959 AAU Outdoors: Pole Vault (1st)
- 1960 AAU Indoors: Pole Vault (1st)
- 1960 Summer Olympics: Pole Vault — 4.70 m (1st)
- 1961 AAU Indoors: Pole Vault (1st)
Education
References
- ^ a b c Don Bragg. sports-reference.com
- ^ a b "The Twig Was Bent", Time, April 20, 1959. Accessed December 16, 2008.
- ^ Don Bragg and Patricia Doherty (2003) A Chance to Dare: The Don Bragg Story, Virtual Bookworm, p. 77, ISBN 1589393422.
- ^ Bill Livingston, Above and Beyond Part Four, The Plain Dealer
- ^ "Golden Reunion for Don Bragg in Rome", Clayton Pioneer, July 23, 2012. Accessed July 28, 2012.
- ^ "Sevilla 99 Preview: Emma versus all the Women's Pole Vault | Preview | World Athletics".
- ^ "Don Bragg, former Olympic hero who starred at Penns Grove and Villanova, dies at 83". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
- ^ Goldstein, Richard (February 18, 2019). "Don Bragg, Olympic Pole-Vault Champion, Is Dead at 83". The New York Times. Retrieved February 20, 2019.
- ^
"12th IAAF World Championships In Athletics: IAAF Statistics Handbook. Berlin 2009" (PDF). Monte Carlo: IAAF Media & Public Relations Department. 2009. p. 555. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 6, 2009. Retrieved August 5, 2009.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Don Bragg.
USA Indoor Track and Field Championships winners in men's pole vault (pole vault for distance) |
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| Pole vault for distance | |
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| Pole vault |
- 1906: Alfred Carlton Gilbert
- 1907: Claude Allen
- 1908: Charles Vezin Jr.
- 1909:
William Happeny (CAN), Harry Babcock (2nd)
- 1910:
William Happeny (CAN), Theodore Babcock (2nd)
- 1911: Gordon Dukes
- 1925: Paul Jones
- 1926:
Charles Hoff (NOR), Edwin Myers (2nd)
- 1927: Sabin Carr
- 1928: Sabin Carr
- 1929: Fred Sturdy
- 1930: Fred Sturdy
- 1931: Fred Sturdy
- 1932: Fred Sturdy
- 1933: Keith Brown, Frank Pierce
- 1934: Bill Graber
- 1935: Ray Lowry, Eldon Stutzman, Oscar Sutermeister
- 1936: David Hunn
- 1937: Earle Meadows
- 1938: Richard Ganslen
- 1939: Cornelius Warmerdam
- 1940: Earle Meadows
- 1941: Earle Meadows
- 1942: Boo Morcom
- 1943: Cornelius Warmerdam
- 1944: Jack DeField
- 1945: Bill Moore
- 1946: Bill Moore
- 1947: Guinn Smith
- 1948: Bob Richards
- 1949: Boo Morcom
- 1950: Bob Richards
- 1951: Bob Richards
- 1952: Bob Richards
- 1953: Bob Richards
- 1954: Jerry Welbourn
- 1955: Bob Richards
- 1956: , Bob Richards
- 1957: Bob Richards
- 1958: , Bob Gutowski
- 1959:
- 1960:
- 1961:
- 1962: Henry Wadsworth
- 1963: Dave Tork
- 1964: John Uelses
- 1965: Billy Gene Pemelton
- 1966: Bob Seagren
- 1967: Bob Seagren
- 1968: Dennis Phillips
- 1969: Peter Chen
- 1970: Bob Seagren
- 1971: Dick Railsback
- 1972:
Kjell Isaksson (SWE), Steve Smith (3rd)
- 1973: Steve Smith
- 1974: Vic Dias
- 1975: Roland Carter
- 1976: Roland Carter
- 1977: Larry Jessee
- 1978: Larry Jessee
- 1979: Dan Ripley
- 1980: Earl Bell
- 1981:
Thierry Vigneron (FRA), Dan Ripley (3rd)
- 1982: Billy Olson
- 1983: Billy Olson
- 1984:
Sergey Bubka (URS), Earl Bell (3rd)
- 1985: Doug Lytle
- 1986:
Sergey Bubka (URS), Brad Pursley (5th)
- 1987: Earl Bell
- 1988:
Radion Gataullin (URS), Dave Kenworthy (2nd)
- 1989:
Radion Gataullin (URS), Billy Olson (2nd)
- 1990:
István Bagyula (HUN), Tim Bright (2nd)
- 1991: Kory Tarpenning
- 1992: Dean Starkey
- 1993: Greg West
- 1994: Kory Tarpenning
- 1995: Nick Hysong
- 1996: Pat Manson
- 1997: Lawrence Johnson
- 1998: Scott Hennig
- 1999: Jeff Hartwig
- 2000: Lawrence Johnson
- 2001: Lawrence Johnson
- 2002: Timothy Mack
- 2003: Derek Miles
- 2004: Toby Stevenson
- 2005: Brad Walker
- 2006: Brad Walker
- 2007: Jeff Hartwig
- 2008: Brad Walker
- 2009: Jeremy Scott
- 2010: Timothy Mack
- 2011: Mark Hollis
- 2012: Brad Walker
- 2013: Jordan Scott
- 2014: Mark Hollis
- 2015: Sam Kendricks
- 2016: Sam Kendricks
- 2017: Sam Kendricks
- 2018: Scott Houston
- 2019: Andrew Irwin
- 2020: Matt Ludwig
- 2022: Chris Nilsen
- 2023: Sam Kendricks
- 2024: Chris Nilsen
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| Notes | |
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1876–1878 New York Athletic Club |
- 1877: George McNichol
- 1878: Alfred Ing
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1879–1888 NAAAA |
- 1879–81: William Van Houten
- 1882: B.F. Richardson
- 1883–86: Hugh Baxter
- 1887: Tom Ray (GBR) & Hugh Baxter
- 1888Note 1: G.B. Quinn
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1888–1979 Amateur Athletic Union |
- 1888Note 1: Lincoln Godshall
- 1889: Lat Stones (GBR) & D.F. O'Brien
- 1890: Walter Rodenbaugh
- 1891–92: Theodore Luce
- 1893–94: Christian Buchholz
- 1895: Hermann Thomas
- 1896: Franklin Allis
- 1897: Jesse Hurlburt
- 1898: Raymond Clapp
- 1899: Irving Baxter
- 1900: Bascom Johnson
- 1901: Charles Dvorak
- 1902: August Anderson
- 1903: Charles Dvorak
- 1904: H.L. Gardner
- 1905: Roy Heater
- 1906: LeRoy Samse
- 1907: Ed Cook
- 1908: William Halpenny (CAN) & Claude Allen
- 1909: Roy Paulding
- 1910: Harry Babcock
- 1911: Ed Cook, Frank Coyle & Sam Bellah
- 1912: Harry Babcock
- 1913: Stanley Wagoner
- 1914: Ken Curtis
- 1915: Sam Bellah
- 1916: Sherman Landers
- 1917: Edward Knourek
- 1918: Carl Buck
- 1919–20: Frank Foss
- 1921–22: Edward Knourek
- 1923–24: Edwin Myers
- 1925: Harry Smith
- 1926: Paul Harrington
- 1927–28: Lee Barnes
- 1929–30: Fred Sturdy
- 1931: Jack Wool
- 1932: Bill Graber
- 1933: Keith Brown & Matt Gordy
- 1934: Keith Brown, Bill Graber & Wirt Thompson
- 1935: Earle Meadows & Bill Sefton
- 1936: George Varoff
- 1937: Bill Sefton
- 1938: Cornelius Warmerdam
- 1939: George Varoff
- 1940–44: Cornelius Warmerdam
- 1945: Boo Morcom & Robert Phelps
- 1946: Irving Moore
- 1947: Boo Morcom
- 1948: Boo Morcom & Bob Richards
- 1949–51: Bob Richards
- 1952: Bob Richards & Don Laz
- 1953: Don Laz & George Mattos
- 1954–57: Bob Richards
- 1958: Ron Morris
- 1959:
- 1960: Aubrey Dooley
- 1961–62: Ron Morris
- 1963: Brian Sternberg
- 1964: Fred Hansen
- 1965: John Pennel
- 1966: Bob Seagren
- 1967: Paul Wilson
- 1968: Dick Railsback
- 1969–70: Bob Seagren
- 1971: Jan Johnson
- 1972: Dave Roberts
- 1973: Mike Cotton
- 1974: Dave Roberts
- 1975: Don Baird (AUS) * Terry Porter
- 1976: Earl Bell
- 1977: Mike Tully
- 1978: Dan Ripley
- 1979: Mike Tully
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1980–1992 The Athletics Congress |
- 1980: Tom Hintnaus
- 1981: Billy Olson
- 1982: Dan Ripley & Billy Olson
- 1983: Jeff Buckingham
- 1984: Earl Bell
- 1985: Joe Dial
- 1986: Mike Tully
- 1987: Joe Dial
- 1988–89: Kory Tarpenning
- 1990: Earl Bell
- 1991–92: Tim Bright
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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, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012 and 2016 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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Men's track and road athletes | | |
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| Men's field athletes | |
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| Women's track athletes |
- Shirley Crowder
- Pat Daniels
- Martha Hudson
- Barbara Jones
- Ernestine Pollards
- Irene Robertson
- Wilma Rudolph
- Jo Ann Terry
- Lucinda Williams
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| Women's field athletes | |
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| Coaches |
- Larry Snyder (head coach)
- George Eastment (assistant coach)
- Ralph Higgins (assistant coach)
- Lloyd "Bud" Winter (assistant coach)
- Ed Temple (women's head coach)
- Fran Welch (women's field event coach)
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Authority control databases |
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| International | |
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| National | |
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