Leamon King
Leamon King (February 13, 1936 – May 23, 2001) was an American athlete who jointly held the world record for the 100-meter sprint for men from 1956 to 1960.
King, a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley, became joint holder of the record on October 20, 1956 in Ontario, California, with a time of 10.1 seconds, equal with Willie Williams and Ira Murchison, and repeated the time a week later in Santa Ana, California. (In 1956, times were only recorded to the nearest tenth of a second.) Ray Norton also recorded a time of 10.1 seconds in 1959. The first person to run unambiguously faster in competition was Armin Hary in 1960.
He also jointly held the world 100 yard record with a time of 9.3 seconds.
King, along with Murchison, Thane Baker, and Bobby Morrow, won a gold medal at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne in the 4x100 metre relay. He ran the second leg of the race.[1]
After retiring from athletics, King returned to his job as a schoolteacher, living in Delano, California. He had been a successful student athlete at Delano High School, making the finals at the CIF California State Meet in both the 100 yard dash and 220 yard dash each of his four years, winning the 100 once and the 220 twice.[2]
References
|
---|
|
- 1912
Jacobs, Macintosh, d'Arcy, Applegarth (GBR)
- 1920
Paddock, Scholz, Murchison, Kirksey (USA)
- 1924
Murchison, Clarke, Hussey, LeConey (USA)
- 1928
Wykoff, Quinn, Borah, Russell (USA)
- 1932
Kiesel, Toppino, Dyer, Wykoff (USA)
- 1936
Owens, Metcalfe, Draper, Wykoff (USA)
- 1948
Ewell, Wright, Dillard, Patton (USA)
- 1952
Smith, Dillard, Remigino, Stanfield (USA)
- 1956
Murchison, King, Baker, Morrow (USA)
- 1960
Cullmann, Hary, Mahlendorf, Lauer (EUA)
- 1964
Drayton, Ashworth, Stebbins, Hayes (USA)
- 1968
Greene, Pender, Smith, Hines (USA)
- 1972
Black, Taylor, Tinker, Hart (USA)
- 1976
Glance, Jones, Hampton, Riddick (USA)
- 1980
Muravyov, Sidorov, Aksinin, Prokofyev (URS)
- 1984
Graddy, Brown, Smith, Lewis (USA)
- 1988
Bryzhin, Krylov, Muravyov, Savin (URS)
- 1992
Marsh, Burrell, Mitchell, Lewis, Jett (USA)
- 1996
Esmie, Gilbert, Surin, Bailey, Chambers (CAN)
- 2000
Drummond, Williams, Lewis, Greene, Montgomery, Brokenburr (USA)
- 2004
Gardener, Campbell, Devonish, Lewis-Francis (GBR)
- 2008
Carter, Frater, Bolt, Powell, Thomas (JAM)
- 2012
Carter, Frater, Blake, Bolt, Bailey-Cole (JAM)
- 2016
Powell, Blake, Ashmeade, Bolt, Minzie, Bailey-Cole (JAM)
|
|
---|
|
1876–1878 New York Athletic Club | |
---|
|
1879–1888 NAAAA |
- 1879: Beverly Value
- 1880-81: Lon Myers
- 1882-83: Arthur Waldron
- 1884-86ro: Malcolm Ford
- 1887: Charles Sherrill
- 1888Note 1: Fred Westing
|
---|
|
1888–1979 Amateur Athletic Union | |
---|
|
1980–1992 The Athletics Congress | |
---|
|
1993–present USA Track & Field | |
---|
|
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.
- Distance:Until 1927 the event was over 100 yards, and again from 1929-31
- ro:In 1886 the event was won after a run-off
|
---|
|
---|
|
Men's track & road athletes | |
---|
|
Men's field athletes | |
---|
|
Women's track athletes | |
---|
|
Women's field athletes | |
---|
|
Coaches | |
---|