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1928 United States Olympic trials (track and field)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

International athletics championship event
1928 United States Olympic trials (track and field)
DatesJuly 3–July 7
Host cityCambridge, Massachusetts (men)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (men, 3 events)
Newark, New Jersey (women)
VenueHarvard Stadium (men)
LevelSenior
TypeOutdoor

The1928 United States Olympic trials for track and field were held between July 3 and July 7, 1928 and decided theUnited States team for the1928 Summer Olympics inAmsterdam. For the first time, women's track and field was part of the Olympic program. The trials for men and women were held separately; men competed atHarvard Stadium inCambridge, Massachusetts on July 6 and July 7, while women competed at City Field inNewark, New Jersey on July 4. Three of the men's events were contested inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania between July 3 and July 5.

Both the men's and women's Olympic trials also served as the annualUnited States outdoor track and field championships. For the last time, the top four athletes in each event qualified for the Olympics; starting in 1932, every nation was limited to three entrants per event.

Official world records were set in the men's meet byMorgan Taylor in the400 m hurdles and byEd Hamm in thelong jump.

Qualifying

[edit]

Athletes qualified for the men's Olympic trials by competing in preliminary tryouts. There were 14 preliminary meetings in total, including regional tryouts and major collegiate meets (theNCAA championship and theIC4A championship both served as tryouts). So many athletes qualified for the final Olympic trials that three or more rounds were needed in all sprinting and hurdling events; for thenext Olympic trials in 1932 a more restrictive qualifying system was adopted.[1]: 3 [2]: 110–129  Athletes who finished in the top four in their events at the final trials qualified for the Olympic team, withsome exceptions. The marathon was not part of the main Olympic trials, and adifferent qualifying system based on multiple races was used for that event.[2]: 88 

Men

[edit]

The men's Olympic trials were contested atHarvard Stadium inCambridge, Massachusetts on July 6 and July 7, except for three events (400 meters,400 meter hurdles anddecathlon) which were scheduled to be held at thePhiladelphia Municipal Stadium inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania on July 3 and July 4.[1]: 3 [3] Due to poor weather conditions, the decathlon was interrupted on July 4 and continued on July 5 atFranklin Field, also in Philadelphia.[4][5]

The meeting doubled as the annualAAUoutdoor national championship; all defending champions from 1927 returned to defend their titles, with the exception ofVille Ritola who was Finnish.[3] Two official world records were set at the men's trials, byMorgan Taylor in the 400 m hurdles and byEd Hamm in the long jump; additionally,Lloyd Hahn broke the world record in the 800 m and bothRoss Nichols andSteve Anderson equaled the world record in the 110 m hurdles, but their marks were not officially ratified.[1]: 9–10, 63–69 [6]: 116 

Philadelphia

[edit]
EventFirstSecondThirdFourth
400 mRay Barbuti51.6[note 1]Euil SniderHermon PhillipsJoe Tierney
400 m hurdlesMorgan Taylor52.0WRFrank Cuhel52.1eJohnny Gibson52.5eRobert Maxwell52.6e
DecathlonKen Doherty7600Jim Stewart7533Barney Berlinger7362Tom Churchill7203

The 400 meters final was run in a storm, accounting for the very slow winning time of 51.6 seconds; both Barbuti and Snider had won their semi-finals in 48.0.[1]: 64 [7]Emerson "Bud" Spencer, the one-eyed Stanford University runner who had set the world record (47.0) two months earlier, was surprisingly eliminated as he only placed fifth; Spencer and the sixth finalist,Fred Alderman, were named to the Olympic4 × 400 meter relay team.[7][8] The other two Olympic relay runners were decided by an extra race for those eliminated in the semi-finals, won byGeorge Baird ahead of John Lewis; however, Lewis was replaced with Barbuti after the latter won an Olympic gold in theindividual event.[2]: 99–100, 139 

The 400 meter hurdles final was run before the storm arrived; Morgan Taylor, the 1924 Olympic champion, set a newworld record (52.0) but still only narrowly defeated Cuhel. Defending AAU champion Gibson, who held the world record in the 440 yard hurdles (52.6), placed third.[1]: 67 [5] The old, still listed world record for the metric hurdles (53.8 bySten Pettersson) was broken in the heats, in the semi-finals, and by all seven men in the final.[1]: 67 

In the decathlon the 1928Penn Relays were originally advertised as an Olympic qualifying event;Tony Plansky, the 1924 AAU champion, won the Penn Relays decathlon ahead of Doherty and Churchill with 7142 points.[9] In the end, though, decathlon selections were based solely on the Philadelphia meet; Plansky was unprepared for having to qualify a second time and only placed 11th.[4][10] Defending AAU championFait Elkins, who entered the trials as a clear favorite, was also left out of the Olympic team; he injured himself in the first event (100 meters) and had to withdraw.[1]: 69 [4] An appeal by Elkins to be selected in spite of his injury was not upheld; he performed poorly in a test two weeks after the trials, and the selectors felt he had not recovered sufficiently.[11]

The rain and wind that disturbed the 400 meters final interrupted the decathlon's eighth event, the pole vault; the last three events were moved to Franklin Field and contested the following day, with the pole vault restarted from scratch.[4][5] Doherty, the Penn Relays runner-up, eventually won from Stewart and Berlinger; he went on to win bronze at the Olympics.[1]: 69  Churchill received the fourth spot on the Olympic team after Elkins's appeal was rejected.

Cambridge

[edit]

Track

[edit]
EventFirstSecondThirdFourth
100 mFrank Wykoff10.6Robert McAllister10.7eHenry Russell10.7eClaude Bracey10.7e
200 m straightCharles Borah21.4Charley Paddock21.5eJackson Scholz21.5eHenry Cumming21.7e
800 mLloyd Hahn1:51.4WREarl Fuller1:51.9eRay Watson1:52.3eJohn Sittig1:53.4e
1500 mRay Conger3:55.0ARSid Robinson3:55.6eNick Carter3:55.8eOrval Martin3:55.9e
5000 mLeo Lermond14:52.8Macauley Smith14:56eDavid Abbott14:56eCharles Haworth15:03e
10,000 mJoie Ray31:28.4ARJohn Romig120 yds bhVerne Booth10 yds bh2Johnny Zola90 yds bh3
3000 m SCWilliam Spencer9:35.8Jesse Montgomery10 yds bhMelvin DaltonWalter Gegan
110 m hurdlesSteve Anderson14.8 =WRJohn Collier14.8eLeighton Dye14.9eCarl Ring15.0e

In the 100 meters four rounds – heats, quarterfinals, semi-finals and the final – were run in the space of one afternoon. Frank Wykoff, an 18-year-old high schooler, outlasted his opponents, winning all four of his races in 10.6.[1]: 63  Defending AAU champion Charley Borah retained his title in the 200 meters; Paddock and Scholz, who placed behind him, had both been among the world's top sprinters for almost a decade and qualified for their third Olympic Games.[1]: 64 Roland Locke, who held the world record for 220 yards (20.6), lost the fourth Olympic spot to Cumming by inches.[12] The Americans entered the Olympic short sprints with high hopes, but did not win any medals in either the 100 meters or the 200 meters; in the4 × 100 meter relay, the American team (Wykoff, Borah, Russell andJimmy Quinn) won gold in 41.0.[2]: 151 [13]

1924 Olympian Lloyd Hahn, who had won the 1928 AAU indoor title in a world best 1:51.4 (880 yards), reached the same time outdoors in the 800-meter final; his time was an outdoorworld record, breakingOtto Peltzer's previous mark of 1:51.6, but was never officially ratified.[1]: 65 [note 2] In the 1500 meters, defending champion Ray Conger finished fast to set anAmerican record of 3:55.0, with Robinson and Carter following; Orval Martin, who had been in the lead for much of the way, stumbled at the very end and dropped to fourth place. As Hahn was named to the team in this event as well, Martin missed out on an Olympic spot.[1]: 65 [14][15] In the long-distance races the American teams, while not world-beaters, were stronger timewise than the 1924 squad;Joie Ray, also entered in the marathon, set an American record in winning the 10,000 meters.[1]: 65 [16]

There were two high-profile falls in the 110 m hurdles.Hugo "Swede" Leistner, winner of the Pacific Tryouts, fell while leading his heat;Ross Nichols, who led the semi-finals with 14.8, fell while leading the final.[1]: 66  Nichols hit the ninth hurdle and lost his balance; as a result, he crashed into the tenth hurdle, losing his chances of making the team. There was controversy as to whether the ninth hurdle had been misplaced, causing Nichols to trip; a meeting official stated the hurdle had been correctly positioned, and was only knocked out of position when Nichols hit it, but Nichols's supporters did not accept this explanation.[17][18] Steve Anderson won, equaling Nichols's semi-final time of 14.8; both times also equaled the official world record, but were never ratified.[note 3]

Field

[edit]
EventFirstSecondThirdFourth
High jumpBob King6 ft 5 in
(1.96 m)
Charles McGinnis6 ft 5 in
(1.96 m)
Harold Osborn6 ft 4 in
(1.93 m)
Ben Hedges6 ft 3 in
(1.90 m)
Pole vaultLee Barnes13 ft 9 in
(4.19 m)
Bill Droegemueller13 ft 9 in
(4.19 m)
Sabin Carr13 ft 9 in
(4.19 m)
Charles McGinnis13 ft 6 in
(4.11 m)
Long jumpEd Hamm25 ft 11+18 in
(7.90 m)WR
Al Bates24 ft 2+12 in
(7.38 m)
DeHart Hubbard23 ft 11+12 in
(7.30 m)
Ed Gordon23 ft 6+38 in
(7.17 m)
Triple jumpLevi Casey48 ft 10+18 in
(14.89 m)
Sidney Bowman48 ft 4+78 in
(14.76 m)
Bob Kelley47 ft 10+34 in
(14.60 m)
Lloyd Bourgeois47 ft 5+58 in
(14.47 m)
Shot putHerman Brix50 ft 11+34 in
(15.54 m)
Harlow Rothert49 ft 8+14 in
(15.14 m)
John Kuck49 ft 4+34 in
(15.05 m)
Eric Krenz49 ft 2+34 in
(15.00 m)
Discus throwBud Houser153 ft 6+14 in
(46.79 m)
Fred Wiecker150 ft 3+34 in
(45.81 m)
James Corson147 ft 10+34 in
(45.08 m)
John Anderson145 ft 7 in
(44.40 m)
Hammer throwEd Black166 ft 4+14 in
(50.70 m)
Ken Caskey162 ft 9+34 in
(49.62 m)
Donald Gwinn161 ft 3+78 in
(49.17 m)
Frank Conner159 ft 6+78 in
(48.63 m)
Javelin throwCreth Hines202 ft 1+34 in
(61.60 m)
Charles Harlow201 ft 3+78 in
(61.35 m)
Arthur Sager200 ft 3 in
(61.04 m)
Lee Bartlett198 ft 10+34 in
(60.62 m)

In the high jump Bob King, who was both the defending AAU champion and the 1928 NCAA champion, defeated McGinnis in a jump-off to retain his AAU title; Osborn, who was the reigning Olympic champion and held the world record of 6 ft 8+14 in (2.03 m), placed third.[19] King went on to win gold at the Olympics, with Hedges taking the silver.

McGinnis also qualified in the pole vault – a double that has never been repeated since – after defeatingJack Williams in a jump-off for the final Olympic spot.[1]: 67 [19] Reigning Olympic champion Barnes won from Droegemueller and Carr in a competition with a deep high-quality field; the United States was the world's leading pole vault power. Carr, Droegemueller and McGinnis swept the medals in Amsterdam.[1]: 67, 75 

NCAA championEd Hamm dominated the long jump, improving Hubbard'sworld record of 25 ft 10+78 in (7.89 m) by a fraction of an inch.[19] In a rarity, three individual Olympic champions qualified for the American team in the same event; Hubbard had won Olympic gold in 1924, Hamm won in Amsterdam, and Gordon went on to win in 1932.[1]: 68  In the triple jump Levi Casey won his third consecutive AAU title; he took silver in Amsterdam, the last American to medal in the triple jump until 1976.[20]

In the shot put Herman Brix was the in-form man at the Olympic trials; defending AAU champion Kuck had unofficially broken theshot put world record earlier in 1928, but at the trials he only placed third.[1]: 68 [6]: 184  At the Olympics Kuck set an official world record, winning gold ahead of Brix.[6]: 184 Bud Houser, the reigning Olympic champion in both the shot and the discus, concentrated on the latter event in 1928; he won at the trials and successfully defended his Olympic title in Amsterdam, with Corson taking the bronze.[1]: 68  The failure of defending AAU champion Eric Krenz to qualify in the discus was a surprise; he made the Olympic team in the shot, but the discus was considered his better event.[21] Some consideration was given by team selectors to adding Krenz in the discus team or moving Anderson to the shot with Krenz in the discus, but these ideas were rejected.[22]

The hammer throw was one of the events in which the American team was not as strong as at the 1924 Games.[16] Ed "Rip" Black, the eventual trials winner and Olympic bronze medalist, was only fifth after the qualifying rounds and the last man to make the final; in the final he improved by almost eight feet and won.Matt McGrath, the 1912 Olympic champion, nearly qualified for his fifth consecutive Olympics; he missed fourth place by less than a foot.[1]: 68 [19] In the javelin the top Americans were evenly matched; IC4A champion Hines also won at the trials, with defending AAU champion Harlow the runner-up ahead of Sager and Bartlett. None of the four made an impact in Amsterdam.[1]: 68 

Marathon

[edit]
EventFirstSecondThird
Boston Marathon
Boston, Massachusetts
April 19
Clarence DeMar2:37:07.8James Henigan2:41:01Joie Ray2:41:56.8
Long Beach Marathon
New York City
May 19
Joie Ray2:34:13.4Albert Michelsen2:35:23
Baltimore Marathon
Baltimore, Maryland
June 2
William Agee2:57:04.4Harvey Frick3:00:11.4

In the marathon there was no clear qualifying system.[2]: 88  Six entrants per country were allowed, and eight races had been named as Olympic tryouts; in the end, the top two from each of the three races with the highest quality were selected.[2]: 88  Joie Ray, who also qualified in the 10,000 meters, was considered America's best Olympic hope in both events;[16] in theOlympic marathon he was among the leaders for much of the way, but eventually dropped to fifth.[23]

The1928 Boston Marathon also served as theUSA Marathon Championships for that year.[24]

Other AAU championship events

[edit]
EventFirstSecondThird
220 yd low hurdlesFrank Cuhel23.6
3 mile walkHarry Hinkel21:49.2
56 pound weight throwPat McDonald33 ft 10+14 in
(10.31 m)

These events were not part of the Olympic trials, but were contested at Harvard Stadium as part of the AAU national championships.[2]: 139  Between 1911 and 1933 McDonald won the AAU weight throw championship ten times;Matt McGrath, who placed second, was a seven-time champion.[2]: 139 [25]

Women

[edit]

With the inclusion of women's track and field in the Olympic program, women competed at the Olympic trials for the first time in 1928.[1]: 3  The women's trials were held at City Field inNewark, New Jersey on July 4, 1928. Like the men's meet, the women's trials also doubled as the national outdoor championships.[26]: 126, 130 Elta Cartwright of the Northern California Athletic Club was the leading star of the meet, winning the 50 yards, the 100 meters and the long jump; meeting rules prevented her from entering more events.[26]: 130 [27] National records were set byMaybelle Reichardt in the discus throw andRayma Wilson in the 800 meters; in the shot put,Lillian Copeland equaled her own national record.[26]: 131 

Of the twelve events in the AAU championship program, only four were part of the Olympic trials. The team championship was won by the Northern California Athletic Club with 52 points; Pasadena Athletic Club placed second.[26]: 132 

Trials

[edit]
EventFirstSecondThirdFourth
100 mElta Cartwright12.4Betty Robinson12.5eAnne VranaMary Washburn
800 mRayma Wilson2:32.6NRDee Boeckmann2:33.8Florence MacDonald2:36.0Ruth Martin
High jumpMildred Wiley4 ft 11+34 in
(1.52 m)
Jean Shiley4 ft 11+34 in
(1.52 m)
Catherine Maguire4 ft 10+34 in
(1.49 m)
Marion Holley4 ft 10+34 in
(1.49 m)
Discus throwMaybelle Reichardt116 ft 9+14 in
(35.58 m)AR
Lillian Copeland115 ft 1+12 in
(35.09 m)
Margaret Jenkins107 ft 6 in
(32.77 m)
Rena MacDonald102 ft 5+14 in
(31.22 m)

The 100-meter dash was Cartwright's only trials event; she won from 16-year-old Betty Robinson, the eventual Olympic champion. Future starStella Walsh was narrowly eliminated in the semi-finals.[1]: 70  The 800 meters was run as a time trial with several heats; both Boeckmann in heat one and Wilson in heat three broke the previous national record.[26]: 131  Women's middle distance races were a rarity in the United States, and the three Americans selected were not expected to make any impact in Amsterdam; MacDonald's sixth place in the Olympic final (2:22.6e) was a surprise.[2]: 154  The high jump title was decided in a jump-off; Wiley, who went on to win bronze in Amsterdam, defeated newcomer Shiley by clearing 4 ft 11+34 in (1.52 m) a second time.[1]: 70 [26]: 131  Reichardt, the discus champion, had not competed since 1926 but made a comeback for the Olympics; the American record in this event was relatively easy to break, as in previous years American meets had used a heavier imperial discus.[1]: 70 [26]: 142 

Other AAU championship events

[edit]
EventFirstSecondThird
50 yd dashElta Cartwright6.6Maybelle GillilandRuth Waldner
Long jumpElta Cartwright16 ft 10+34 in
(5.15 m)
Elizabeth Grobes5.00 mDorothy Furth
200 m dashFlorence Wright27.4Alice WilliamsMartha Scarlett
8 lb shot putLillian Copeland40 ft 4+14 in
(12.30 m) =AR
Rena McDonald11.44 mAida Silva
4 × 110 yd relayNorthern California AC52.2
Javelin throwMargaret Jenkins112 ft 5+58 in
(34.28 m)
Gloria Russell29.75 mEstelle Hill
80 yd hurdlesHelen Filkey8.4Belle OwensAida Silva
Baseball throwVivian Hartwick228 ft 8+12 in
(69.71 m)

Cartwright won two more national titles in the 50-yard dash and the long jump; she might have scored even more points, but meeting rules limited her to only three events.[27] Northern California Athletic Club won the 4 × 110 yard relay without Cartwright, and also scored first places in the javelin and baseball throws; in the baseball throw the top three (Hartwick, Jenkins andGloria Russell) were all Northern California athletes.[26]: 131–132  Lillian Copeland of Pasadena Athletic Club, who won silver in the discus in Amsterdam, equaled her own American record for the eight-pound (3.63 kg) shot.[26]: 131–132 [28][29]

Selections and appeals

[edit]

The principle that the top four finishers in each event would be selected for the Olympics was not followed completely strictly.Lloyd Hahn, who only took part in the 800 meters at the trials, was selected for the Olympics in both that event and the 1500 meters;Orval Martin, who had placed fourth in the 1500 meters, was left out of the Olympic team.[12] Although Hahn was seen as a potential Olympic champion in both the 800 and 1500 meters, the move was still criticized, and failed to pay off as he underperformed in Amsterdam;Avery Brundage, then president of theAmerican Olympic Association, cited the Hahn case as a reason not to give star athletes any special treatment at thenext Olympic trials.[10][30] In the 10,000 meters Verne Booth and Johnny Zola, who placed third and fourth at the trials, were left out of the team as too weak; Zola traveled to Amsterdam at his own expense, hoping the selectors would change their mind. American officials did eventually enter him, but the deadline for entries had already passed, and he was not allowed to compete.[31][32] In the end, the American team in the 10,000 meters consisted of the trials top two (Joie Ray andJohn Romig) and 5000-meter runner Macauley Smith, with no fourth entrant.[33]

A number of athletes who had placed outside the top four at the trials and not been selected also attempted to appeal their non-selection. TheNew York Athletic Club sponsored the trips of decathleteFait Elkins, sprinterRoland Locke, hurdlerWeems Baskin and hammer throwerMatt McGrath to Europe.[12][34] The appeal of Elkins, who was America's best decathlete but had injured himself at the trials, was taken seriously; it was only rejected after a test of form in mid-July indicated he had not recovered from his injury.[11][35] Locke, who held the220 yards world record, would have qualified in the 200 meters ifCharley Paddock had not been cleared of accusations of professionalism; at the time, onlyamateur athletes were allowed to compete in the Olympics. Paddock's amateur status was challenged after the trials, and two committees voted to exclude him from the team, but he was reinstated before the final selections were made.[36]

HurdlerRoss Nichols appealed on the grounds that he had hit a misplaced hurdle in the final; his appeal was turned down as meeting officials denied the hurdle had been misplaced, and footage of the race failed to support Nichols.[37][38] SprinterFrank Hussey and hurdlersHugo Leistner andClyde Blanchard travelled to Amsterdam asstowaways aboard the U.S. team's ship, theSSPresident Roosevelt; like the other rejected athletes, they were not allowed to run at the Olympics but could take part in other European meets.[39][40][41]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^All official times at the 1928 Olympic trials were hand-times, taken with the accuracy of one-fifth of a second; for example, Ray Barbuti's winning time in the 400-meter final was 51 35 seconds.
  2. ^Otto Peltzer's world record of 1:51.6 had been set at 880 yards (804.672 meters), and was the official outdoor world record for both the metric and imperial half-miles; it was equivalent to 1:50.8–1:51.0 for the metric distance.[13]: 101, 103  Hahn continued to 880 yards in the trials final in an attempt to break Peltzer's imperial mark, but his time at that point was only 1:52.4.[6]: 56  Hahn's metric world record was superseded before the Olympics when France'sSéra Martin ran 800 meters in 1:50.6.[6]: 56 
  3. ^While thede jure world record for the 110 m hurdles was 14.8,Earl Thomson's world record for the only marginally shorter 120 yd hurdles was 14.4, andLeighton Dye had run the metric distance in 14.6 three weeks before the trials. Like Dye's time, the marks of Nichols and Anderson were not ratified as official world records.[1]: 66, 67 [6]: 116 

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzHymans, Richard (2008)."The History of the United States Olympic Trials – Track & Field"(PDF).USA Track & Field. RetrievedOctober 20, 2015.
  2. ^abcdefghi"Report of the American Olympic Committee"(PDF). American Olympic Committee/LA84 Foundation. 1928. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on March 4, 2016. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  3. ^ab"Final Olympic Tryouts To Start Tomorrow".The Pittsburgh Press. July 2, 1928. RetrievedOctober 25, 2015.
  4. ^abcdZarnowski, Frank."History of the Decathlon at U.S. Olympic Trials"(PDF). RetrievedOctober 25, 2015.
  5. ^abc"Taylor Races Over Hurdles To World's Record".Chicago Tribune. July 5, 1928. RetrievedOctober 25, 2015.
  6. ^abcdefHymans, Richard; Matrahazi, Imre."IAAF World Records Progression"(PDF) (2015 ed.).International Association of Athletics Federations. RetrievedOctober 20, 2015.
  7. ^ab"12 Track Athletes Selected At 'Philly' For Olympic Team"(PDF).The Binghamton Press. July 5, 1928. RetrievedOctober 25, 2015.
  8. ^Gould, Alan (Associated Press) (July 6, 1928)."Excellent Crop of Track and Field Talent Boosts Hopes".St. Petersburg Times. RetrievedOctober 25, 2015.
  9. ^"Schuylkill College Wins Race at Penn Relay Carnival".Reading Eagle. April 29, 1928. RetrievedOctober 25, 2015.
  10. ^abCurrie, George (July 15, 1928)."Frank Hussey's Escapade Has Relieved Threatening Situation"(PDF).Brooklyn Daily Eagle. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  11. ^ab"Elkins Not Included On U.S. Decathlon Squad".Reading Eagle. July 17, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  12. ^abcVosburgh, F.G. (Associated Press) (July 28, 1928)."'Olympic Team That Was Left Behind' Refuses To Stay Home".The Daily Illini. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  13. ^abJukola, Martti (1935).Huippu-urheilun historia (in Finnish).Werner Söderström Osakeyhtiö.
  14. ^"Martin, Purdue Runner, Trods Path To Fame".Chicago Tribune. April 21, 1929. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  15. ^Hodak, George A."An Olympian's Oral History: Ernest "Nick Carter""(PDF). LA84 Foundation. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on August 19, 2016. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  16. ^abcWalsh, Davis J. (INS) (July 11, 1928)."America's Newest Army Of Expedition Sets Sail For Amsterdam Olympiad".Indiana Gazette. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  17. ^"Wightman Quits Olympic Body".Reading Eagle. July 11, 1928. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  18. ^Currie, George (July 12, 1928)."300 Athletes Who Sailed For Amsterdam Comprise "Best Team Ever Sent""(PDF).Brooklyn Daily Eagle. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  19. ^abcdGould, Alan (Associated Press) (July 8, 1928)."World, Olympic, National Marks Broken at Harvard".Daily Illini. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  20. ^"Lee Casey Bio, Stats and Results". Sports Reference LLC. Archived fromthe original on April 17, 2020. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  21. ^Sullivan, Prescott (June 26, 1928)."California Counts On Weight Tossers".Lewiston Evening Journal. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  22. ^"Yale Track Star To Attempt Pair Of Olympic Wins"(PDF).Brooklyn Daily Eagle. July 18, 1928. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  23. ^"Athletics at the 1928 Amsterdam Summer Games: Men's Marathon". Sports Reference LLC. Archived fromthe original on April 17, 2020. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  24. ^"USA National Championship (doubled as the Olympic Trials), Cambridge, MA 1928 Men, Track".trackfield.brinkster.net. RetrievedDecember 17, 2024.
  25. ^"USA Outdoor Track & Field Champions". USA Track & Field. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  26. ^abcdefghiTricard, Louise Mead (January 1996).American Women's Track and Field: A History, 1895 Through 1980, Volume 1.McFarland.ISBN 9780786402199. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  27. ^ab"Californian Proves Best Girl Athlete".San Mateo Times. July 5, 1928. RetrievedOctober 27, 2015.
  28. ^"USA National Championship (doubled as the Olympic Trials), Newark 1928 Women, Field".trackfield.brinkster.net.
  29. ^"USA National Championship (doubled as the Olympic Trials), Newark 1928 Women, Track".trackfield.brinkster.net.
  30. ^Gould, Alan (Associated Press) (July 9, 1932)."Eastman Moves For Exemption".Prescott Evening Courier. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  31. ^"Johnny Zola Goes Abroad".The Milwaukee Journal. July 18, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  32. ^"Zola Back Home With Two Trophies, Medals".The Milwaukee Journal. September 8, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  33. ^"Athletics at the 1928 Amsterdam Summer Games: Men's 10,000 metres". Sports Reference LLC. Archived fromthe original on April 17, 2020. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  34. ^"Club To Send Its Defeated Team To Olympics To Protest Ruling".Prescott Evening Courier. July 13, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  35. ^"Fait Elkins Proves He Is In Condition".Lewiston Evening Journal. July 16, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  36. ^""Fastest Human" Receives His Ticket To Amsterdam".St. Petersburg Times. July 10, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  37. ^"Paddock's Loss Blow To Team".Lewiston Daily Sun. July 9, 1928. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  38. ^Gould, Alan (Associated Press) (July 15, 1928)."Fait Elkins May Go To Olympics".Daily Illini. RetrievedOctober 26, 2015.
  39. ^"Swede Leistner Is Stowaway On Olympic Vessel".San Jose News. July 13, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  40. ^"Athletic Star Is Stowaway On Big Liner".The San Bernardino County Sun. July 13, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
  41. ^"Stowaways Star In Belgian Meet". St. Petersburg Times. August 12, 1928. RetrievedOctober 24, 2015.
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Women's field athletes
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