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Thane Baker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American sprinter (born 1931)
Thane Baker
Personal information
Full nameWalter Thane Baker
BornOctober 4, 1931 (1931-10-04) (age 94)

Walter Thane Baker (born October 4, 1931) is an American former sprinter and winner of the gold medal in the4 × 100 m relay at the1956 Summer Olympics inMelbourne, Australia, with a new world record of 39.5 seconds. At those Olympics, Baker also won a silver medal in the 100-meter and a bronze in the 200-meter. At the1952 Summer Olympics inHelsinki, he won a silver medal in the 200-meter.[1]

Biography

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Baker was born inElkhart, Kansas. In 1953, as aKansas State University student, Baker won theNCAA championship in the 220 yards (200 m), and in 1956 he won theAAU championships in 200 m. Baker also won numerous conference titles at Kansas State, and was a four-timeAll American.

Before theMelbourneOlympics, Baker equaledJesse Owens's long-standing 100 mworld record time of 10.2 seconds, and also twice equaled the 200 m world record of20.6. He tied the world record in the 100 yd in 9.3 seconds, twice tied the world record in 60 yd indoor events at 6.1 seconds, and set the world record in the 300 yd at 29.4 seconds. He co-held several world records in relays.

After turning forty, Baker participated in the Masters Track and Field program and held numerousworld records in the 100 yd, 100 m, 220 y, 200 m, and several relays in the age groups categories of 40–44, 45–49, and 50–54 years of age. Baker is enshrined in theUSATF Masters Hall of Fame[2] and theKansas Sports Hall of Fame.[3] He is also in the Kansas State University Sports Hall of Fame and the Kansas State High School Activities Hall of Fame. In 1978, he was named a "Silver Athletics Top Ten" for personal achievement.

He began as a track meet "starter" in 1959 and has started NCAA National Championships and National Federation Championships. The year 2010 was his forty-fourth year of serving at the Texas Relays. He was selected "Outstanding Official" by the Texas Relays Committee in 2010 and inducted into the Texas Track and Field Coaches Hall of Fame, Class of 2011.[4] He also has the track named after him in his home town of Elkhart, Kansas.

He retired in 1983 as a colonel from the United States Air Force after serving thirty years of active and reserve status. Additionally, in 1992, he retired from Mobil Research and Development after thirty-nine years of employment. His civic involvement included serving as president of a Rotary Club chapter, a member of the Cotton Bowl Athletic Association board of directors, the United States Olympians board of directors, and volunteered on other boards and associations.

Thane Baker's daughter, Catherine Baker Nicholson JD, wrote a book about his first Olympics called Running in Borrowed Shoes: Thane Baker and the 1956 Summer Games, which Texas Christian University Press published in Summer 2024. Because he did not expect to make the 1952 Olympic team, Baker competed in the Men's 200 meters and won a silver medal wearing borrowed socks and borrowed shoes.

BYUtv produced a video about Thane Baker's experiences in 2024.[5]

Baker is the oldest living United States Olympic medalist in track, and ranks third in the world in the same category.[6]

References

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  1. ^Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen;Mallon, Bill; et al."Thane Baker".Olympics at Sports-Reference.com.Sports Reference LLC. Archived fromthe original on 2020-04-17.
  2. ^"USATF - Masters Hall of Fame".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^"Kansas Sports Hall of Fame". Archived fromthe original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved2006-09-23.
  4. ^"txtfhalloffame". Archived fromthe original on 2017-01-16.
  5. ^"The Dream: Kansas State Big Story".YouTube. 9 February 2024.
  6. ^"ptchir".acsweb.ucsd.edu.
1876–1878
New York Athletic Club
1879–1888
NAAAA
1888–1979
Amateur Athletic Union
1980–1992
The Athletics Congress
1993–onwards
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.
  • 2020 OT: The 2020 Olympic Trials were delayed and held in 2021 due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.
  • *USA: Leading American athlete
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Women's track athletes
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