OT: Greatest 45 Minutes in Sports History - si.com article

Submitted by JeffB on

SI.com article on what the writer is calling the greatest 45 minutes in sports history, which occurred 75 years ago tomorrow (5/25), with Jessie Owens tying or setting 4 world records in 4 different events at the 1935 Big 10 Championships at Ferry Field.  The article sums up the accomplishment as:

Ferry Field still stands. Outside the track a plaque commemorates Owens' record-shattering day. It is, perhaps, the ultimate compliment in college sports that a University of Michigan athletic facility continues to honor the achievements of an Ohio State Buckeye.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/more/05/24/owens.record.day/index…

 

JeffB

JeffB

May 24th, 2010 at 5:55 PM ^

I agree with you there.  I was surprised that Owens still has the OSU long jump school record, and he would've placed 7th in the last Olympics.  If he had access to the training and equipment (not running on dirt and having blocks), I really wonder what he could do.

JeffB

oldblue

May 24th, 2010 at 5:56 PM ^

features, Owens was both sick and injured that week and the coach initially told him not to bother coming to the Big Ten Meet, but Jesse thought he owed it to his team to at least try.  No idea whether there is any truth to that, but I do know that is what Paul Harvey said.

Section 1

May 24th, 2010 at 6:08 PM ^

I remember my grandfather taking me to Ferry Field, telling me about "Old Man Yost," and also about Jesse Owens' world-record day there.

I forget when the Jesse Owens plaque went up.  Owens died tragically of lung cancer (he smoked like a chimney) in 1980; I'm not sure if that was when they put up the memorial or not.

I DO remember my grandfather telling me that "Michigan won the meet."  Funny how something like that gets around; I don't even know if it is true.

Here's the totally freaky thing -- somebody remarked that Denard would beat the OSU Jesse.  Um, it is not true.  I'll let you catch your breath.  At least, the Olympian Jesse Owens was faster, in 1936, than the Florida State High School Athletic Association 4-A meet Denard Robinson.  (Can't compare Owens' world records at 100 yards and 220 yards to modern sprints in meters; so we disregard his day at Ferry Field in 1935.)

Denard in high school:  Career-best 10.56 in the 100m; 21.89 in the 200m.

Jesse Owens in the Berlin Olympics:  10.3 in the 100m; 20.7 in the 200m. 

Alton

May 24th, 2010 at 7:39 PM ^

I DO remember my grandfather telling me that "Michigan won the meet."  Funny how something like that gets around; I don't even know if it is true.

It is true:  Michigan 48, Ohio State 43.5, Wisconsin 29.5, Indiana 24.5, Northwestern 20, Iowa 19, Illinois 18.5, Purdue 11, Minnesota 10, Chicago 1.

Something I found when looking this up in the Big Ten Record Book:  the times in the 100, 220 and 220 hurdles by Jesse Owens that day were still Big Ten meet records when NCAA Track converted to metric in 1976, and so will always remain the Big Ten record in those 3 events.  His Long Jump of 26 feet 8.25 inches (8.13 m) also still stands today as the Big Ten championship record.

willywill9

May 24th, 2010 at 8:54 PM ^

Long Jump... 26 feet 8 1/4 inches.  Wow.  My longest jump ever was 20 feet 4.5 inches... and he still has me by over 6 feet.  It's remarkable to think someone jumped 26 feet... especially if you actually measure that out.  Unreal.

VAWolverine

May 24th, 2010 at 6:12 PM ^

who Jesse Owens played for; or whose jersey Jackie Robinson wore, or which city Larry Doby or Ernie Davis represented. What matters is that they were there competing in their own right.

JeffB

May 24th, 2010 at 6:12 PM ^

I remember going to Ferry Field for an independent track meet in 1992 (I was still in high school).  I hadn't heard any of this at all, but I was amazed when I saw a plaque commemorating an OSU athelete on Michigan's campus.

I know that when I talk about that plaque to other Michigan fans (not necessarily alumni) or OSU fans, very few people seem to realize that it's there, or that Jesse Owens did this.

Section 1

May 24th, 2010 at 6:20 PM ^

on the Michigan campus.

There's Yost Bridge at the Golf Course.  And, naturally, there are the memorialized buildings; Yost, Schembechler Hall, Canham Natatorium, Crisler Arena, Ray L. Fisher Stadium, etc., all named for coaches and AD's.

I cannot think of anything, apart from the Stadium "brick" areas, that are any kind of ahtlete memorials.

The Jesse Owens memorial is special, unique.  I think it is great.  Like the buckeyes growing on the golf course. 

LB

May 25th, 2010 at 1:08 AM ^

Woolfolk. His 100 time was below 10.4 and I think the 4 x 100 team he anchored still holds the school record. That is now a 30 year old record.

MznbluePA

May 25th, 2010 at 11:36 AM ^

A plaque to Bob Ufer, Wolverine Track Star, was next to the entrance door to the press box. Not for Bob's athletic prowess(a world record holder in the 600 yard run), but for a Meechigan athlete nonetheless. Wonder what has happened to the plaque with the demolition of the old press box.

Buccaneer_9

May 25th, 2010 at 6:06 PM ^

Some athletes transcend the schools/organizations that they represent.  Jesse Owens went to Germany and pissed all over Hitler's "Master Race" theory.

Jesse Owens, Buckeye or not, is an American hero.