Personal information | |
---|---|
Full name | John Michael Morton |
National team | United States of America |
Born | April 3rd, 1946 Keene, New Hampshire |
Education | Tilton School Middlebury College |
Height | 5.83 ft (178 cm) |
Weight | 146 lb (66 kg; 10 st 6 lb) |
Sport | |
Sport | Biathlon |
Event(s) | Men's 7.5-km Relay Men's 20-km |
John Morton (born April 3, 1946) is an Olympic skier and writer from the United States. [1] [2] [3] He was born in Keene, New Hampshire. Morton has participated as an athlete, coach, and team leader in seven Olympic Games for the United States in the biathlon event.
John Morton grew up in Walpole, New Hampshire. [3] [4] Morton graduated from Tilton School in 1964. At Tilton, he competed in four ski events: downhill, slalom, cross-country, and jumping. [5] Morton was also a recipient of The John F. Thompson Memorial Award while at Tilton. [6] He then attended Middlebury College where he competed on their cross-country skiing team. [7] During his athletic college career he won the Eastern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference Championship in 1966 and 1968, and placed second at the 1968 NCAA Skiing Championships. [4] Morton completed the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) program [8] at Middlebury and graduated in 1968. [7] Morton was then to complete four years in the United States Army. In his first two years with the Army, Morton was assigned to Anchorage, Alaska, where he trained for the biathlon, combining his skiing talents and his military shooting training. In 1970, Morton was given orders to work as an advisor for the Military Assistance Command Vietnam, and was sent to South Vietnam for two years, deterring his biathlon training. [8] He was released from active duty in 1972 with the rank of Captain. [3]
Only having three months to train after being released from the Army, Morton made the U.S. Olympic team in 1972. Morton traveled with the team to Sapporo, Japan, but was benched for the entirety of the games because of personal conflict with his coach. [8]
Morton competed at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria, for the United States. [9] Falling ill the night before the 20-km race, Morton was unable to compete, which put him at a disadvantage in placement for his second event of the games: the 7.5-km relay.
Morton has participated in five more Olympics for the U.S. Biathlon team as a coach or Team Leader. At the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Morton worked as the Chief of Course for Biathlon events.
Morton was on the U.S. Biathlon Team starting in 1968 and ending in 1976. He won first place with the relay team at the 1976 North American Championships. He also raced on the U.S. Cross-Country Ski Team from 1973 to 1975. He won U.S. National Championships in 1974 and in 1976. Representing the United States, Morton competed at six Biathlon World Championships. [10]
Between the 1972 Winter Olympics and the 1976 Winter Olympics, Morton worked as a high school teacher in Anchorage while training for the biathlon. He was the Dartmouth College head ski coach from 1978 to 1989. [4] [3] Morton has been a ski commentator for Vermont Public Radio since 1994. [4]
Currently, Morton designs cross country skiing trails in Vermont with his company Morton Trails. His design work has taken him all over the world, designing different Nordic skiing trails for large-scale competitions, such as the World University Games and Biathlon World Cups, to local skiing trails, such as the Nordic trails at Proctor Academy. [8]
Morton resides in Thetford, Vermont, with his wife, Kay. [3] A competitive skier, Morton races in cross-country skiing events and is one of the top Masters athletes in the world for this discipline. [10]
Morton is considered a master on the biathlon event and has written books and journal articles concerning his experiences with the sport. He has been published in journals and magazines, including the Dartmouth Medical College magazine. [11]
His other non-fiction works include Don't Look Back: Olympic Skiing Competitor and Coach Shares His Story and Training Program (1992) [12] and A Medal of Honor: An Insider's Unveiling of the Agony and Ecstasy Surrounding the Olympic Dream (1998). [13]
His most recent book, Celebrate Winter, originally published December 2020, revised January 2021, is a collection of stories, sharing insights and reflections of more than fifty-five years of competition and coaching. [14]
Morton was inducted into the U.S. Biathlon Association Hall of Fame in 2008 for his commitment and contribution to the sport. [1] In 2008, Morton was featured as an "Olympic Entrepreneur" in Forbes magazine for founding and running his trail design company, Morton Trails. [15] In 2018, Morton was inducted in the Athletic Hall of Fame of his alma mater, Middlebury College.
In 2012, Morton gave the formal address at his alma mater, Tilton School, for their 168th Convocation. [5] He is also a member of the Board of Trustees of Tilton School, and has been inducted into Tilton's Athletic Hall of Fame.
William Conrad Koch is an American cross-country skier who competed at the international level. A native of Guilford, Vermont, he is a graduate of the nearby Putney School in Putney. In 1974, he became the first American to win a medal in international competition, placing third in the European junior championships.
Andrew Johnson is a cross-country skier from the United States. He was born and raised in Greensboro, Vermont, and is a member of the U.S. 2006 Olympic Cross-Country Ski Team. He has been a Junior National Champ, an Overall "Supertour Champ", and a three-time All American. He is a four-time national champion, winning at the 2005 and 2006 championships, both held in Soldier Hollow, Utah.
The Skiing Cochrans are a family of American alpine ski racers from Richmond, Vermont, a dominant force on the U.S. Ski Team in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and again in 2000s, 2010s and 2020s.
Tilton School is an independent, coeducational, college-preparatory school in Tilton, New Hampshire, serving students from 9th to 12th grade and postgraduate students. Founded in 1845, Tilton's student body in the 2021-22 academic year consisted of 61 day students and 129 boarding students. The typical student enrollment includes representation from 15-20 states and 10-15 countries.
Poland first participated at the Olympic Games in 1924, and has sent athletes to compete in every Summer Olympic Games since then, except for the 1984 Games, when they were part of the Soviet-led boycott of the 1984 Summer Olympics. Poland has also participated in every Winter Olympic Games.
The Middlebury Panthers are the 31 varsity teams of Middlebury College that compete in the New England Small College Athletic Conference. The Panthers lead the NESCAC in total number of national championships, having won 34 team titles since the conference lifted its ban on NCAA play in 1994. Middlebury enjoys national success in soccer, cross country running, field hockey, men's basketball, women's hockey, skiing, men's lacrosse and women's lacrosse, and fields 31 varsity NCAA teams and several competitive club teams including a sailing team (MCSC), a crew team, a water polo team, an ultimate frisbee team, and a rugby team. Since 2000, Middlebury's varsity squads have won 84 NESCAC titles. Currently, 28% of students participate in varsity sports.
The Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club (SSWSC) is located in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. SSWSC has produced 88 Winter Olympians, including 14 sent to the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi. Some of the more well-known Olympians including 6-time Olympian Todd Lodwick, 5-time Olympian Billy Demong, 1992 Bronze Medalist Nelson Carmichael, 2002 Silver Medalist Travis Mayer, and Caroline Lalive.
Thomas Michael Jacobs was an American Olympic Nordic skier who competed in the 1950s.
John Homer Caldwell is a retired American nordic skier who competed in the 1952 Winter Olympics, then became a cross-country ski coach and authority on cross-country skiing. He wrote a series of books that helped popularize and develop understanding of recreational cross-country skiing in the United States. Consequently, Caldwell has been called the "father" and "guru" of Nordic skiing in North America.
John Bower was an American nordic combined skier who competed in the 1960s and later went on to become a coach of the American nordic skiing team for the 1976 and 1980 Winter Olympic team. He also became the first non-European to ever win at the Holmenkollen Ski Festival in Norway with his 1968 victory in the Nordic combined event, winning the prestigious King's Cup.
John Carleton was an American lawyer and competitive skier from New Hampshire. He competed in cross-country skiing and Nordic combined at the 1924 Winter Olympics in Chamonix. He was also a pioneer of alpine skiing in the United States.
Erlon "Bucky" Broomhall is a Vermont skier, former junior olympic ski coach, and advocate of youth skiing. He is responsible for bringing the first girls' team to the Junior Olympics in 1968.
Hannah Dreissigacker is a former American biathlete. She competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
The 2013 NCAA Skiing Championships were held in Vermont and Vermont on March 6–9, 2013. Middlebury College hosted the event with alpine events at the Middlebury College Snow Bowl and Nordic events taking place at the Rikert Nordic Center. The competition was won by the Colorado Buffaloes after compiling the largest final-day comeback in NCAA Skiing Championships history. Twenty-one teams from three regions sent skiers to compete for the NCAA collegiate team championship and individual titles.
Joseph Peter "Joe Pete" Wilson was an American Olympic cross-country skier, who skied for the U.S. in cross-country at the 1960 Winter Olympics and later became a well-known skiing administrator in the United States. Wilson also in collaboration authored several books on cross-country skiing, all co-written by William J. Lederer. Wilson set up the cross-country ski area at the Trapp Family Lodge in Stowe, Vermont – the lodge established by the Trapp family of The Sound of Music fame. In 1973, Wilson organized a meeting of 25 ski areas and established the National Ski Touring Operators' Association. Wilson was named as its first President from 1973-1977. After several name changes it is now called the Cross Country Ski Areas Association (CCSAA). CCSAA is an international association of U.S. and Canadian cross-country ski areas. Wilson is also known for having set up an inn in Keene, New York, the Bark Eater Inn, and developing the ski trails around the inn.
Sarah Konrad is an American former biathlete. She competed in two events at the 2006 Winter Olympics. She also competed in the cross-country skiing at the same Olympics. Konrad was the first woman to represent the United States in two different sports at the same Winter Olympic Games. Since retiring, Konrad has served as a representative for the Athletes Advisory Council of the United States Olympic Committee and the United States Biathlon Association for the International Competition Committee.
Emily Dreissigacker is a former biathlete from Vermont.
Martha Rockwell is a retired American cross-country skier and coach, who competed at the Winter Olympic Games in 1972 and 1976. She has been cited in the U.S. as a "pioneer" and a "legend" in women's cross-country skiing, having been the U.S. women's cross-country ski champion 18 times between 1969 and 1975 as part of the first U.S. national cross-country ski team for women.
Gordon Ladd Eaton, known as Gordi Eaton, is an American alpine skier. He competed in the men's downhill at the 1960 Winter Olympics. Eaton is a Middlebury College Class of 1962 graduate, and competed on the school's alpine ski team.
The Dartmouth College Ski Team is organized under the aegis of the Dartmouth Outing Club and is notable for both providing students access to competitive skiing and training internationally successful nordic and alpine ski racers.. The Dartmouth Outing Club hosted the US's first downhill ski race on Mt Moosilauke in 1927, and Dartmouth skiing has been intertwined with ski racing ever since.