Millrose Games

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Millrose Games
2019 Millrose Games (32114193207).jpg
Yomif Kejelcha leading the Wanamaker Mile at the 2019 Millrose Games
DateFebruary
Location New York City, United States Flag of the United States.svg
Event typeIndoor track and field
Established1908
OrganizerRay Flynn
Official site https://millrosegames.org/
Athletics current event.svg 2024 Millrose Games

The Millrose Games are an annual indoor athletics (track & field) meet held each February in New York City. Among the world's most prestigious indoor track meets, the games started taking place at the Armory in Washington Heights in 2012, after having taken place in Madison Square Garden from 1914 to 2011. [1]

Contents

The games were started when employees of the New York City branch of Wanamaker's department store formed the Millrose Track Club to hold a meet.

Today, the Millrose Games feature elite competitions for athletes at all levels, including youth, club, masters, high school, collegiate, and professional levels. [2]

The featured event is the Wanamaker Mile.

History

2008 Millrose Games Millrose games 2008.jpg
2008 Millrose Games

The Millrose Games began in 1908 at a local armory the same year when its parent, the Millrose Athletic Association, was formed as a recreational club by the employees of the John Wanamaker Department Store. "Millrose" was the name of the country home of Rodman Wanamaker in Cheltenham, Pennsylvania.

In 1914, after overflowing the armory the year before, the Millrose Games moved to Madison Square Garden, and until 2011 was the oldest continuous sporting event held there. For 10 years beginning in 1916, the Wanamaker 1 ½ Mile race was a highlight of the meet. Run for the last time in 1925, the final edition was won by Paavo Nurmi, the nine-time Olympic gold medalist from Finland. In 1926, the distance was shortened, and the Wanamaker Mile was born. It has often been run at 10 p.m., a carryover from the days beginning in the 1930s when noted sports announcer Ted Husing would broadcast the race live on his 10 p.m. radio show.

The Wanamaker Mile has been won by over 44 different men, including Glenn Cunningham, Kip Keino, Tony Waldrop, Filbert Bayi, Steve Scott, Noureddine Morceli, Bernard Lagat, Marcus O'Sullivan, Ron Delany, and Eamonn Coghlan. Coghlan was known as the “Chairman of the Boards” for his dominance on the old wooden Millrose track and won the mile seven times, a feat surpassed only by Bernard Lagat, who won his eighth Wanamaker Mile in 2010. [3]

Some highlights in Millrose history include Ray Conger's 1929 upset win over Nurmi in the Wanamaker Mile; pole vaulter Cornelius Warmerdam becoming the first person to vault 15 feet (4.6 m) indoors, in 1942; John Thomas hitting the first 7-foot (2.1 m) high jump, in 1959; Mary Decker’s run to a 1500-meter World Indoor Record to encouragement from the crowd, in 1980; John Uelses becoming the first person to pole vault the height of 16 feet; Carl Lewis in 1984 breaking the World Indoor Record with a jump of 28 feet (8.5 m), 10.25 inches, a mark that still stands; Eamonn Coghlan notching his then record seventh Wanamaker Mile in 1987; Bernard Lagat breaking Coghlan's record with his eighth Wanamaker Mile triumph in 2010, and Stacy Dragila setting a late-night pole vault world record in 2001.

For 70 of its first 96 years, the role of Millrose meet director was a father-son affair: Fred Schmertz directed the meet in 1934, passing on that position to his son Howard in 1975. In 2003, the title of Meet Director Emeritus was bestowed on the younger Schmertz.

In May 2011 Norbert Sanders, the President of the Millrose Games, announced that, starting January 2012, the games would be moved to the Armory in Washington Heights, at 168th Street, and that a new all-day Saturday schedule would replace the Friday evening format. [4]

The Millrose Games, operated by The Armory Foundation, are also notable for their rigid anti-doping policies. In 2017, Millrose race director Ray Flynn told an ESPN reporter, "We have a mandate that we don't invite any athlete that has had any drug history in their past. We want to keep our meet free of any athlete that really has a violation." [5]

The Millrose Games were first added to the World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold Standard in 2022. [6] [7]

At the 2023 Millrose Games, Dr. Anthony Fauci attended and was honored with The Armory's Presidents Award. [8]

At the 2024 Millrose Games, the President of World Athletics, Sebastian Coe, was given The Armory's Presidents Award. [9]

Editions

Statistics

The most prolific winner in event history is Loren Murchison, a sprinter who won 13 titles between 1919 and 1926. He is followed by pole vaulter Bob Richards (11), hurdler Greg Foster and 500-600-800m runner Mark Everett (10), and hurdler Harrison Dillard and miler Eamonn Coghlan (9). Coghlan’s total includes seven Wanamaker Mile victories and two Masters Mile wins.

Four women share the honor of most Millrose wins at eight apiece: 400-meter runner Diane Dixon, whose eight victories include five straight from 1988–1992; middle-distance runner Jearl Miles-Clark; shot putter Connie Price-Smith; and high jumper Tisha Waller.

202 athletes share the distinction of being both Millrose Games and Olympic champions.

Millrose Games Hall of Fame

AthleteCountryEventCareer notesMillrose highlightsInducted
Horace Ashenfelter Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 2 MilesOlympic gold medalist, Steeplechase (1952)5-time winner2001
Earl Bell Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Pole VaultOlympic bronze medalist (1984)6-time winner2000
Joetta Clark Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 8004-time Olympian (1988, 1992, 1996, 2000)7-time winner; 23-time competitor2003
Eamonn Coghlan Flag of Ireland.svg  Ireland MileWorld Championships 5000 m gold medalist (1983)7-time winner of Wanamaker Mile1999
Glenn Cunningham Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States MileOlympic silver medalist, 1500m (1936)6-time winner2000
Willie Davenport Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Hurdles2-time Olympic medalist, gold and bronze (1968, 1976)5-time winner2003
Harrison Dillard Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Hurdles4-time Olympic gold medalist (1948, 1952)8-time winner1999
Diane Dixon Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 4002-time Olympic relay medalist, gold and silver (1984, 1988)8-time winner1999
Mark Everett Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 500, 600, 8002-time World Championships medalist10-time winner2003
Greg Foster Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Hurdles4-time World Champion indoors and out (1984–1991)10-time winner2000
Johnny Gray Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 800American Record Holder, Olympic bronze medalist (1992)5-time winner2004
Stephanie Hightower Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Hurdles1980 Olympian, World Record Holder5-time winner2001
Joni Huntley Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States High JumpOlympic bronze medalist (1984)4-time winner2004
Jackie Joyner-Kersee Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Long Jump, Hurdles6-time Olympic medalist, including 3 gold (1988–1996)5-time winner2001
Carl Lewis Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Long Jump9-time Olympic gold medalist, 100 m, 200m, relay, LJ (1984–1996)4-time winner2000
Marty Liquori Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States MileRanked #1 in World three times, 1968 Olympian3-time Wanamaker Mile winner2003
Martin McGrady Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 600World Record Holder (1970)3-time winner2005
Loren Murchison Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Dash, 3002-time Olympic 4x100 relay gold medalist (1920, 1924)13-time winner2002
Renaldo Nehemiah Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States HurdlesRanked #1 in the World 1978-19814-time winner2002
Marcus O'Sullivan Flag of Ireland.svg  Ireland Mile3-time World Indoor gold, 4-time Olympian (1984, 1988, 1992, 1996)5-time Wanamaker Mile winner2002
Billy Olson Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Pole Vault11-time World Record Holder, 1988 Olympian4-time winner2004
Doug Padilla Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 3000, 50002-time Olympian (1984, 1988)6-time winner2000
Don Paige Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 1000Ranked #1 in World, Sullivan Award winner (1980)5-time winner2001
Joie Ray Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 1½ Mile3-time Olympian, 1924 bronze medalist 30007-time winner2004
Greg Rice Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 2 MileWorld Record Holder, Sullivan Award winner (1940)4-time winner2005
Bob Richards Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Pole Vault2-time Olympic gold medalist (1952, 1956)11-time winner1999
Fred Schmertz Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Meet Director, 1934–19742003
Howard Schmertz Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Meet Director, 1975–20022007
Mary Slaney Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 1000, 1500, Mile36 ARs, 17 WR, World Championships double gold (1983)6-time winner2002
Dwight Stones Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States High Jump2-time Olympic bronze medalist (1972, 1976)3-time winner2005
John Thomas Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States High Jump2-time Olympic medalist, silver and bronze (1960, 1964)6-time winner1999
Gwen Torrence Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Sprints5-time Olympic medalist, including 3 gold (1992, 1996)7-time winner2003
Cheryl Toussaint Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 440, 600, 800Olympic 4x400 silver medalist (1972)4-time winner2005
Cornelius Warmerdam Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States Pole VaultWorld Record Holder, Sullivan Award winner (1942)2-time winner2001
Mal Whitfield Flag of the United States (23px).png  United States 600, 8805-time Olympic medalist, including 3 gold (1948, 1952)4-time winner2002

Meeting directors

The Millrose Games has had ten meeting directors over its rich history. [18]

Meet DirectorYear(s) Active
Col. Clarence W. Smith 1911
Johnny Fleeson 1912
Andrew Christie1913-1914
John J. McGowan 1915-1919
John G. Anderson1920-1933
Fred Schmertz 1934-1974
Howard Schmertz 1975-2003
David Katz2004-2008
Mark Wetmore 2009-2011
Ray Flynn 2012-Present

World records

Over the course of its history, three world records and three world bests have been set at the Millrose Games.

World records & bests set at the Millrose Games
YearEventRecordAthleteNationality
1984 Long jump 8.79 m Carl Lewis Flag of the United States.svg United States
1988 Mile walk 5:33.53 [WB] Tim Lewis Flag of the United States.svg United States
2018 300 m 35.45 [WB] Shaunae Miller-Uibo Flag of the Bahamas.svg Bahamas
2018 4 × 800 m relay 8:05.89 Chrishuna Williams
Raevyn Rogers
Charlene Lipsey
Ajeé Wilson
Flag of the United States.svg United States
2024 60 m hurdles 7.67 Devynne Charlton Flag of the Bahamas.svg Bahamas
Two miles 8:00.67 [WB] Josh Kerr Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Great Britain

Meeting records

Men

Women

Notes

  1. later disqualified due to lane infringement

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