Dr. Norman (Norm) Green (born June 27, 1932, in Oakland, California - died May 16, 2023 in Media, PA (age 90)) [1] was an American long-distance runner. He set numerous American and World records over his career. He still holds the current M55 American record for the 10,000 metres. [2] In 1996 he was elected into the inaugural class of the USATF Masters Hall of Fame, [3] the first long-distance runner. For more than a decade, Green was the director of the Hall of Fame. [4]
Green began running at Piedmont High School, running a 4:31.6 mile. He was the North Coast Section champion in the mile in 1950 which qualified him for the CIF California State Meet, but he didn't place in the final. [5] He ran for two years at the nearby University of California, Berkeley, improving to 4:24, but he stopped running to concentrate on his studies. He wouldn't run competitively again for almost 30 years. After Baptist Divinity School he found his way to work for American Baptist National Ministries in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.
On the road racing circuit, starting in 1981 he found himself far ahead of any other 50-year-olds. He still holds masters records in the M60 8 km, M50, M55 and M60 in the 15 km run, M50 and M60 10 mile run, M50, M55 and M60 20 km and half marathon, M50 25 km and M50 Marathon running sub-2:30 with a 2:29:11 at age 51. [6] Those are just the official records, other marks not so recognized include a 2:25:52 marathon at age 52 and a 2:27:42 marathon at age 55, making him the oldest American to run under 2:30. [4] A bout with prostate cancer in 1995 and injuries kept him out of running for almost 11 years but he returned to the competitive scene at age 74.
After retiring as a demographer for the Baptist National Ministries, he worked for his local Association of USATF and led the Hall of Fame Committee. Spending a reported 70 hours a week, he would prepare detailed dossiers of each candidate for the vote by the other members of the Hall of Fame, plus the nationwide administrators who elect members. His dramatic, sermon like speeches announcing each inductee's qualifications were legendary until his sudden retirement in 2011. [7]
In addition to the Masters Hall of Fame, he is also a member of the Piedmont High School Hall of Fame. [8]
Deena Michelle Kastor is an American long-distance runner. She was a holder of American records in the marathon (2006-2022) and numerous road distances. She won the bronze medal in the women's marathon at the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece. She is also an eight-time national champion in cross country.
John Lee Gray Jr. is a retired American world class 800 meter runner from the mid-1980s to the late 1990s and the holder of the 600m world best. A four-time-Olympian (1984-1996) in 1985 he set the US record of 1:42.60 at a meet in Koblenz. That time puts Gray as the nineteenth fastest performer of all time. He came seventh in the 1984 Summer Olympics, fifth in 1988, and won the bronze medal at the Barcelona Olympics of 1992. In 1993 Gray was one of the favourites to win a gold medal at the World Championships in Stuttgart as he had won the A-race at the prestigious meeting in Zurich. However, he failed to qualify for the final in Stuttgart. He also set the world 600 meter record in 1986 at 1:12.81. In 1992 and 1993 Gray came close to breaking the world indoor record over 800 m several times. He held the US indoor record at 1:45.00 till February 2019.
Norman Bright was an American runner, mountaineer, and teacher. Bright once held the American record in the two-mile run.
Michiko "Miki" Suwa Gorman was an American marathon runner of Japanese ancestry. Gorman did not begin running competitively until she was in her mid-30s, but rapidly emerged as one of the elite marathoning women of the mid-1970s. She is the only woman to win both the Boston and New York City marathons twice and is the first of only two woman runners to win both marathons in the same year.
Linda Somers-Smith is an American long-distance runner who is a two-time United States national champion in the marathon. Somers competed in the marathon at the 1996 Summer Olympics. She also won the 1992 Chicago Marathon (2:37:41) and the 1993 California International Marathon (2:34:11). Somers is notable as she is one of the very few athletes who has continued running at the elite level since she turned Pro in 1984 into the transition to Masters athlete. She continues to win and place in Open competition, even at the age of 50, all the while as a practicing attorney.
Albert Richmond "Boo" Morcom was an American track and field athlete.
William Collins is an American sprinter, originally running for Mount Vernon High School in Westchester County, New York, where he won four state titles and later at Texas Christian University where he achieved "All-American" status.
Tom Patsalis was an American track and field athlete. He had set 26 World Records in his career, a career that was still active in his late 80s. As of 2014 he is the World Record holder in the M60 Long Jump, set in 1982 and thus a record he has held for more than three decades. As of 2014, only one jumper has come within .2 m. He is also the American record holder in the Long Jump for the M60 age division, has an as yet unrecognized mark that has been pending since 1977 still 7 inches superior to the listed American record and is the American record holder in the Triple Jump in the M60 and M65 age divisions. He was selected to the Masters division of the National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 2003.
Gary Tuttle is an American long distance runner and local politician from Ventura, California. Over a lengthy career, he won two NCAA Men's Outdoor Track and Field Championships, set three American records, ran for the USA team at the IAAF World Cross Country Championships, won the Bay to Breakers race in 1974 and placed second in the Boston Marathon in 1985.
Gerry Davidson was an American long distance runner from Fallbrook, California. She is the former world record holder in the W85 Mile run. She is also the American record holder in most W80 and W85 track events from the 400 metres through the 10,000 metres and several road running records going back to 1991 when she was 70 years old.
Nolan Shaheed is an American jazz musician, specializing in the cornet and trumpet, and a world record holding masters athlete.
Kenneth Edward Dennis was an American track and field athlete. As a Masters sprinter he held the world record in the 100 metres in several age groups. Standing 5'3" the short Dennis was known for his soft-spoken nature, his greetings of "Hey man" or "Go man" and his blazing fast starts.
Jack Eldred Greenwood was an American track and field athlete. He is the former world record holder in the 400 metres hurdles in the masters age divisions M45, M50, M55, M60 and M65. His hurdle records were so advanced, the shortest any of them lasted was almost ten years, all but one broken by the same athlete, German Guido Müller. He had a similar record over the short hurdles. He also had his time at the top of the M50 and M60 400 meters and ten years at the top of the M65 200 meters. Two of his marks survive to this day as American records.
Norman Foster Darrell "Norm" Alvis is a former professional American cyclist. He was professional from 1988 to 1998. He won dozens of races as a junior, amateur, professional and masters racer. He competed in the team time trial at the 1988 Summer Olympics. In 1997 he set the one hour record for track time trial which held for 17 years.
Larry Stuart was an American track and field athlete, known primarily for the javelin throw.
The USATF Masters Outdoor Championships is an annual track and field competition which serves as the national championship for the United States for athletes in masters age groups. Organized by USA Track & Field, the national governing body for the sport, the competition was first held in 1968. Athletes compete in 5-year age groups, beginning from 25 and up to 105. Traditionally limited to athletes over 35, a "pre-masters" group was introduced in 2020 to encourage post-collegiate athletes over 25 to continue competing.
2010 World Masters Athletics Indoor Championships is the fourth in a series of World Masters Athletics Indoor Championships. This fourth edition took place in Kamloops, Canada, from 2 to 7 March 2010. This is the first WMACi to be hosted outside of Europe.
Charles Allie is an American masters athletics sprinter. He has set numerous masters world records in sprint events from 200 to 400 meters.
2024 World Masters Athletics Championships was the 25th in a series of World Masters Athletics Outdoor Championships (WMAC) that took place in Gothenburg, Sweden from 13 to 25 August 2024. These Championships were originally scheduled for 2023, but was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.