Page Ten -THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, March 13, 1970 .ae.e .E.I HI A N D IL ri ay.ar h 3 1 7 I I I brace for NCAA 's I Daily-Dave BeaU WOLVERINE THINCLAD Eric Chapman follows teammate Paul Armstrong (left) around the turn in a meet against Miclhgan State at Yost Field House earlier this season. Armstrong finished second in the contest while Chapman placed third. I the long jump and triple jump, while John Mann will be com-' peting in the high jump. Rus- sell was third in the NCAA meet in the long jump two years ago and could have as similar per- formance this year. Mann has gone 6'11" in the high jump so far this season and this jump puts him among the top ten high-jumpers in the country. Mann's best asset is that he has been consistent in every meet of the season so far, jumping 6'10" in every meet until last weekend when he went 6'11". In two other events, Godfrey Murray is entered in the 60- yard high hurdles and John Thornton is entered in the 1000- yard run. Murray has run :07.2 for the highs, equaling the present Michigan varsity record. Meanwhile, Thornton will be running in the 100-yard ,run against some pretty stiff com- petition. His best time so far this season has been a respect- able 2:12.7 which compares to the varsity record time of 2:07.8 set by Olympian Ron Kutschin- ski last year. Now MediKcar fortlhe older Voiks. on this and that The road ends, the running stops eric siegel THE '69-70 INDOOR TRACK season draws to a close with the NCAA championships at Cobo Hall this weekend, but the man who won the mile event last year in these same cham- pionships will not be competing. Jim Ryun, 22 years and a senior at the University of Kan- sas and, quite probably, the greatest long - distance runner of our time, is no longer a member of that rather elite slice of American society known as "athletic stars." Ryun's"fall from the ranks of the stars cannot, however, really be considered a tragic one. Ryun is no longer a track star because he doesn't want to be one. This statement is not meant to be taken as a criticism of the runner or the man. It should be taken nore as a statement of some of the agencies of being an amateur athlete in a sport in which there is no pro future. As long ago as July 17, 1966, when he broke the world record for the mile by more than two seconds with a time of 3:51.3, Ryun was more despondent than delighted. He said that mile would be his last for the year, that he was "looking forward to when I can be human again ... there are so many things you can't do in training." Ryun took some time off, but Oe came back. He came back to take two-tenths of a second off his record less than a year later, to consistently break the four minute mark, to win a silver medal for the 1500-meter run in the 1968 Olympics. Then last year, in , the NCAA indoor championships, with his feet taped and bandaged, Ryun again came back, winning the mile run Saturday afternoon after his blistered feet forced him to drop out of the two mile run Friday night. A couple of months later, at the beginning of June, it was intimated that marriage, injuries and other problems had put Ryun at the end of his career. Ryun said nothing about the in- timations. He merely stopped out on the track at the Compton Relays in California, and with his graceful powerful, but seemingly effortless stride won the mile with the fastest time of the year, 3:55.9. Still, there were indications even then that the curtain was falling on Ryun's career. Compared to his earlier years, Ryun was running less; even more important, he was getting less enjoyment out of the sport. When, on July 1 of last year, he announced that he had cancelled his European tour with the AAU and all other competition for the season, he said: "When you compete for several years in a sport that re- quires great mental effort, you can't help being mentally tired once in a while, especially after an Olympic year." To those who had followed Ryun's career, the amazing thing was not that he was complaining of mental fatigue, but that the war -weariness of eight years of competition in the world's loneliest sport hadn't worn him out earlier. At the peak of his career, he was, running 90, sometimes 100 miles a week; even after he was married and holding down a job, he ran at least 21/2 hours a night, seven days a week. Ryun's races were of shorter distances, ,and shorter times. As a student at East Witchita High School in 1965, he set an American citizens mark in the mile with a time of 3:55.3. As a freshman at the U of K, a year later he came within one- tenth of a second of the world's record with a time of 3:55.7. Five days later, he set the world's record for the half mile. His time was 1:44.9. It was almost inevitable that Ryun would become sort of a prototype legend. He came along when American track needed him most-when it was in the midst of an AAT-NCAA fued for the control of the sport. He loped and then sprinted onto the track scene when America was a country in search of a long distance star. There was Bob Hayes in the sprints; John Pennel and Bob Seagren in the pole vault; Bob Boston in the long jump; and Randy Matson, shot put. But the long distance runners were Ron Clarke of Australia and Michel Jazy of Franco, and Amer- ica, with her peculiar emphasis on nationalism, saw this as a personal affront. Ryun also developed something of a "Ryun style" years before anyone thought of applying "style" to Jean-Claude Killy or anyone else. The Ryun style seemed simple: stay back, conserve your strength, then put on a final burst of speed; but Ryun was the only one who could carry it out. The question with Ryun, like the question with all sports stars, is how long will the legend last? Even now, .only a few months after his last race, he is already beconing something of a forgotten man. Kip Keine, a spiffy distance man from Kenya, Marty Liquori, a Villanova Olympian who finished second to Ryun at Cobo last year but now holds the distinction as America's top miler, have become the hot names in the long distance field. Meanwhile, Ryun is living the way he wants to, quietly setting his own pace. He has switched his college major from business to photography, and is trying to complete his requirements by June. Maybe someday he'll be able to take a picture of someone who runs like he di. It was one of the most beautiful sights in sports. 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