12A -The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 27, 2006 Warhurst proud to sport the red, white and blue I 0 4 By Mirgim Jusufi For the Daily Say you coached the last American to win the Boston Marathon, or heck, were just the coach of the last American male to medal ina distance race at the Olym- pics. Let's not even mention the Big Ten titles, the All-Americans you coached, or the four decades you've been around. Doesn't it feel like some gratitude should have come your way by now? Recognition finally caught up with Michigan men's cross country coach Ron Warhurst this past January when he received word that he would be on the U.S. coaching staff for the Track and Field World Cup in Athens, Greece on Sept. 16 and 17. Warhurst wasn't exactly sure why the U.S. Track and Field Committee chose him as one of the coaches, but he did offer an amusing speculation. "Maybe they just felt sorry for me after those 33 years of coaching," War- hurst said with a laugh. Warhurst had never been involved with the national team. But at the meet last week, many familiar faces, includ- ing some fellow Wolverines, made him feel right at home. "It was my first experience represent- ing the United States and coaching the U.S. track team," he said. "My respon- sibility was to coach the distance run- ners, men and women. And fortunately, l knew most of the athletes." Why it took so long for one of the nation's most respected distance coach- es to receive such an honor is a mystery even to Warhurst, but he said he felt it was a rewarding experience for him and the athletes. "I hope from (the athletes') per- spectives it was nice to see a friendly face who at least knew who they were and had watched them run at college," Warhurst said. "(It) made them feel at home." Although Warhurst helped many ath- letes feel at home, the three athletes that probably benefited from his presence weren't even on the U.S. team. They were three Michigan alums running for their home countries. Recent graduates Nick Willis and Nate Brannen finished third and sixth, respectively, in the 1500-meter race. Willis represented team Oceania, run- ning for his home country of New Zea- land, and Brannen ran for Canada on the Americas team. One of Brannen's fellow countryman, Kevin Sullivan, placed fourth in the 3000-meter run. Warhurst rooted for his former pupils, even though they were now his opponents. And apparently, all his loyalties run deep. His national pride kept him wear- ing his red, white and blue in and out of Athens Olympic Arena, despite World Cup officials' warnings. "They told us to be careful of wear- ing your identification as an American and U.S. gear because of terrorism," Warhurst said. "But I wore my U.S. hat wherever I went and my U.S. shirt, and I was proud to be there as an official coach." Grateful for the opportunity to coach many of the world's best athletes and to watch his former Wolverines race, War- hurst had to make time for the World Cup around an already busy schedule. One week before he departed for his international coaching debut, Warhurst underwent surgery to have two stints implanted in his heart. But even surgery wasn't enough to keep the coach out of usual his lighthearted mood. "(Coaching) was a great experience, especially after coming off of heart sur- gery," Warhurst said. "It made it even more exciting to see howI was going to feel." Warhurst said he felt great watch- ing his former athletes competing on an international level. But he didn't feel great about having to leave his current runners for a week. He missed out on their dominant performance in East Lansing the weekend of the World Cup. But no worries for Michigan; every- thing continued like business as usual. "Well, a lot of the coaches were amazed that I would leave my team," Warhurst said. "I was really proud of the way they conducted themselves with the workouts and winning the Spartan Invitational." Overall the United States, the only country that is not part of a continental team, fared well. The men's team came in second, four points behind team Europe, and the women placed fourth. Only professional athletes are allowed to compete in the two-day event. Warhurst - done having his fun in Greece - and his 18th-ranked Wolver- ines are now gearing up for their first tough competition of the season at the Notre Dame Invitational on Friday. "South Bend will be flat and fast, with good competition?' Warhurst said. "This will be the runners' first 'quiz' of the semester." i4 FILE PHOTOS LEFT: Former Wolverine Nick Willis competed at the Track and Feid World Cup in Athens last week. RIGHT: Michigan coach Ron Warhurst brought his distance coaching skills to Athens for the U.S. team. Golf great, record holder 'Lord Byron' dies at 94 0 0 I IRVING, Texas (AP) - Byron Nelson's graceful swing and gentle manner earned him the nickname '"Lord Byron?' a tribute to the courtly Texan whose lind, caring style with fans and competitors made him one of the most well-liked figures in sports. But what will forever set Nelson apart is a single record, one that no golfer has ever approached: his 11 straight tournament victories in 1945, the greatest year in the history of golf. Nelson died Tuesday at 94, the end of a life span- ning eras from hickory shafts and meager prize money to titanium heads and multimillionaires. The Tarrant Qounty Medical Examiner's Office said he died of natural causes. His wife, Peggy Nelson, told family friend Angela Enright that her husband appeared fine as she left their Roanoke home for Bible study Tuesday morning. "I'm so proud of you," he told her, something he often said about her church involvement, Enright said. When she returned, Peggy Nelson found her husband On the back porch, which faces the woodworking shop where he spent much of his free time. Arnold Palmer called Nelson "one of the greatest players who ever lived." "I don't think that anyone will ever exceed the things that Byron did by winning 11 tournaments in a row in one year" Palmer said in a statement. The closest any player has come to Nelson's streak is six, first by Ben Hogan in 1948. When Tiger Woods reached that number in 1999-2000, Nelson was typi- cally gracious when putting his own mark into perspec- tive. "Anytime you make a record stand for 55 years, why, you've done pretty good?' he told The Associated Press. Last month, when Woods' current streak of PGA tour wins reached five and counting, he didn't sound confident that Nelson's feat would fall anytime soon, comparing it to Joe DiMaggio's elusive 56-game hit- ting streak. "In this day and age, with this competition, to win 11 in a row would be almost unheard of," Woods said. "What Byron accomplished, that goes down as one of the great years in the history of our sport.... DiMaggio's record, I see that being broken more than winning 11 in a row" Nelson won 18 tournaments in 1945, also a record for a calendar year. He captured 31 of 54 tournaments in 1944-45, and won a total of 52 events, including five majors: the Masters in 1937 and '42, the U.S. Open in 1939 and the PGA Championship in 1940 and '45. Then, at age 34, he retired after the 1946 season to spend more time on his Texas ranch. "When I was playing regularly, I had a goal," Nelson recalled years later. "I could see the prize money going into the ranch, buying a tractor, or a cow. It gave me incentive." Nelson's long, fluid swing is considered the model of the modern way to strike a golf ball. In 1968, he was the first player to have a PGA Tour event named for him, an honor that remained his alone until the former Bay Hill Invitational, scheduled for March, was renamed the Arnold Palmer Invitational. "We have lost a giant in the game ... someone who elevated the game in every way: as a player, an ambas- sador and a gentleman," said Ben Crenshaw, a two-time Masters champion and winner of Nelson's tournament in 1983. "Whoever came up with'Lord Byron,' they got it exactly right." Nelson was an active host for his event, recruiting players through genuine friendships with them and their admiration for him. That connection helped make his event a popular stop and the No. 1 fundraiser for charity on the PGA Tour._ more than $94 million since the tournament's inception, including $6.3 million this year. The U.S. House recently voted to award Nelson a Congressional Gold Medal for philanthropy; the legis- lation, Congress' highest award, is pending in the Sen- ate. "Our players, young and old, looked to Byron as the consummate role model of our sport" PGA Tour com- missioner Tim Finchem said. "His legacy spans across his historic performances, the gentle and dignified way he carried himself and his tremendous contributions to golf and society" Nelson held the PGA Tour records for most consecu- tive made cuts (113) and for single-season scoring aver- age (68.33) until both were broken by Woods. Nelson's mark on the Masters was honored in 1958 when the path that takes golfers over Rae's Creek to the 13th tee was named Nelson Bridge,commemorating his final-day charge over the 12th and 13th holes that sent him to victory in 1937. He later was the annual honor- ary starter, along with Gene Sarazen and Sam Snead. Nelson made his final ceremonial shot in 2001. "Today we have lost a truly wonderful gentleman?' said Billy Payne, chairman of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters. "Byron has meant so much to so many people, and has been an integral and impor- tant part of this tournament since he first played here in 1935." John Byron Nelson was born Feb. 4, 1912, on the family farm in Waxahachie, Texas, and started in golf in 1922 as a caddie at Glen Garden Country Club in Fort Worth. One year, he won the caddies' champion- ship, defeating Hogan in a playoff. It was the beginning of a rivalry that never really materialized. Though they were born six months apart, Nelson won all five of his major championships before he was 34 and Hogan won all nine of his after he was 34. After graduating from high school, Nelson got a job as a file clerk in the accounting office of the Forth Worth and Denver Railroad andplayed golf in his spare time. 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