Poge 1*-Friday, July 31, 1981-,-The MichiganDaily GOODRIDGE NEW WOMEN'S TRACK MENTOR Coach passes position to ex-pupil By JOHN FITZPATRICK Daily sports writer The former coach and his successor. sat across froni each other in the tiny office, recalling names and races of years past. Each spoke with an easy familiarity to the other, a familiarity not surprising considering the special bond they once had-and still seem to share in many ways-as .coach - and athlete. Ken "Red". Simmons, the only coach the Michigan women's track program has ever known, retired at the end of this past spring track season. His replacement-and the woman now talking with him who he had once cqached-is Francie 'Kraker Goodridge, two-time Olympian and a former world record holder, now the Michigan women's track and cross- country coach. GOODRIDGE WAS not only coached by Simmons, but she was his first pupil.." In 1961 Goodridge was a student at Slauson Junior High School in Ann Ar- bor, and Simmons' wife, who taught phys-eo at the school, noted the speed Goodridge displayed in a 600-yard run during class one day. Simmons was looking°for someone with promise to coach, and he soon offered his services to Goodridge, who accepted, with her mother's approval. "My mother asked the big question-would I get too many muscles?" she recalled. "She was a fair runner at first," noted Simmons of his first athlete. "But we started her doing a lot of weight training and such . . . we had all the time in the world." Indeed they did, and it was put to good use, as Goodridge rapidly developed into one of the best middle- distance runners in the region during her high school years. SIMMONS REMAINED her coach throughout high school, as there was no prep program for girls in Michigan at that time. "There wasn't much," said Simmons, "I was running around giving clinics (on women's track and field)." Goodridge was originally a 400-meter runner, but moved up to the 800 as she neared the end of high school, as the mixture of speed and endurance she exhibited seemed more suited to the middle distances. After graduation, Goodridge atten- ded Michigan and continued to improve under the guidance of Simmons. He squad which was to compete in the an- nual dual meet against the Russians. Goodridge had been a favorite to make the 1965 dual meet squad, ("They had a big article in the paper about me-On my way to Russia said the headline," she remembered ruefully), but in the qualifying race for the team, she showed a tendency for starting out too quickly, which would appear in later races: "One of the girls went out too fast, and I followed her. I was still in second with a half a backstretch to go, then everybody went by me." Ironically, disappointment was to be her lot again in, '66, for after the euphoria which followed making the team, came the news that the Soviets were going to boycott the meet because of the U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. This marked the beginning of what Goodridge called a "dearth of in- ternational competition for American athletes," which didn't end until the 1968 Olympics. IT WAS IN '68 that Goodridge made her first Olympic team, achieving the ultimate goal of many amateur athletes. "It was a blockbuster ex- perience," she said. "It (was sort of like) a numbness-we hadn't had the exposure to international class com- petition for so long." Despite the lack of foreign competition, the American women did well in these Games, as Wyomia Tyus won her second gold medal in the 100-meter dash (she had won in Tokyo in '64 as well) and Madeline Manning captured the 800 meters, Goodridgie's event. But Goodridge was shut out of the final: "There were four heats," said Simmons, "the first was won in 2:10, the second in 2:09. Francie ran 2:07.6 in her heat, but only got fourth, and didn't Goodridge two-time Olympian remained her coach, even though Michigan did not have a women's program. FITTING HER hour-long interval sessions at the old Waterman Gym track into a hectic schedule which in- cluded classes and a 20-hour work week didn't faze Goodridge. She made her' first national team in 1966, the U.S. make it to the final." The years after the Olympics and up through the '72 Games at Munich saw Goodridge turn in the peak performan- ces of her career. These included a world record for the indoor 600-yard run (1:22.4), an AAU championship in the 'indoor 880, and a summer competitive schedule which included meets in San- tiago, Chile; Stuttgart, Bucharest, Hamburg, Moscow, and London. Despite the talent she showed at the middle distances from 600 yards to the 800 meters, Goodridge moved up her racing distarfce once again, this time up to the 1500 meters prior to the Munich Olympics. "They (other 800 runners) were getting too fast," she remarked. GOODRIDGE qualified for her second Olympic team in '72 running the 1500. At Munich, she'made it to the semi-finals, but no further. Her time was consolation enough, though, as she recorded a blistering 4:12.8, one of the top times in the world that year and the second-fastest time ever turned in by an American until 1975. "I felt I had accomplished what I trained for," she said of her Munich ex- perience. "It was a nice note to end on." Her competitive career ended primarily, but not entirely, with the '72 Olympics. Following the Games, she moved to Wellesley, Mass. to work for Blue Ribbon Sports (the predecessor of today's Nike corporation), and while doing so discovered-the joys of long- distance running. "I got that great ex- posure to the requirements of aerobic training," she said. "I started doing ten mile runs . . . that' was a whole new definition to my career, and I gained a great sense of independence." HER LIFE changed in another way, as' she married John Goodridge. From 1974 onwards she was involved in a number of challenging jobs, including a stint as the women's athletic director at the. University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee, and a period at Ann Arbor Greenhills School, where she was Director of Admissions, Financial Aid, Alumni Development aPd Minority Admissions, academic advisor, and of course, a coach for the school's track and cross-country teams. Despite a strong attachment to ,the Ann Arbor area, she left Greenhills in 1979 to assume coaching duties at Michigan State (where her husband is also a coach), and East Lansing High School. Her greatest challenge at Michigan is to "gain the team's respect," she said. "This is a well-established progr.am, and I'm not going to try to alter things too drastically," she added, "I think this team has alot of potential." Though it remains to be seen how Michigan'y women's cross-country and track teams will fare this fall, with a coach as experienced as Goodridge at the helm of a squad which is gaining in - talent and experience every season, one cannot help but think that the team has, at the very least, a lot of potential. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY: Moffett heads private negotiation NEW YORK (AP) - Negotiators in the 49-day-old baseball strike prepared for A marathon meeting last night in an attempt to salvage the 1981 baseball season. It was learned that instead of full bargaining teams, the session would involve only-the three key figures in the talks - federal mediator Kenneth Mof- fett; Marvin Miller, executive director of the striking players association, and Ray Grebey, chief spokesman for the owners. THE TWO sides had been scheduled to resume formal negotiations for the first time in a week Thursday after- noon, but Miller and Grebey apparently decided to meet together, instead. It was not known what developments or proposals caused the two negotiators to decide on the extraordinary, private. session. But The Associated Press lear- ned they were prepared to talk through the night if necessary in the latest at- tempt to settle the strike which has. canceled 580 games, more than 25 per- cent of the regular schetule. The private session between Miller and Grebey was taking place in the Doral Inn, site of most of the negotiations throughout the strike. A year -ago, a similar private session- between Miller and Grebey on the night of a strike deadline helped shape a set- tlement that prevented a walkout at that time. Unser takes stand -( INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Bobby Un- ser, penalized one lap and dropped to second place in last May's Indianapolis 500, testified Thursday he was told before the race that there was no way to enforce the rule he supposedly violated. Unser took the witnesschair for the first time in his own behalf. He is ap- pealing to a special U.S. Auto Club panel the penalty that gave the victory to Mario Andretti. He described a meeting he had with steward Art Meyers two days before the May 24 race. Unser had missed a meeting with all other drivers and crews a day earlier because he was competing in a USAC-sponsored pit stop contest - which he won. "He had a list of -the stuff that was 5 brought out at the drivers' meeting," Unser said, of his- conversation with Meyers. "We went through everything, the same stuff Chief Steward Tom Bin- ford always goes over at the meeting. We had no problems, no arguments, no screaming, nothing." ANN ARBOR GOLD AND SILVER EXCHANGE 216 S. 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