Meadowbank

Meadowbank Stadium has had several incarnations but has been a vital part of Scottish athletics for over a century.   The local authority has decided to pull it down and provide alternative facilities.  This ha not met with universal approval.   Colin Youngson comments on the past and present at the Stadium

There have been numerous newspaper and internet articles on the future of Meadowbank Stadium as well as many lengthy forum threads on the topic of Edinburgh’s Meadowbank Stadium’s imminent demise.   It is timely then to have a look at what the arena meant to so many generations of runners.   Colin Youngson’s statement on what Meadowbank meant to him follows. 

No need for research on this topic – memories, good and bad, flood back instantly. Apparently, the famous Edinburgh stadium is to: close soon, be rebuilt and modernised and re-open in 2020. The plans sound impressive; but how did the current Meadowbank fare?

Although it hosted the 1969 Scottish Marathon Championship (won by Bill Stoddart, who was to be a World Champion many times as a veteran), the stadium, styled ‘New Meadowbank’ was only half-completed at the time. The previous track had been ‘Old Meadowbank’, so the 2020 one should be ‘Newest’, perhaps.

From 1967 the revolutionary Rub-Kor black track at Grangemouth hosted most athletics championships; and other races took place on a variety of surfaces – blaes, cinders, lumps of coke, smooth or bumpy grass. So the New Meadowbank ‘Tartan’ track  felt great.

‘The Friendly Games’, as the 1970 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh was named, was a fantastic, unforgettable event. Don Ritchie (the future ultra great) and I spectated at every athletics session. Tickets were cheap and easy to get (how unlike Glasgow 2014.). The crowd cheered everyone in every event. Scottish athletes did really well. Lachie Stewart out-sprinted Ron Clarke in the 10,000m; and Ian Stewart out-toughed Ian McCafferty in the 5000m. Wonderful races – just a pity that I was cheering for the silver medallists. Rosemary Stirling won the 800m. England’s Ron Hill produced a superb European record of 2.9.28 in the marathon, with defending champion Jim Alder (2.12.04) hanging on to second place despite total exhaustion and a charging Don Faircloth closing fast. 47 years later, this remains the fastest marathon ever run in Scotland; and Jim’s time the fastest by a Scot in Scotland. The Athletes’ Parade as the Games closed was joyous.

Between 1971 and 1999 I competed at Meadowbank – not every year, but this was the venue for umpteen personal landmarks.

In 1971 the Scottish 10,000 championships took place on the hallowed track and I felt it a real privilege to race there. In the main SAAA champs, I ran the steeplechase, and was in a clear third place with two laps to go, when suddenly my right leg collapsed – since I had pulled the main muscle and every tendon from Achilles to hip – and that was the end of that race, and my one-season steeplechase ‘career’!

1972 brought me a silver medal well behind Andy McKean in the SAAA Track Ten Miles. During the GB v Poland international match, the Scottish 10,000m took place. Jim Brown won but my Victoria Park AAC club-mate Alastair Johnston, in the form of his life, was battling for silver when a stray hammer bounced onto the track and smashed his left tibia. I could not believe it, when I ran past not long afterwards and saw my friend in agony. Hammer ‘cages’ had not yet been invented, alas.

Personal bests for 5000m, 10,000m and marathon were set at Meadowbank. The first narrowly broke 14.30; the second (29.33) led to Scottish selection for my only track international over that distance v Iceland in Reykjavik – my team-mate Allister Hutton won and I was second; and the third was the best performance of my life, leading to my sole GB selection (for a small team at the Antwerp marathon, where I finished second, my colleague third and we won the international team award.)

My first SAAA title was gained in 1974 at Meadowbank – the 10 Miles Track against Martin Craven in a gale. In 1975 I set a championship record of 2.16.50 when winning the Scottish marathon.

In all, I secured ten SAAA medals there – three gold, four silver, three bronze – and ran eleven marathon championships out and back from the stadium. The worst three were: in 1972 when I ‘hit the wall’, lost second place on the track and Albie Smith timed my last sleep-walking 200 metres at 80 seconds; in 1978, when I was mad enough to try a new pre-race diet by drinking half a pint of cream half an hour before the start, felt sick as a dog and finished eleventh in a personal worst time; and in 1983, when a stomach upset induced embarrassing pit-stops but somehow I finished no worse than second after leading for more than twenty miles. Horrible but definitely memorable!

Especially for Edinburgh Southern Harriers, I ran Scottish and British Athletic League matches there, even winning one 5000m after being tripped and crashing to the track on the first lap. Two East District 10,000m titles were secured at Meadowbank.

The day after my 1975 marathon win, 100 ESH runners each raced one mile in a vain attempt to break the world record for such a relay. I had to shuffle about warming up for ages, trying to get the post-marathon ‘concrete’ out of aching legs before managing a respectable 4.29.

After I moved back to Aberdeen in 1981, and concentrated mainly on local races, my visits to Meadowbank became fewer. However three further races there stand out.

In 1984 Sri Chinmoy AC organised a road race from Meadowbank to George Square, Glasgow – 50 exhausting miles. One of the organisers was my contemporary (also born 1947) and acquaintance Alan Spence, the poet, short story writer and novelist, who ran a few marathons himself and even wrote a short story about one of them. In September 2017, Alan was named Makar of Edinburgh (i.e. City Poet and Writer). Back in 1984, I finished a distant and knackered third but my brilliant team-mate Don Ritchie won by twenty minutes and Aberdeen AAC were first team.

In 1999, when I was 51 years old, my two final visits took place. The British Veterans Track and Field Championships were held at Meadowbank and I won the M50 10,000m – my only outdoor track success at that level, while my beloved wife Susan spectated by reading a book. The stars that day were the Three Amigos of Scottish Veteran Athletics, World Masters record breakers Emmet Farrell, Gordon Porteous and Davie Morrison, each winning medals in over-80 categories.

To round things off appropriately, I completed my very last 26 miles 385 yards that autumn. The Puma Edinburgh Marathon (which was also that year’s Scottish championship) started in Dunfermline and the route went over the Forth Road Bridge and then, via devious small roads and tarmac tracks, emerged near Haymarket before heading straight up Princes Street and down past Holyrood Palace to finish on the Meadowbank track. For me it meant the end of thirty years running sub-three hour marathons.

In retrospect, I have many reasons to be grateful for the existence of Meadowbank. Without it, I would have lost so many experiences and running adventures, plus convivial pints at the Piershill Tavern. Imagine – no Meadowbank – the careers of thousands of athletes would have been spoiled.

Of course, the Meadowbank Velodrome, despite being exposed to the rain as well as steep, slippery, wooden and splintered, played a vital part in the early training and racing of one Chris Hoy, now Sir Chris because of his six Olympic gold medals! The Newest Meadowbank will have a great deal to do, if it is to emulate its illustrious predecessor!

That’s what Colin has to say – now read what some other athletes have to add about the Stadium which has played a significant part in their careers.   Find their thoughts  here

Below:   Meadowbank being taken apart.   Almost heartbreaking – the site of the first Commonwealth Games to be held in Britain and not a plaque left to commemorate it.   Dreadful.

 

1974 Christchurch

The 1974 British Commonwealth Games were held in Christchurch, New Zealand from 24 January to 2 February 1974. The bid vote was held in Edinburgh at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games.    This was the second time that they had been held in New Zealand – the 150 version was in Auckland – and they had twice been in Australia – 1938 in Sydney and 1962 in Perth.   They were all held in what would normally have been the Scots winter season with virtually no track racing at all and no permanent indoor facility either.   They also came two years after the Israeli athletes had been kidnapped and murdered at the Munich Olympics and the tenth Games was the first big sports meeting to place the safety of spectators and participants as arguably its top priority.   The Village was surrounded by security gards, police and the military had a highly visible presence.   Despite all of that, however, many athletes from several countries decided to emigrate to New Zealand on the strength of their welcome and what they saw of the country. 

The Games were officially named “the friendly games”. There were 1,276 competitors and 372 officials, according to the official history, and public attendance was excellent. The main venue was the QEII Park, purpose built for this event. The Athletics Stadium and fully covered Olympic standard pool, diving tank, and practice pools were all on the one site. There were always, whether the general public were aware of the fact or not, a theme tune for the Games – Edinburgh in 1970 had had three songs!   The theme song this time was “Join Together”,  sung by Steve Allen.   The Games were held after the 1974 Commonwealth Paraplegic Games in Dunedin for wheelchair athletes.   

Ron Marshall tells us in the ‘Glasgow Herald’ that Lachie Stewart was the standard bearer as Scotland the parade into the stadium wearing their white hats, blue blazers and white trousers.    More interesting were the comments of Dr Roger Bannister on the topic of drugs and doping.   He is quoted sas saying that the drug takers were safe at these Games.   “Nobody will be banned from these Games but afterwards they can look out.   A change in detection methods is being developed but not quickly enough to be brought into action. ”   “The rules of international federations at the moment still need a degree of proof which at the moment isn’t possible.   The improvement in testing methods coupled by firm action by the federations will put an end to this evil in th very near future.”  

The Glasgow Herald reporter for the Games was Ron Marshall (whom we all thought had been the newspaper’s reporter for the last two Games although he had only had a byline for the Edinburgh Games) who made a very good job of it.  

The first day was 24th January and the report began:

“Mary Peters, the Olympic champion, and Scotland’s Myra Nimmo had the distinction of getting to their marks this morning in the first heat of the first track event of the Commonwealth Games, the 100 metres hurdles of the pentathlon.   Northern Ireland’s supporters were disappointed with Miss Peters’ winning time of 13.9 sec, which gave her 873 points, but the Scottish girl who finished second to her in 14.1 sec for 847 points proved to be fourth fastest on a chilly, dull morning.   This was undoubtedly a promising start for the Uddingston girl and put her well into the medal reckoning.”

The heats of the men’s 100 metres brought a satisfying result in Scotland’s favour.   Don Halliday, the AAA’s champion,  looking extremely confident as he sped home inches behind the title holder, Don Quarrie (Jamaica), although I thought the Scot was unfairly treated in getting a time of 10.6, a tenth behind the winner.   In the next heat Les Piggot, given the toughest draw of them all, battled tenaciously for a fourth place behind a formidable trio- George Daniels (Ghana), Lennox Miller (Jamaica), a Munich finalist. and Greg Lewis (Australia).   From the results so far, it looks as if Piggot has the precious fourth fastest time, 106, good enough to put him intomorrow’s semi-final.   

David Jenkins, bidding for a second major championship to add to his European 400 metres title, had little difficulty in winning his first round heat in 46.9 sec, one of the slowest qualifying times.   Drawn in lane six he led all the way but was hard pressed towards the tape by the New Zealand record holder, Bevan Smith.  Jenkins’s main rivals for the title, Julius Sang and Charles Asati, both from Kenya, qualified with even more ease, and Jenkins has no simple task ahead of him”.

Unfortunately it was also the end of Myra’s pentathlon hopes as she failed to complete the five disciplines and ended ‘dnf 847 pts’, but the outlook was promising.   After the successes of Edinburgh in 1970, confidence was high in the Scots camp.    Myra was coached by team coach Frank Dick whose stock was high after 1970, and she still had her specialist event, the long jump to come.

The decathlon finished on Sunday 27th, a day christened ‘Black Sunday’ by the ‘Herald’.  After the real Black Sunday in Munich two years earlier it was maybe a bit tasteless: the two events could not have been more different, but it was undoubtedly a bad day for the sport in Scotland. Going in to that day we had Stewart McCallum and Kidner in the decathlon, Halliday in the 200m  heats, Alison McRitchie in the 200m (two rounds – heat and semi-final on the same day), David McMeekin in the 800m semi-final, and others like Rosemary Wright, Margaret Coomber, and Norman Morrison all in action.   The report was honest  and direct, almost to the point of brutality, and read:

“Black Sunday would not be too dramatic a way to describe the few hours Scotland’s athletes spent on a sun-drenched track here today.   They virtually walked into a wall of superior opposition and never knew what hit them.   It was distressing to witness.   One of our major hopes for a gold medal, Stewart McCallum, saw his decathlon bid crumble as he failed three times at his opening height in the pole vault.   That in itself was bad enough but for that height to be two and a half feet below his best turned out to be typical of our efforts from the morning to the early evening.   Although he still had two events to take part in,  Stewart called it a day and sped off to the Village.   There was little reason to be hanging about after having gifted varying amounts of points to his opponents.   ….  Latterly it was David Kidner who carried Scotland’s decathlon flag with some distinction.   Having ended the first day in seventh place, he buckled to with courage this afternoon and vaulted 14′ 1 1/2” , his highest ever.   But, as usual, his 1500m looked painfully pedestrian.   There was nothing he could do in this last event to save the second place he had so painfully reached.   

Tonight he wanted to rebut the criticisms he always hears about his 1500m.   “People keep talking about that bit of my decathlon.   What they forget are the other bits I’m good at – pole vault, long jump, high jump and so on.”   He was placed fourth with 7188 points.   But how near he had been to climbing on to the medal rostrum.

But back to the Black Sunday tag.   In brief it reads like this – Don Halliday out in the 200m heat, Alison McRitchie out in the 200m heat, Helen Golden out in the 200m semi-final, David McMeekin out in the 800m semi-final, Margaret Coomber and Rosemary Wright fail to make the 800m final, Norman Morrison ninth in 5000m heat.   

Frank Dick, the national athletics coach, could hardly be blamed for trudging wearily out of the athletics stadium.   His reasons for today’s disaster are worth recording.   “We under estimated the opposition.   We came out here totally unaware just how advanced some of these countries are but we know now – only too well.”   He shook his head as if in disbelief.   “I can’t describe how disappointed I am   – it’s been an awful day’s athletics for Scotland.”

But before the picture is painted irredeemably black, it should be added that there were bright patches.   David Jenkins crossed home in his 200m heat clocking 21 sec, a tenth behind the Ghanaian speedster George Daniels.   The Scot earned himself an extra cheer for assisting the African off the track after he had seemed to injure himself at the finish.   Ian Stewart qualified easily in his 5000m heat but a few grandads might also have squeezed through, bearing in mind that in the two heats the first six qualified.   Only two  had to be discarded in Stewart’s heat won by an over-exuberant Kenyan, Joseph Kimeto, who appears to have taken this contest for the final.   Others did it the easy way.”

Frank Dick’s comments were simultaneously typical in their honesty and shocking in their content.   There were those who attributed the Scottish athletic successes in 1970 at Meadowbank to John Anderson’s influence: he had been Scottish national coach until late 1969.   However that may be, 1974 was all Frank in terms of preparation and it must have hurt him to say what he did.   It didn’t happen again.   The results that Marshall referred to:

Men’s 200m:   H1: 2nd D Jenkins  21.0;  H5: 4th D Halliday  21.7

Women’s 200m: H3: 5th  A McRitchie 24.4;  H5: 2nd  H Golden 23.9

Women’s 200m: SF 1:  5th H Golden  23.9

Men’s 800m:  H3:  4th  D McMeekin  1:49.1      SF 2:  5th  D McMeekin 1:48.1

Women’s 800m: H1:  R Wright  3rd  2:06.3;   H2: M Coomber 5th 2:06.5    

Women’s 800m:  SF 1:  M Coomber 5th  2:05.9;  SF 2:  R Wright  5th 2:05.7

Men’s 5000m:  H1:  2nd I Stewart 13:57.2;   H2  N Morrison  9th  14:40.6

Shot Putt Women:  R Payne  7th  14.07m

David Jenkins was one of the Scots in action the next day when he was second to Australian Greg Lewis in the semi-final of the 200m but then could finish no better than sixth in the final in a time of 21.5.   Ian Stewart went one better in the 5000m to be fifth in 13:40.4 in a race won by Ben Jipcho of Kenya in 13:14.4 with Brendan Foster second in 13:14.6.   Kenya also won the 800m Kipkurgat won in 1:43.9 from Mike Boit, also of Kenya, in 1:44.9.   That was it for the day as far as Scots were concerned – no high or long jumpers, no javelin throwers and no race walkers or hurdlers had been entered.   

30th January was a rest day as far as athletics was concerned but it gave the reporters time to devote to other sports where Scotland was performing nobly – Willie as a bowler and David Wilkie in the swimming pool – but Ron Marshall took the opportunity to look forward to Lachie Stewart running in the marathon on the following day.   Lachie had carried the standard on the opening day and then stood out in the centre of the arena for the duration of that ceremony: many questioned th wisdom of this the day before his specialist event of 10000m.   In that race he did run below his usual to finish tenth in 29:22.6 while Ian Stewart was sixth in 28:17.2 and Norman Morrison was fifteenth in 30:25.8.   The selectors had also entered him in the marathon – a distance he had never tackled seriously before, if in fact he had ever tackled it.   The furthest most had seen him run was the 16 miles of the Clydebank to Helensburgh road race.   Under the heading of ‘Lachie tackles marathon’ he wrote

“Scotland’s Lachie Stewart will make his marathon debut in the Commonwealth Games at Christchurch today and is a quiet tip to upset the fancied English and Australian gold medal hopes.   Stewart is better known as a 10,000 metres runner and proved his class by winning that event in Edinburgh in 1970.   

He has never run a competitive marathon, byt Scotland’s team manager Peter Heatly states, “Lachie doesn’t say very much, but we know he is extremely fit.   He has been doing plenty of hard cross-country running the last few months and we think he has had the marathon at the back of his mind for some time.   He is such a determined fellow, and he would not go in the marathon unless he thought he could give a good account of himself.”  

The way Stewart ran in the 10000 metres last Friday suggested he had high hopes in the marathon,   He finished 10th.   

The marathon favourites are the Australians Derek Clayton and John Farrington, and the defending champion, England’s Ron Hill.   ….   Hill, sixth in the Munich Olympics, has the best time of the strong British contingent with 2:09:26, although he was beaten by Ian Thomson (Luton) in the October trial.   Scotland have two other contenders besides Stewart in Donald Macgregor, a teacher and university lecturer, and Jim Wright, a student.   Macgregor has the better time, 2:15:06.”

It is possible that the reporter was being a bit over optimistic about Lachie’s chances in a new event – especially over the 26 miles of the marathon and in the Christchurch temperatures.   He certainly damns his run in the 10000 with faint praise.   And it was possibly a bit hard on Donald Macgregor – after all, he was only one place behind Ron Hill in the Olympic marathon in 1970, and had actually been in front of him when they came on to the track with only ab out 400m to go at the end of the race.

As it turned out, Ian Thomson won the marathon for England in 2:09:12.2.   In the course of a longish report on the event, the Scots only got one paragraph.   “Donald Macgregor was Scotland’s first man home in the marathon in sixth place and he recorded his fastest time – 2:14:15.4.   Both Lachie Stewart and Jim Wight pulled out of the race, Stewart after halfway and Wight not much further along the route.”   The experienced Macgregor who had run in Commonwealth and Olympic marathosn with distinction, who had won Scottish titles over the distance proved to be the best of the three over the distance.   

Other events that day included the women’s 1500m in which Ian Stewart’s sister Mary qualified for the final when she was third in her heat in 4:15.3, the women’s long jump where Myra Nimmo was fourthwith a best leap of 6.34m, only 4 cm behind the third placed Reid of Wales.  

The final day of athletics was February 2nd when there were Finals of the men’s 1500m (no Scots were entered), men’s 4 x 400m in which no team was forward, men’s shot putt (no Scot taking part), men’s javelin (no one entered) and women’s 4 x 400m with no Scots entered.   On the other side we had representatives in the men’s 4 x 100m relay (5th in 39.8), men’s triple jump (W Clark 11th), women’s 1500m (Mary Stewart 4th  4:17.4), women’s 4 x 100m (7th in 46.5) and women’s high jump (Ruth Watt 4th  1.78 – missed bronze by 2 cm).    Over the piece there was only one medal for the Scottish team, silver in the women’s discus from Rosemary Payne (53.94m).    

Ron Marshall’s review of the Games included the following:

“One silver medal from a corps of 27 athletes is a particularly poor return from what we were calling the best prepared team to travel to any major competition.   Perhaps we did too well in Edinburgh.   Perhaps that is the subtle burden placed on every host.   It will be interesting therefore to see whow New Zealand , one of the successful nations here, fare in Edmonton four years from now.   No explanation, no rational one anyway, has come from any of our team leaders.   If blame lies anywhere, is it with the athletes themselves or their own coaches, or the team coaches and officials?   I find it hard to fault team management, if they erred it was on the side of leniency.

One comment from Frank Dick, national athletics coach, early on in the week, keeps coming back: “we under estimated the opposition.”   Mr Dick is abreast of world progress in athletics – he obviously knew what to expect.   Clearly the competitors did not.   Talk of an inquiry when the team comes back is just that – talk.   No amount of discussion will produce a solution to what happened.   But one answer will be to send a much smaller athletics team next time round.   Feelings, not to mention thousands of pounds, will be spared now that Scotland have no obligation to fatten up the team just for the parade and the opening ceremony.   We will not march first into the stadium in Edmonton.”

One silver medal was indeed a disappointing return from the team but I think maybe the reporter was being a bit easy on the officials.   For instance, the management of Lachie Stewart’s Games was seriously badly thought out.   The notion that he should be the standard bearer and stand in a draughty arena for hours on end the night before his 10,000m race was a bad one.   He should maybe have missed the parade altogether.   Then to add in his marathon debut – debut – against the best in the Commonwealth only a few days later was a bit lacking in judgment.   If there was a desire to give him two races, then the 5000m or the steeplechase would have been better bets.   Myra Nimmo was an outstandingly good long jumper with a chance of a medal – surely that should have been the target rather than greedily going for two medals?   And if ‘we’ under estimated the opposition, who was in charge of the group team meetingsand get-togethers for the four years leading up to the Games?   If Frank Dick was really up on the world situation,should the information not been impressed on the athletes before the Games?

Other events that day included the women’s 1500m in which Ian Stewart’s sister Mary qualified for the final when she was third in her heat in 4:15.3, the women’s long jump where Myra Nimmo was fourthwith a best leap of 6.34m, only 4 cm behind the third placed Reid of Wales. 

The final day of athletics was February 2nd when there were Finals of the men’s 1500m (no Scots were entered), men’s 4 x 400m in which no team was forward, men’s shot putt (no Scot taking part), men’s javelin (no one entered) and women’s 4 x 400m with no Scots entered.   On the other side we had representatives in the men’s 4 x 100m relay (5th in 39.8), men’s triple jump (W Clark 11th), women’s 1500m (Mary Stewart 4th  4:17.4), women’s 4 x 100m (7th in 46.5) and women’s high jump (Ruth Watt 4th  1.78 – missed bronze by 2 cm).    Over the piece there was only one medal for the Scottish team, silver in the women’s discus from Rosemary Payne (53.94m).   

Ron Marshall’s review of the Games included the following:

“One silver medal from a corps of 27 athletes is a particularly poor return from what we were calling the best prepared team to travel to any major competition.   Perhaps we did too well in Edinburgh.   Perhaps that is the subtle burden placed on every host.   It will be interesting therefore to see whow New Zealand , one of the successful nations here, fare in Edmonton four years from now.   No explanation, no rational one anyway, has come from any of our team leaders.   If blame lies anywhere, is it with the athletes themselves or their own coaches, or the team coaches and officials?   I find it hard to fault team management, if they erred it was on the side of leniency.

One comment from Frank Dick, national athletics coach, early on in the week, keeps coming back: “we under estimated the opposition.”   Mr Dick is abreast of world progress in athletics – he obviously knew what to expect.   Clearly the competitors did not.   Talk of an inquiry when the team comes back is just that – talk.   No amount of discussion will produce a solution to what happened.   But one answer will be to send a much smaller athletics team next time round.   Feelings, not to mention thousands of pounds, will be spared now that Scotland have no obligation to fatten up the team just for the parade and the opening ceremony.   We will not march first into the stadium in Edmonton.”

One silver medal was indeed a disappointing return from the team but I think maybe the reporter was being a bit easy on the officials.   For instance, the management of Lachie Stewart’s Games was seriously badly thought out.   The notion that he should be the standard bearer and stand in a draughty arena for hours on end the night before his 10,000m race was a bad one.   He should maybe have missed the parade altogether.   Then to add in his marathon debut – debut – against the best in the Commonwealth only a few days later was a bit lacking in judgment.   If there was a desire to give him two races, then the 5000m or the steeplechase would have been better bets.   Myra Nimmo was an outstandingly good long jumper with a chance of a medal – surely that should have been the target rather than greedily going for two medals?   And if ‘we’ under estimated the opposition, who was in charge of the group team meetings and get-togethers for the four years leading up to the Games?   If Frank Dick was really up on the world situation, should the information not been impressed on the athletes before the Games?

Finally we have some thoughts from Willie Robertson who competed in these Games as a wrestler.   He was also a nationally ranked throws athlete with several SAAA hammer throwing medals and three times GB wrestling champion.   He says:

I realised I had to win the British title at wrestling to be sure of selection.   I checked the English results and the 100Kg plus weight group looked easier than the 100kg.   I won the Scottish title at 100Kg beating Ian Duncan, a team mate.   My plan was to win the British and ask for selection to the team at the lower weight group.  At the British I won the title at 100Kg+, however Ian Duncan won the 100Kg.   So they picked Ian at 100 and me at 100+.    Yes, the best laid plans.    At the games two of the wrestlers were struggling to make the weight and were on a strict diet.   I had the opposite problem.   Because I was on full time training I had to eat large meals to maintain my weight.

There was a squad day for the better NZ hammer throwers who did not make the Commonwealth team.   Bryce, Black, myself and the weightlifter Grant Anderson took on the NZ second team  It was decided on an aggregate score would be used.   Howard Payne acted as judge.  We were beaten.  Grant threw an impressive 40m with a standing throw.   Bryce suggested I should not be suggesting he tries the Highland Games.   Of course he won the Scottish professional title a couple of times.

I met up with a Samoan trying to throw the hammer.   I gave him some coaching and he got on to a one turn throw.   He said he was a decathlete and the head of sport had contacted him and said he should enter all the throws.   I went along to the stadium to watch the hammer.   Chris Black was in with a chance of a medal.   There were nine competitors which meant one would be eliminated.   Chris had two narrow fouls in the first two rounds.    He was forced to do a two turn throw for his third to get another three throws and beat the Samoan.   If the ninth thrower had not been there Black would have had an extra counting throw.   He might well have won a medal.    Bryce was last in the final.   The problem was the technique had moved on.   It is interesting to compare the 1970 and 74 standards.    Bryce was coached to drag the hammer: every other thrower in the final was on to a using two straight arms.

One of my great memories of the athletic was the 1500m.    Filbert Bayi was a front runner and lead from the start.   The only runner who looked that he might catch him was John Walker.    Not only Bayi had broken the World record, Walker had had also beaten the old one   I was sitting beside Bryce who remarked that he wondered how Frank Clement would have done in that race.

The athletes were aware they were receiving some bad press for their performance.   After the 1970 games there was great expectation of a number of medals. There were a few ‘near misses’   I remember seeing Jenkins in the last leg of the 4x100m relay making the school boy error of looking behind him when receiving the baton. They should have won a medal. Our best decathlete no heighted in the pole vault.   Frank Clement, our lead middle distance man had missed the games for University exams.   Lawrie Bryce, with his usual wit, paraphrased the words of Churchill: Never in the history of the Commonwealth Games have so many, went so far to do so little.

The team met up at the Royal Scot hotel in Edinburgh. After dinner and some speeches we wrestlers were told to go to bed by our coach.   Half an hour later Lawrie Bryce knocked at the door and demanded I went for a drink with him.   Bryce had not reached the qualifying standard in the hammer for selection but had been added later.  This was his third games. He wasn’t expecting to do well.   He more or less saw the trip as a wee unexpected holiday at the end of his throwing career.    You must also remember the games were held at the end of the Heath government with the three day week, power blackouts and TV closing at 10.   It was a great time to have a month in the sun.

I went with Black and Bryce to visit Duncan Clark, a former Empire games gold medallist and Scottish record holder?   I believe he liked New Zealand when he attend the games and decide to emigrate there.   I think Euan Douglas did the same thing.  He competed at Perth Games and decided to emigrate there later.      

 

 

Graham’s Programmes

Graham MacIndoe is very fortunate that his Dad, who lives in Bathgate, keps an eye out for athletics memorabilia – there have been several wonderful ‘finds’ in the past such as old E-G programmes and then there was the collection of Andy Forbes programmes, not to mention the items that may well have belonged to Alastair Wood.   This latest collection of porgrammes and magazines, of which we only have the covers here, includes the 1952 English national programme, that was the year that Victoria Park won, plus the back page with the signatures of all the VP men who ran that day including all the non-scoring runners.  Have a look and enjoy them.

AAA’s Championships 1952

1952: With Victoria Park AAC team

 

 

 

 

 

Walter McCaskey

Walter (M80) heading for 2016 British Masters 5k gold

That fine Scottish sports journalist, Doug Gillon, wrote an article about Walter in January 2015; and here are several excerpts.

In the Scottish Masters Cross-Country Championships at Kilmarnock, one of the hardy stalwarts is Walter McCaskey, making his first appearance in the over-80 age group for which three men line up.

He began by accident, running the 1982 Edinburgh Marathon to help raise funds for an exercise pool. ‘I trained for four months,’ he recalls, ‘and finished in four hours four minutes.’

‘I didn’t think 26 miles sounded a lot, but it was a long way on a wet, cold day and there was no chance of stopping. You just kept going. But I enjoyed it and got the bug.’

‘I have now run more than 50 marathons, but none for the last few years. I was advised not to because of osteoarthritis in my left knee. I did Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Glasgow, with just a fortnight between each. It was just about having fun.’

‘I only started pushing it at 70, started training with a pal. We did the 10k together and had a real tussle. I managed to win the Scottish Veterans Championship, and then the British. I’m amazed. I never thought I was any good at running.’

His best marathon time was in Glasgow aged 53 (2.59). ‘But now I focus on cross country and shorter stuff.’

Today he defends the Scottish Masters title he won 12 months ago at Hawick, and he completed the 12k course of the Scottish National at Falkirk last year (first in his age group) in a very creditable 67.12.

He was sixth in the British and Irish Masters International cross country at Nottingham in November, second Scot as they won team bronze.

He says he has no sporting pedigree or history. ‘I played a little football when I was younger, in the street, up the park, and perhaps a wee bit in the Army in Hong Kong.’

He tried bowl, but in a reversal of the perceived norm, chucked it for running. ‘I am really hooked on it. I only do about 20 miles a week now since I have stopped marathons, but I go down to the gym and I swim a bit.’

‘If anyone tells me I’m getting on a bit, I just ignore it. Obviously you know you’re getting older – you’re not running as fast – but I don’t dwell on the subject. Get on with life, enjoy yourself.’

The mud threatens to be difficult today, but having spent a chunk of his life working with bulldozers and other plant machinery, Walter says he is prepared.

(Ed. An inspection of sporting records reveals that Walter won Scottish Masters XC medals at M60: bronze in 1996 and silver in 1998. He won his first titles at M65 in 2001 and 2003, plus a silver medal in 2004 and bronze in 2000. There ensued four successive M70 golds between 2005 and 2008; and he was second in 2009. In the M75 category, he won in 2010, 2011 and 2014; and was second in 2013. Naturally he won the M80 titles in 2015 and 2016! Walter is an inspiration to all SVHC members!)

QUESTIONNAIRE ANSWERS:

Walter McCaskey (born 11th August 1934).

Club: City of Edinburgh A.C.

I began running in 1982. It was at my daughter’s wedding and, after a few drinks, I promised to raise some money for charity by joining my brothers, who were training for the Edinburgh Youngers Tartan Marathon. Little did I know what I had let myself in for.

After marathons at Aberdeen and Glasgow, in the 1984 Black Isle Marathon I came first M50. After setting my fastest time in the 1986 Glasgow event I did not improve, probably because I was doing so many races and using them as social events, just going away for long weekends. It was about this time that I joined EAC and started doing cross country. Alex McEwan got me thinking about how I was running. He told me that I had too much energy left at the finish of races! The next event I tried much harder and won gold at Aberdeen.

It was Bert McFall that got me to join the Scottish Veteran Harriers and it was the start of a great friendship. We had some really good training sessions and the rest is history. I made it into the Scottish Masters team, thanks to Bert and, along with the rest of the age-group team, we had several good races. I really enjoy running. It has given me the chance to make so many good friends and has really helped me to get on with my life

[Ed. In the annual British and Irish Masters International XC, Walter has represented Scotland at least nine times since 2004, winning individual M70 silver in 2005 to improve on bronze the previous year. His M70 team won silver medals four times, including one loss to the Auld Enemy by a single point. Then in 2014, aged 80, he contributed to M70 team bronze!  In M75 contests Walter’s team won silver medals in both 2015 and 2016 (when he was 82). Amazing!]

I can say that the best races that come to mind are firstly the 2005 Scottish Masters XC Championships at Bellahouston Park, when I came in first M70 only two seconds in front of Bert McFall. It was a great contest and Bill McBrinn reckoned it was the finest contest of the day. The only thing I did not like about it was having to beat my friend Bert! Secondly, the following week I travelled to Bangor and came in first M70 in the British Masters XC Championships. The worst race was rushing to catch the bus in Glasgow to join the Scottish team! By the time I reached it I was really done in. I have only one ambition and that is to keep on running.

As for my other activities, I bike to the gym and do some work on the rowing machine and the cross trainer. I do some speedwork on the treadmill and then finish with a little swim. My training is a mixture of road and grass running. I do hill reps in the park. Each week I run 15 to 20 miles and probably a little bit more when building up for a race. Running has made me a more responsible person, and given me time to think about other people and the good they do. By joining SVHC I gained one big family of friends.

George Sim

NAME George Sim

CLUBs Moray Roadrunners/Scottish Veteran Harriers Club

DATE OF BIRTH 23 January 1950

OCCUPATION Retired

HOW DID YOU GET INVOLVED IN THE SPORT?

There was a local 3 mile race taking part in a nearby village and myself and my brother in law decided to give it go. I went for 3 training runs before the race and won it with my brother in law coming 2nd. I then heard about a running group that the council had set up trying to get the community active so went along. This is where my enjoyment of running through the woods started at the age of 35 and Moray Roadrunners were formed.

HAS ANY INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP HAD A MARKED INFLUENCE ON YOUR ATTITUDE OR INDIVIDUAL PERFORMANCE?

No, I just enjoyed the company and started to enjoy the improvement of my own running.

WHAT EXACTLY DO YOU GET OUT OF THE SPORT?

The feeling of fitness, racing and the camaraderie of other runners and supporters. I then started coaching juniors and this helped improve my own performances and gave a great sense of satisfaction.

WHAT DO YOU CONSIDER TO BE YOUR BEST EVER PERFORMANCE OR PERFORMANCES?

My most memorable best performances are winning 3 British Track Masters Golds in MV50 one weekend in July 2000 in Bedford. The first gold came in the Saturday in the 1500m in a time of 4.27 followed by the 5k in 16.20. Then the 10,000m on the Sunday winning in 33.18.

Also in 28 degrees in Riccione Italy, in the World Vets Track in September 2007, I was 5th in the MV55 5k in a time of 16.57, 4 days after I took the Silver medal in the 10,000m in a time of 35.10.

All my Scottish and British Masters X Country medals but always behind Mike Hager (England).

I was also pleased that in September 2006 at the age of 56 I ran 33.37 in the Dyke 10k and a week later did 75.44 in the Great North run.

Personal Best performances:

5k 15.32 aged 45

10k 31.45 aged 45

10mile 52.06 aged 45

Half Marathon 69.53 aged 41

Marathon 2.32 aged 40

 

YOUR WORST?

I cannot remember ever having a really bad race. I only get out of the racing what I have put into the training.

WHAT UNFULFILLED AMBITIONS DO YOU HAVE?

I don’t really have any. I just want to be able to keep running and remain injury free.

OTHER LEISURE ACTIVITIES?

I thoroughly enjoy my golf now that I have retired, trying to reduce my handicap which is currently 16. I also enjoy a bit of coaching, travelling and gardening.

WHAT DOES RUNNING BRING YOU THAT YOU WOULD NOT HAVE WANTED TO MISS?

Lots of lasting friendships, fitness and enjoying watching friends/athletes in various competitions.

CAN YOU GIVE SOME DETAILS OF YOUR TRAINING?

 

Typical training week aged 40 – 45
Monday. – 1hour steady in woods
Tuesday – track, 4x4x 400m in 70 sec, 50sec recovery. 3min between sets
Wednesday – steady wood run 50/60 mins
Thursday – 6x 1000m in 3.10, 200m jog rec
Friday – rest/golf
Saturday – 3x4x400m in 66sec, 1 min rec, 3 mins between sets
Sunday – steady 14-16 miles.
(Week before my 31.45 I did 20 mile run on Saturday and GTVLeague on Sunday – 3000m in 9.20!)

Typical week aged 50 before BMVTrack – 3 golds
Monday – steady wood run 60 mins
Tuesday – 8x400s in 70, going every 2 mins. 6min jog x 2 sets
Wednesday – club run usually eyeballs out with great training group
Thursday – 16x200s in 31/32sec walk back rec
Friday – rest/golf
Saturday – steady wood run 60mins
Sunday – 12/14 miles steady

Typical week training aged 55
Monday – steady 45/60 mins
Tuesday – 2×4 600s in 1.52 4mins rec, 8mins between sets
Wednesday – club night usually hard run 50/60 mins
Thursday – steady 59 min wood run
Friday – rest / golf
Saturday – rest
Sunday – Tom Scott 10 mile race 1st M55 vet, 4th vet overall – 55.36

Nowadays I’m happy if I can get out and just run! Injury has prevented me from proper training over the last 3 years so training is not as serious as it was 10 years ago. The body is not quite willing any more.

There is no set pattern to my training now. These days it consists of runs in the local woods that I have run in for 33 years. Usually 6/7miles steady.

Fartlek and speed sessions with the MRR.

I also try to fit in dreaded hills reps that I know have to be done!

The Editor added the following.

George Sim is renowned for being an elegant, graceful athlete who makes nearly all of the rest of us look bad by comparison! He has a great deal of talent and, as his training above shows, worked hard and intelligently to carve out a very successful running career. In addition, he has always been modest and extremely casual about his many successes.

When we first met in 1990, before the Scottish Veterans Cross Country Championships in Dumfries, I knew that my Aberdeen AAC clubmate Graham Milne (a former Scottish marathon international) had been training with George and rated him as extremely promising. Graham lived in Elgin and had convinced George, a near neighbour, to join AAAC since we had a good veteran team. George made an immediate impact by finishing 7th and we won team gold medals for the third year in a row.

George had just turned 40, having started running five years earlier. I was running quite well by 15 and so for a while, due to more background, had the edge on my new clubmate, who is more than two years less old. However his improvement was rapid – in fact it took him little more than three years to relegate me to the also-rans.

A few significant races illustrate this process: a ‘Veterans’ Mile’ in July 1991 on the posh Aberdeen track, when George was right behind me with half a lap to go but I tried extra hard while he glided in just behind my 4.38.8; a month later he thumped me in the Aberdeen Half Marathon; then the 1992 Scottish Vets Cross Country in Troon when I got some revenge by finishing second to his fourth and AAAC won the team title again; the 1992 Alloa to Twechar 8-Man Relay when team victory was almost assured because George rolled right away from Fife AC on Stage Six (the great Don Macgregor was impressed, saying ‘A classy runner’); in late 1992 I finished a couple of places ahead in the Forres 6. The last time I managed to beat him was in August 1993 when I almost gave myself a heart attack in the Aberdeen Half Marathon, eventually finishing five seconds ahead of George, with Shetland’s Bill Adams another seven seconds down. This three-way battle was for the SAF veteran gold medal at that distance. By 1994 the contest was over for me: George Sim was different class. I could only admire the stylish supremacy of such an athlete and make the most of races when he was in a younger age group or running elsewhere!

In his answers to the questionnaire, George did not mention title successes in the Scottish Masters XC: gold medals at M45 (1996), M50 (2003), M55 (2007) and M60 (2010). He did not run the British and Irish International until 1995 in Dublin, when he was 5th M45. By 2016 he had run for Scotland nine times in this most prestigious of events; winning many team medals (including M55 gold in Belfast 2007); plus individual M50 bronze in 2002; three silver (M50 in 2000, M55 in 2005 and 2007) and two fourth places as well. Yes, England’s Mike Hager (a frequent record-breaking World Veteran champion, after all) often had a slight edge on him but justice was served when, in Falkirk 2006, George Sim won the M55 age group.

It was good that, despite many injuries, George was fit enough to be part of our M65 outfit in the 2016 Glasgow International, contributing to team bronze. Hopefully he will regain full fitness and go on to further fully-deserved successes.

 

 

1966 British Empire and Commonwealth Games: Jamaica

The 1966 British Empire and Commonwealth Games were held in Kingston, Jamaica from 4th to 13th August.   It was the first time  that they had been held outside one of the ‘white dominions’ and were followed by the Commonwealth Paraplegic Games.   Thirty four nations, including Aden and Saudi Arabia, competed sending a total of 1316 athletes and officials.   The nine sports were the same as had been on the programme for Perth, Australia, in 1962.   

Athletics won only two medals (a gold and a bronze) but as had been the case in Perth both were won by one man.   In Perth Mike Lindsay took two silvers in the throws events while in Jamaica Jim Alder won his two in the marathon and six miles.   Looking forward to the Games, one of the athletics highlights would be the 3 miles battle between Ron Clarke and Kip Keino.   Each was thought to have a chance for a double – Keino the three miles and theMile, Clarke the three and six miles races.   Alder did not figure in the calculations.   In the sprints the battle was anticipated to be between Harry Jerome (Canada) and Tom Robinson (Bahamas).   The ‘Glasgow Herald’ reporting was the best that they had provided for any Games so far and it is worth reproducing.  The first day’s events featured several Scots – the six miles, the steeplechase and he high jump were contested by team members.

“RW Clarke (Australia), the world’s greatest distance runner, by the stopwatch at least,  is still awaiting his first major title.   For here last night in the athletics stadium Clarke again met an athlete “he had never heard of” and the Australian was beaten into second place in the Commonwealth Games six miles.   The man who did the damage was Kenyan Naftali Temu who ironically enough was one of those straggling runners that Clarke had to wade through in the Olympic 10,000m final and on that occasion another unknown Mohammed Gammoudi pushed Clarke back into third place.

The humidity was such that everyone visiting here from some of the more moderate climes was dripping with sweat as the runners lined up.   Clarke seemed unaware of the strength-sapping closeness as he and Temu set out on their own after about half a mile.   The first mile, in about 4:25 brought that pair clear with another group containing J Alder (Scotland) content to suffer a less painful death than Clarke.   Six or sven times after the three mile mark the Australian exploded away, and each time Temu hauled in the slack, persistent, game, and more than that – capable of shaking the great man beside him.   

Temu has obviously never been pulled out to anything like his best on previous occasions for at three miles his time of 13 min 24 sec was more than 20 seconds faster than he had ever done over that distance  and there were still three more miles to go.   Round about the four mile mark Clarke must have been feeling the pace troubling him, for he cut the lap times down to 72 seconds, followed by one at 75.   Not slow to notice what was happening ahead of him, the small, determined Alder began to bring himself clear of those around him but the effort was telling on him.   

The explosion came: Temu simply roared away from Clarke with a mile to go, glancing back only to check on a desiccated, disappointed Clarke, and after a blistering 62 second lap, ran the last three laps magnificently for a victory in 27 min 14 sec, 150 yards ahead.   In seventh place AF Murray (Scotland) ran as well as expected in such conditions; rather than consider his performance as ordinary we should instead think of Alder’s bronze medal as a remarkable achievement.”

John Linaker  was seventh in the steeplechase in 8 min 41.5 sec, Crawford Fairbrother fourth in the high jump with a clearance of 6′ 6″and Norrie Foster in the decathlon was fourth overall with 6728 points after running the fastest 1500 metres in the final discipline.   It was a good day for the country’s athletes.   On 8th August the heats of the 220 yards took place.

“Over at the National Stadium the heats of the men’s 220 were held and they were less of a competitive occasion than a time to separate the men from the boys.    A headwind was gusting across the track and so, as in the 100 yards first round, no one put any stock on times.   Nevertheless the 21.4 sec by WM Campbell (Scotland) in winning his heat proved to be the second fastest of the morning and he had obviously recovered from a toe-stubbing received when he bumped into a fence at the end of last week.   From the outside lane he was well into his stride and some of his old majesty semed to have returned. At the same time let us not be fooled into thinking of his chances in terms of a medal.   here were a few wily men on this track today, among them H Jerome (Canada), T Robinson (Bahamas) and E Roberts (Trinidad and Tobago).   Jerome strolled the last 20 yards taking his heat in 21.7 sec, and Robinson allowed S Allotey (Ghana) to equal the Games record of 20.9 sesonds in his heat while he himself, observed from a distance of about eight yards, easily qualifying in second place.”

The 100 yards mentioned above had only one Scot competing in each event – in the men’s, Campbell who was fifth in his quarter final in 10.0; and in the women’s, Alex Stevenson who was fifth in her heat in 11.3 seconds.   Campbell made the semi-final in the 220 where he was fifth in 21.2, and Barbara Lyall was sixth in her heat in 25.1 seconds.

On 9th August in the three miles, Ian McCafferty had a spell in the lead but finished fifth in 13:12.2, a Scottish record by seven seconds and he still had the mile to come.   Lachie Stewart and Fergus Murray also ran in this race, finishing  twelfth and seventeenth in 13:40.0 and 14:32.4.  Ron Clarke was second to Keino.   Remember that Stewart had run a good race in the steeplechase (9th in 8:57.0) and Murray had run well in the six miles.   In the heat and, more important, humidity prevailing they had probably not had enough time to properly recover.   The half mile final was also on that day but there were no cots there – the only half miler taken was Graeme Grant from Dumbarton and he ran 1:53.4 finishing eighth in his semi-final.

There was for the first time a 440 yards race for women and Scotland had Barbara Lyall running in it.   She ran 57.0 seconds to be fourth in her heat and did not get through to the final.   There were no more Scots in any track events but there was still the marathon to come – and Jim Alder was in it.

“JNC Alder gave Scotland their first gold medal of the Commonwealth Games seven minutes after eight this sweaty morning.   No marathon is ever won without some kind of attendant drama  –  the 26 miles 385 yards would not seem the same if one did not cause headlines to be written about him  –  and this one today maintained the high reputation of its predecessors.   Alder, with a lead of 75 metres as he reached the perimeter of the stadium, was sent the wrong way, lost the lead, and in what in most marathons is the glory lap, he caught his rival and won by about a dozen yards.   

Seventeen men lined up in a deserted National Stadium at 5:30 with a moon and stars above them that looked grotesquely out of place; the romance of the sky was unappreciated by this grim body of men, handkerchiefs at neck, sweat already gathering at the top of singlets.   There was RW Clarke bobbing about pensively, trying not to think that his medal winning days were numbered – he was even considering going in tomorrow’s mile heats in a last gasp attempt for victory if he failed today – and beside him as he waited for the gun, M Ryan, a Scot by birth and for almost three years now, a New Zealander by choice.   We followed them out of the cathedral-like silence into the streets of the city; not a sleeping city, but one alive and lining the route so thickly that the cars, ambulances and anonymous supporting cohorts, had for a time to nudge their way through,  foot by foot.

Clarke was up with the leading group headed by Ryan, J Julien, also from New Zealand, and after five miles the order was R Wallingford (Canada), Ryan, Alder, K Graham, Jamaica – bidding for eternal glory? – and, in eighth place, Clarke.   For a time the Kenyan Nemesis appeared to be stalking Clarke once again – the defeats from Keino and Temu are not easily forgotten – when J Wahome’s dark figure drew within 30 yards of him at ten miles, but that threat came to naught.   The homeward turn put the sun’s rays into the athletes’ faces and as the temperature made its daily inexorable climb into the 80’s Clarke was being steadily overhauled by W Adcocks (England) and Alder.   At 16 miles Clarke’s lead was taken away and at 20 miles Adcocks and Alder shared the lead timed at 1 hour 47 min 53 sec, Ryan, third, clocked 1 hour 49 min 31 sec.   

Three miles from the stadium, Alder, only 5′ 5″ tall, had gone into a 30 yard lead over the Englishman, and from there to the area immediately surrounding the stadium he built up a lead on 70 yards.   Then the confusion began.   Well-meaning, misguided officials allowed him to go in what was originally meant to be the point of entry but because of the sloping nature of this tunnel, it was felt that a more level entry should be used.   Adcocks was sent in another way, and when the Scot came on the track he found the Englishman 20 yards in front of him.   All was not lost however.   The Scot obviously had more left in him than Adcocks and with 200 yards to go went past him briskly towards victory in 2:22:7.8.   Adcocks clocked 2:22:13, the closest finish to a major marathon anyone here can remember.   Ryan, who was sixth in the Scottish six miles championship three years ago at New Meadowbank in Edinburgh was third in 2:27:59.”

The report continued but the race was over.   Clarke dropped out at 20 miles, Brian Kilby, the reigning champion dropped out at 19 miles with a thigh strain.   In all there were seven who did not finish the race.    The main thing however was: it was Scotland’s first gold medal. 

Jim Alder winning the SAAA Marathon Championship

In the field events, there were no medals at all this time round.   Lawrie Bryce was fifth in the hammer and Mike Lindsay, hero four years earlier in Wales, was fourth in the shot putt and sixth in the discus.   In the women’s shot putt, Moira Kerr was tenth in the shot, while Rosemary Payne was fourth in the discus.   Fairbrother was fourth in the high jump, missing bronze by one inch, while David Stevenson was fourth in the pole vault after clearing 15′ 3″ –  the same height as third placed Moro of Canada.  Decathlete Norrie Foster was seventh in this very technical event.    Alex Stevenson was also fourth – in the women’s long jump.   There were no men in either long or triple jump.

No medals in field events but very good performances from many of the athletes – Norrie Foster’s fourth place in the decathlon after running the fastest 1500m at the end of a gruelling two days has to be highly rated; David Stevenson was only 6″ behind the gold medallist in the pole vault, Rosemary Payne would go from her very good fourth here to gold in Edinburgh four years later.   

There can however be no lack of respect for any performance by any of these athletes who competed in the heat and humidity of Jamaica.   It is possible to acclimatise to the heat but you can’t acclimatise to the humidity.   It was known at Jamaica that the next Games would be on home territory, in Edinburgh, and the lessons learned in Jamaica allied to the undeniable advantages of the home situation, would pay off handsomely.

Norrie Foster in 1966

 

Willie Drysdale

(Willie, who has done a tremendous amount for SVHC, is well known to many Scottish Veteran Harriers Club members and still continues to battle round the annual Scottish Masters Cross Country Championship. While I was at Aberdeen University and he was near his peak, I remember racing him in the 1968 Tom Scott 10 miles – Willie beat me by over 20 seconds and received a treasured first class certificate. His longevity as a runner is amazing – at the end of September 2017 he will have been in Athletics for 70 years, 27 years with Monkland Harriers and 43 with Law & District AAC!

by Colin Youngson)

Willie Drysdale: Keep On Running

Willie is 81 years young, having been born on the 26th November 1935. He joined Monkland Harriers in October 1947.

He enjoyed football and swimming but took to running because he thought he could be good. He got involved in the sport because he saw an advert in a pub window to join Monkland Harriers. Competition began in 1951 when he was a Youth (under 17). This was the youngest age group at the time and very few events were available: only 100 yards handicap and the occasional 880 yards handicap. The minimum age to take part in road and cross country was 16.

Willie’s best times were as follows:

880 yards – 2.02.3 (1967); 1 Mile – 4.29 (1967); 6 Miles – 30.09 (1967); 10 Miles Track – 51.50 (1967).

Willie had a fine record in the Scottish 10 Miles Track Championship. He won a bronze medal in 1966 at Seedhill, Paisley, recorded his personal best a year later, and between 1966 and 1969 was high in the annual Scottish rankings: fourth followed by seventh three times.

In the Scottish Senior National Cross Country he was a very respectable 29th at Hamilton Racecourse in 1966; and 39th in 1967, when ten New Zealand team members were allowed to take part as guests.

In the Scottish Masters Cross Country, he was second M40 behind the great Bill Stoddart in 1978; second M70 in 2010; third M75 in 2011; and third M80 in 2016 and 2017.

Willie was known as a good road runner. He took part in several Edinburgh to Glasgow Relays between 1965 and 1980. For Monkland Harriers he took on the most competitive stages (2 and 6); and was in their best teams when they were ninth in 1971 and tenth in 1972, when his team mates included future SVHC stalwart Bill McBrinn and young stars like Jim Brown, Ron MacDonald and Ian Gilmour, who went on to run for Britain.

Between 1974 and 1980, Willie often ran Stage 8 in the E to G for Law and District. The club’s best position was tenth in 1974, when Willie’s fastest team mate was Scottish XC International XC John Myatt.

In November 1966 Willie won the handicap in the traditional Brampton to Carlisle 10 miler; and on the 1st January 1967 was second in the handicap in the even more famous Morpeth to Newcastle (at least half marathon distance) in a time of 71.51, a personal best by over four minutes. He ran the top Scottish event, the Tom Scott 10 (over the old Law to Motherwell course) in under 51 minutes, finishing 14th.

Willie is a hill walker and also liked hill races and his favourite was the long-established Carnethy event, which he ran twelve times.

Willie Drysdale reckons that his fastest years were between 1967 to 1975, when he was 32 to 40 years old.

Normally he trained once a day, 6 days a week, resting on Friday, since races used to be on Saturday. His weekly training distance, up to age fifty, was about 50 or 60 miles. He also used to do weights at Monklands.

As a Veteran and Masters athlete, since March 1997 he has trained off road, due to back and knee problems. However he can still run for 60 to 80 minutes and goes to the gym three days a week. Occasionally he does speedwork – some strides in the football park!

Willie used to train at Corkerhill Stadium (near Bellahouston Park) on Sundays between the early 1960s to mid 1975. The best thing that happened was that Ken, a Senior Lecturer at Jordanhill College, supervised Willie’s weight training between 1963 and 1965. After that, Willie started running personal bests.

His original work training, as a pre-apprentice engineer, was at Coatbridge Technical College; and then he went on to qualify as a turner and fitter.

National Service. Between 1957 and 1959 he served with the Royal Scots Greys. He had seven weeks of general and fourteen weeks specific training as a Centurion Tank driver, then stayed at Catterick in Yorkshire for one year. In 1958 the Greys were sent to Munster in West Germany, near the Dutch border.

In October 1957 Willie ran a North Yorkshire & South Durham Cross Country League race and finished well up and first home for the Greys. He was asked to run for the league in an inter-league match – but his officer said to the selectors that Willie was not good enough! The officer was proved wrong in February 1958 when the Northern Command XC championships were held at Catterick and Willie ran well to finish third; then he was 28th at the Army XC championships at Aldershot but writes that this was a bad run for him.

Between 1966 and 1979 Willie worked as a technician at Strathclyde University. In 1967, through S.U., he got treatment three times a week for a hamstring injury at Corunna Street physiotherapist. However the injury did not clear up properly until 1980. At lunchtimes he ran five to seven miles along Alexander Parade to the golf course and back.

Between 1979 and 1989 he worked as a technician at Wishaw High School – and trained by running five and a half miles there from his home; and back later on.

From 1989 to 1997 he worked as a technician at Carluke High School. Willie used the gym when at Carluke and, after retiring in 1997, continued to use the gym.

As for diet, Willie writes that he just eats normally. The GP has given him Adcal-D3 vitamin. He also takes Perindopril (blood pressure) Simvastin.

Willie was mostly self coached, although he was supervised at Corkerhill a little. He himself had a coaching qualification from the 1960s onwards. In addition he was Secretary and Treasurer at Monkland Harriers; and, when President, organised the club training.

Since joining Law & District AAC, Willie has been Secretary three times and has been a Life Member since 2009. He helps the club at league matches and compiles the results for the referee. He assists with the organisation of the Tom Scott 10 miles road race at Strathclyde Park.

Willie Drysdale was a member of The Scottish Marathon Club; and continues to belong to the Scottish Hill Runners and the Fell Runners Association.

He was President of the Scottish Veteran Harriers Club from 1999 to 2001; and was Secretary from 2001 to 2012. He still works for the club in a number of ways.

Willie writes that he has always liked to compete in races to find out if he can improve his performance. Nowadays he just wants to keep on running and intends to take part in the BMAF XC championships at Forres in 2018.

Running, he writes, is a great way to meet people and to see other parts of the country. He has competed all over Scotland, in some parts of England, in Spain, Portugal, the USA and Canada. Willie Drysdale has enjoyed it all.

 

Eddie Stewart

Colin Youngson compiled the following profile of Eddie Stewart, a runner for whom all of Scottish athletics have a great respect.   Were there an award for the most consistent high-level runner on a year-round basis, Eddie would have been at the very top, or near the top, over many years.  A Scottish internationalist several times over he was a member of a really great bunch of Cambuslang Harriers runners.   You can read some more about Eddie at this link.

Eddie Stewart in the Edinburgh to Glasgow Relay in 1985

How did you get involved with the sport?

At the age of fourteen I started running at school, where they had a cross country club. The head music teacher, Bill Wright, was a keen runner and a member of Paisley Harriers. Like most boys I played a lot of football, not very well but I used to run all over the pitch chasing the ball, which annoyed the other lads but I did win my first medal in football when our primary school team won the local school league. So I liked running and, when I realised I would never be much of a football player, it seemed natural to take up running as a sport.

 Has any individual or group had a marked influence on your attitude or individual performance?

Probably the first person was Bill Wright who took the running club at school. We used to train on Tuesday and Thursday after school and on a Saturday morning if we didn’t have a race. We had 5 or 6 different routes of different lengths, ranging from 1mile to nearly 10miles. Most of the runs were like races and were all timed, so we could see how fast or slow we had run compared to the previous run over that route. Looking back, it wasn’t the most sophisticated type of training and probably coaches nowadays wouldn’t train young boys that way, but we enjoyed it, and it gave us plenty incentive to beat our own times or the times of the other lads.       

After I left school I joined West of Scotland Harriers but then I went to work for the Ordnance Survey in Southampton, where I half-heartedly trained and ran a few races for Southampton and Eastleigh. After 3 years I left the OS and came back to Glasgow. In the meantime West of Scotland Harriers had folded and I was thinking of joining Bellahouston when Robert Anderson arrived on the doorstep and asked if I wouldn’t like to join Cambuslang Harriers, since they had a young up-and-coming team.

The bus connection between Mearns and Cambuslang wasn’t very good so Robert, being the enthusiast that he was and still is, used to pick me up on a Tuesday night and take me to the club and then take me back again after training. So I was inaugurated into the Cambuslang Tuesday night ‘Hampden Park’ training run”: 71/2 miles of hell. It always started out at a reasonable tempo with perhaps 20 runners in the group but it was never an easy run, with the likes of Alec Gilmour, Colin Donnelly, Rod Stone and later Jim Orr and Charlie Thompson to name just a few. There was always someone who was feeling good on the night who wanted to push the pace, and if the infamous Jimmy Quinn was there he used to stick the boot in after half a mile. The Tuesday night run was harder than a lot of races although we never admitted it, saying only that it ‘wasn’t bad’ or ‘felt okay’.

So the whole squad of Cambuslang runners and officials had a big impact on my running – Robert, Dave Cooney, Des Yuill and Jim Scarborough who organised the club, along with all the runners who never made the first team, but who always kept the pressure on, waiting on a chance if we didn’t perform. None of us in the club were superstars – we were a bunch of lads with a bit of talent and a lot of hard grind, who made an impact on the cross country and road running scene in the 80’s and 90’s, but I doubt I would have had the same running success if it hadn’t been for the team spirit which the club had.

 What exactly do you get out of the sport?

I think, like most people who run, that the biggest thing is the feeling of being physically fit, of being able to get your training gear on and just run when and where you want, with no rules or regulations telling you that you must do this or that, and then the cameraderie of other runners. There is very little aggression in the sport because most of your energy is needed just to combat your own feelings of fatigue and tiredness and the battle is with your self.

What do you consider to be your best ever performance or performances?

I suppose my best performances were in the Scottish cross country championships in 82 and 84 when I was selected for the Scottish team for the World Cross in Rome and New York – not that I ran very well when I got there, but I gave it a go. Most of my best performances were associated with Cambuslang winning team titles, notably when we won the Scottish cross country relay championships for the first time in Inverness. Clyde Valley AC was the favourite team and, expecting to win again had decorated the cup handles with red and white ribbons, but that didn’t bother us, as Cambuslang also run in red and white. 

Another first was winning the Scottish cross country team title at Irvine and then winning gold in the E to G relay which, although I never felt I ran very  well in it, was always a great event , and it’s a pity it’s no longer in the race calendar.

Worst?       

My worst performance I think was going down to the English Inter-Counties cross country and running like an absolute donkey – the legs didn’t work, the lungs didn’t work, and only the brain was working, telling me to stop. But I carried on and ended up near the rear of the field. Horrible.

What unfulfilled ambitions have you?

I don’t think I’ve any unfullfilled running ambitions – just to keep running and enjoying it.

Other leisure activities?

I like walking, painting and drawing and generally watching nature.

What does running bring you that you would not have wanted to miss?

The main thing running brought me is my wife, who I met at a race in Bolzano in Italy. It was a New Year’s Eve race in 1987, and I was running in the Scottish team with Aidie Callan and Alastair Douglas. My wife-to-be was running for Czechoslovakia as it was then. We wrote letters to each other for about four years before I packed my bags,and I’ve been here in Prague ever since. In addition I’ve always liked the freedom and the feeling of being physically fit that running gives you. Also the friends I’ve made through the sport, both in Scotland and in the Czech Republic.

Can you give some details of your training?

I was never a big mileage man, due to my physical work as a gardener, but I always managed to get by with about 40 miles a week when I was running at my best. I always say that 8 hours gardening work is like steady circuit training – you’re using your whole body and not just your legs. so it gives you good general fitness.

I never had a coach for running. For about 2 years I did train with Brian McAusland’s squad on a Wednesday night at Coatbridge, and Brian gave me a few ideas about how I might improve. Just training with that squad improved my general speed, not that I was ever known for my sprinting ability!

My main running season was always September to March, usually with a break in April, and then some track and road running during the summer, but the cross country season was my main interest.

A typical week’s training for me in the autumn would have been as follows.

Mon. 2mile jog,10 x 200m hills slow jog down recovery, 2mile jog

Tues. Club 71/2 miles road hard

 Wed. Track i.e. 12 x 400 in 69 secs with a diminishing recovery – 45 secs, 30 secs, 15 secs.

Thur. Steady 5 miles run on country

Fri.    Rest

Sat. Race or 7 miles over country

Sun. Longer steady run over the country 10 miles

I wasn’t fanatical about my training. If I felt I was tired I would take 2 or 3 days off to rest before starting again. I tended to do most of my training at a fairly good pace, even my longer runs, since I never felt comfortable running at a slower pace than I felt I had the energy for.

During recent years, as a veteran, I try to get out 2 or 3 times a week, and this would include one longer run of say 9 or 10 miles, one interval session 8 x 500 on an undulating track in the woods, and a shorter 4 or 5 mile run on the country. I think that’s enough for me and it gives me a rest day or 2 in between my runs.

Edd

Eddie leading the field in the 1983 Nigel Barge Road Race

.. among others were   Steven Begen, Al Currie, Georghe Braidwood, Richie Barrie, Dave McShane, Tony Coyne …

 (During a long and distinguished running career, Eddie Stewart, such a strong, consistent athlete, produced track bests of: 800m – 1.59; 1500m – 3.55.4; 3000m – 8.16.5; 5000m – 14.11.7; 10,000m – 29.55. On the road he ran a half marathon in 65.14; and, as an afterthought, a marathon – 2.23.47 (aged 39) and 2.26.59 (aged 40). 

In his favourite Scottish National cross country championships, Eddie was in winning Cambuslang teams an amazing 10 times, between 1988 and 2000.

In the Scottish Masters cross country championships, he won the M40 title in 1998 (leading Cambuslang to team victory); M45 in 2004; M50 in 2007; M55 in 2012, 2015 and 2016; and M60 in 2017. The end for Eddie’s superb running is definitely not in sight!

In addition, his wife Miriam picked up a bronze medal in the W50 1500m in Korea this year at the World Masters Indoors; and both his son and his daughter Moira run well. In fact Moira has run several times for the Czech team in the European XC championships; and recently finished 7th in the 5000m at the European Under 23 championships in Poland.)

 

1970 CG Marathon

As far as I know there have been no books written by athletes about the 5000m or 10000m races in the Games other than Ron Clarke’s autobiography while there have been several by competitors in the marathon.    Ron Hill’s Biography ‘The Long Hard Road,’ Jim Alder’s ‘Marathon and Chips, Bill Adcocks’ ‘The Road To Athens’ and Don Macgregor’s ‘Running My Life’.    It was certainly a fantastic race with a wonderful field of athletes contesting it but the attitudes revealed in the books could not be more different and extracts will be on a separate page which will be linked to this one.   I would urge anyone interested in marathon running generally to get their hands on copies of these books if at all possible, lay photo-copies of the sections on this one race side by side and just see how different the ways up the mountain were.   The official report read:

“The four fastest Marathon runners of all time competed in this race, run in good weather conditions over a fairly level course.   Right from the start, Derek Clayton, Australia, and Jerome Drayton, Canada, set a fast pace, passing five miles in 23:31, with Ron Hill, England, and Paul Ndoo, Kenya, close behind.   Jim Alder, the 1966 winner and Bill Adcocks, second in 1966, were running well, 200 yards farther back.   At ten miles, the leading positions were: Hill (47:45), 2nd Drayton (47:50), 3rd Ndoo (47:55), 4th Jim Alder, 5th Bill Adcocks and 6th Stephen (Tanzania) all at 48:40.   Ron Hill continued to push ahead and at 15 miles his time of 1:12:18 was actually better than his world record for that distance.   Clayton had dropped back, Drayton was still in second place. with Alder and Stephen closing on him.   Of the others, only Adcocks and Faircloth were within striking distance.    Drayton dropped out just before 16 miles and the race began to take shape.  

Hill kept on relentlessly, completing 20 miles in 1:37:02, 1 minute 20 seconds ahead of Alder and Stephen with Faircloth fourth in 1:30:17 and Adcocks fifth in 1:40:16.   Hill maintained his lead and finished with a brisk lap of the Stadium in the record-breaking time of 2:09.8.   Jim Alder came in doggedly two-and-a-half minutes later, and also 15 seconds behind was Don Faircloth.   Jackie Foster of New Zealand passed Stephen to finish fourth, pushing Stephen back into fifth place at the finish.   Nearly all the finishers improved on their best performances, several by large margins.”   

 

Position Name Country Time Position Name Country Time
1. R Hill England 2:09:28 16. S Harnek India 2:23:12
2. J Alder Scotland 2:12:04 17. DH Davies Wales 2:23:29
3. D Faircloth England 2:12:19 18. JL Julian New Zealand 2:24:03
4. JC Foster New Zealand 2:14:44 19. YD Birdar India 2:29:18
5. J Stephen Tanzania 2:15:05 20. D Sinkala Zambia 2:30:02
6. W Adcocks England 2:15:10 21. F Rwabu Uganda 2:34:15
7. AF Murray Scotland 2:15:32 22. K Grant Gibraltar 2:35:55
8. D Macgregor Scotland 2:16:53 23. R Diamini Swaziland 2:49:33
9. M Teer Northern Ireland 2:17:24 24. S Alecio Gibraltar 2:50:39
10. A Boychuk Canada 2:18:45   S Jagbir India DNF
11. M Rowland Wales 2:19:08   A Parody Gibraltar DNF
12. CT Leigh Wales 2:19:53 . J Drayton Canada DNF
13. M Cranny Northern Ireland 2:20:23   D Kalusa Zambia DNF
14. R Moore Canada 2:20:47   DJ Clayton Australia DNF
15. P Ndoo Kenya 2:22:40   H Powell Guyana DNF

 

Five Mile Splits For The Leaders

Even the top men can misjudge the marathon: compare the top eight at five miles with the top eight at twenty miles.

      Five Miles                                      Ten Miles                                    Fifteen Miles                                  Twenty Miles                                 Twenty Five Miles

1,   Drayton, J     23:31                 1.   Hill, R             47:45            1.   Hill, R               1:12:18              1.   Hill, R          1:37:32                           1.   Hill, R             2:03:10

2.   Clayton, DJ   23:31                 2.   Drayton, J      47:50            2.   Drayton, J         1:13:17               2.   Alder, J        1:38:51                           2.   Alder, J          2:05:10

3.   Ndoo, P        23:31                 3.   Ndoo, P        47:55             3.  Alder, J              1:13:27               3.  Stephen, J     1:38:52                          3.   Faircloth, D     2:05:30

4.   Hill, R            23:31                  4.   Alder, J        48:40             4.   Stephen, J         1:13:27               4.   Faircloth, D   1:39:17                         4.   Stephen, J       2:06:35

5.   Harnek, S      23:57                  5.   Adcocks, W 48:40             5.   Adcocks, W     1:13:42               5.   Adcocks, W  1:40:16

6.   Stephen, J      24:07                  6.   Stephen, J    48:40              6.   Faircloth, D       1:13:42               6.   Foster, JC     1:41:21                             No More 25 Mile Splits

7.   Alder, J         24:09                   7.  Faircloth, D   48:45              7.   Clayton, D         1:14:39              7.   Macgregor, D 1:44:02                                  Available.

8.   Adcocks, W  24:09                   8.  Clayton, D     48:49             8.   Moore, R           1:14:39              8.   Murray, AF     1:44:02

 

 

1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games: Perth

The Scottish Games team

“The VII Commonwealth Games is remembered for its “heat, dust and glory”.   The day before the Perth Games opened the temperature was an expected 80 degrees Fahrenheit, but the heat was measured at 105 degrees at the Opening Ceremony in the new Perry Lakes Stadium the following day, and such extremes persisted throughout the Games duration.   In the previous 65 years, only ten 100 degree plus days had been recorded in Perth.   Australian soldiers were pressed into action, ferrying water to competing athletes.  

James Coote of the London Daily Telegraph describes “the VII Commonwealth Games have proved that it is possible for an area as basically devoid of sports interest  to stage the second most important sports meeting in the world – and to stage it successfully.   Perth has shown that these Games will continue for years to come.”

Thirty five countries sent a total of 863 athletes and 178 officials to Perth.   Jersey was amongst the medal winners for the first time, whilst British Honduras, Dominica, Papua New Guinea and St Lucia all made their inaugural Games appearances.   Aden also competed by special invitation.   Sabah, Sarawak and Malaya competed for the last time before taking part in 1966 under the Malaysian flag.  

Nine sports were featured at the Perth Games – athletics, boxing, cycling, fencing, lawn bowls, rowing, swimming and diving, weightlifting and wrestling.”

That comes from the Games website – www.thecgf.com – which is a real mine of information.   If you want any information about the Games, no matter how abstruse, you will get it there.

The notes about the temperatures in Perth made the advice given to the athletes beforehand very important.  Not as much information as we would get in the 21st century but really appropriate all the same, if only because it drew the importance of adjusting to the conditions to the attention of the athletes.    I quote from the double sided sheet of foolscap sized paper:

1.   Climatic Conditions.   Meteorological details in Perth for the period of the Games from 1930 – 1959 show

Shade Temperatures

The average maximum (c.)  78 degrees F

The average minimum (c.) 58 degrees F

The highest extreme    103 degrees F

The lowest extreme      47 degrees F

2. Training.   Should the weather be very hot, it is advised that the bulk of the training be carried out during the cooler periods of the day.   It may however be necessary for some more vigorous training to be done in the morning or early afternoon.   If this takes place, each period of exercise should be alternated with an equal period of rest in the shade.  

It is important that loss of body fluid due to sweating should be replaced as soon as possible by drinking water with added salt – up to a half teaspoon of salt to a glass of water.   Serious lack of salt, which is exuded from the body in sweat, will result in tiredness and cramp, and in its serious stages in a similar condition to a marathon runner at the end of his race.

3.   Cooling down.   The best method of cooling down in very hot weather is to take a tepid shower and if necessary to let the water n the body evaporate without towel drying.   Should a competitor get heat exhaustion (collapse) the immediate treatment is sponging with cold water, massage to maintain circulation and later drinks of salt water should be taken.   Ice packs (if available) should be used.  

4.   Diet.  

(a) Team members are strongly urged to preserve ‘diet discipline’.   The food at the ‘Commonwealth Games Village’ , from previous experiences, may well be plentiful and tempting.   Before competition is over, team members should use restraint and eat mainly the sort of food to which they are accustomed.   There will be scales in the Village and a check can be kept on any increase in weight.

(b) “Holiday Dysentry”.   It is unlikely that this complaint will be prevalent in Perth.   Nevertheless, supplies of ‘Streptotriad’ will be available as a preventative – dose two pils per day.   ‘Streptotriad’ has been tested by a famous London hospital, and is strongly recommended as a safe preventative by our Medical Advisory Committee, composed of high ranking medical men.   No side effects were reported by the Hospital concerned, by any Olympic athletes in Rome, nor by numerous teams which have used it.

Unless conditions warrant it, it is not suggested that Team Members should take these pills in Perth.   They may, however, be needed during the air trip to Perth, should the aircraft be delayed and an enforced stay be made in any country where dangers of ‘Holiday Dysentry’ prevail.

Team Members, at the first sign of diarrhoea, are strongly advised to report the fact to the team Medical Officer.

(c) To avoid stomach upsets, Team Members are advised not to take OUTSIDE the village any ice cream or unpeeled fruits; and INSIDE the Village to drink sparingly any iced fruit drinks or juices unless they are fully accustomed to them.”

Similar instructions covered sleeping conditions, and dealing with sunshine.   The team to which the instructions were issued was, as might be expected given the distance and expense of the location, small.   

The Games were held between 22nd November and 1st December, 1962, so the contrast between the climate at home and what was experienced in Perth could not have been greater

Crawford Fairbrother competing in Cardiff, 1958

The opening ceremony in the heat lasted four and a half hours and 200 spectators collapsed with exhaustion, fainting and sunburn.The temperature in the middle of the arena was estimated at 140 degrees Fahrenheit and in the shade at 92 degrees.  The Duke arrived in an open topped car, there was a 21 gun salute, a fly past of Vulcan aircraft and he inspected the guard of honour.   The Scottish standard bearer was Dick McTaggart and the team ‘received a rousing reception.’

But the most important point in any Games is the performance of the team.    As far as medals were concerned, there were two silvers – both from Mike Lindsay  in shot and discus.   

100 yards men:   Mike Hildrey   10.1 sec   4th/Quarter Final;   Alistair McIlroy  9/9 sec   4th/semi-final

100 yards women:   Janette Neil   12.0  5th/Ht 1

220 yards men:   Mike Hildrey  21.7    5th/SF; Alistair McIlroy  22.4   5th/QF   

880 yards men:   J Wenk  1:51.2 1st in Ht 2;  1:52.3  6th in semi-final.  (event won by P Snell in 1:47.6)

Mile:  M Beresford  4:13.0  5th/Ht3  (event won by P Snell in 4:04.6)  [MBS Tulloh, late of Scotland, ran in the final for England, ninth]

 

  Shot putt men:   Mike Lindsay   59′ 2 1/2″     2nd

Discus men:         Mike Lindsay   172′ 6″           2nd

High Jump Men:   Crawford Fairbrother  6′ 7″  8th

Pole Vault Men:   DD Stevenson    13′ 0″    10th

Long Jump Women:  Janette Neil    17′ 10″   8th

Marathon:   AJ Wood  dnf

And there you have it.   Nine athletes, two medals.   The other disciplines picked up more hardware –

Bowlers had three silvers (Joseph Black, Thomas Hamill & Michael Purdon, and Rinks), boxers had one gold (Bobby Mallon), one silver (Dick McTaggart) and one bronze (Tom Menzies), cyclists had none at all, fencing had one gold (Sandy Leckie), rowing had none at all, swimming had onesilver (Bobby McGregor), weight lifting had one gold (Phil Caira) and one bronze (Jimmy Moir), and wrestling had one bronze (James Turnbull).

Back home the reports were read daily.   No internet and the television was scanty so other than over the radio Scots had to wait until the next day for the reports.  The temperature when the 100 metres men competed was 105 degrees and the report read:

“CW Fairbrother (Scotland) only jumped 6′ 7″ in the high jump and finished equal eighth.   G Miller (England) who jumped an inch higher was fourth.   A McIlroy, an Anglo-Scot, qualified for the 100m semi-finals – MG Hildrey, the other Scot went out in the second round, but was then eliminated, as were the other Britons, PF Radford (England), and R Jones and TB Jones (Wales).”

The tone of the articles gave the impression that they were agency reports rather than having been written by Scots.   Another example:     “Lindsay was well beaten for the discus gold medal by W Selvey (Australia) who set a Games record of 185′  3 1/2″, but the Scotsman’s best throw of 172′ 6″ was 6′ further than that of J Sheldrick (England) who won the bronze medal.   MG Hildrey (Scotland) went a stage further than his countryman A McIlroy in the 220 yards, reaching a semi-final, but he was only fifth in that in 21.5 sec and was eliminated.”

The Games were over,  the quality of competition was very high and the Scottish team was placed sxth of over 30 countries.   Athletes such as Antao in the sprints, George Kerr in the 440, Peter Snell and John Davies in the middle distances, Murray Halberg, Bruce Kidd, Dave Power and Ron Clarke in the long distances and Martyn Lucking and Howard Payne in the field events; Dorothy Hyman, Pam Kilborn and Val Young on the women’s side – were of the very highest calibre and helped justify the tag of the second most important meeting in the world.   It is perhaps not insignificant that most of Scotland’s medals were won indoors – boxing, swimming, weight lifting – with only the bowling, a relatively gentle sport, winning outdoors.   

However that may be, the next Games would be in another hot country – Jamaica in 1966 – and that would be another test for the Scottish sportsmen.