Tuesday, February 7, 2017

Day 7-- From the Red Box

                                  Ralph  Boston
Image result for ralph boston free pictures
It was 52 years ago this week, about a month before the 1960 Rome Olympics. Ralph Boston, a Laurel farmer’s son and the youngest of 10 children, was a nobody, a largely unknown 21-year-old student at Tennessee State.
Boston, at 73, well remembers the night a nobody became a big somebody. The U.S. Olympic track and field team was holding a conditioning meet in preparation for Rome at Mt. San Antonio College near Los Angeles. Boston, a long jumper, leaped 26 feet, 11 inches, breaking the 25-year-old record of the legendary Jesse Owens. It was the last world record Owens owned.
“Suddenly people recognized me,” Boston said, chuckling at the memory Wednesday. “Before that night nobody outside of Laurel, Mississippi, knew who I was and the people in Laurel knew me as Hawkeye Boston, not Ralph Boston.”
Boston remembers a strapping, young man from Louisville, Ky., stopping him in New York just before the U.S. team boarded a plane for Rome.
“He said, ‘You’re Ralph Boston, I want to take your picture,’” Boston said. “Then he said, ‘You don’t know who I am yet, but you will soon.’ And then he introduced himself as Cassius Marcellus Clay. You don’t forget things like that.”
No, we can only suppose, you don’t. Nor do you forget what Boston did next, which was win the gold medal in Rome.

“I was just a bright-eyed, skinny kid from Laurel, Mississippi, who didn’t know which way was up,” Boston said. “And then I walk into that stadium and there are more people than I had ever seen in my life. I thought, ‘Man, what have I gotten myself into here.’”
After Boston won the long jump, the huge crowd chanted, “Boston! Boston! Boston!.”
You don’t forget things like that, either.
Now, here’s the kicker: Boston jumped the same distance that night 52 years ago in Rome that American Will Claye jumped Sunday in winning the bronze medal at London.
“That’s really amazing when you think about it,” Boston says. “That’s not much change in over half a century. On the one hand, you’d think the distances would be much longer now, but on the other hand, you want to think, ‘Hey, maybe I WAS pretty good.’”

http://aaregistry.org/historic_events/view/ralph-boston-athlete-and-much-more

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