RIP Rafer Johnson

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RIP to a great one.

I met him a couple of times. The first was in the early '70s when I was in college and working at Pep Boys.

He came in with his wife and kid just before closing time to buy a bicycle. We closed the store but continued helping them, checking to make sure the bike was assembled properly, tires inflated, etc. Probably spent a half hour with them. Good to go.

His credit card was rejected. I don't remember specifically what we did, the manager (my Dad) took over helping him while me and another guy checked out the bike. It might have been that his wife's card reached its limit. They might have used another card. Or we held the bike until the next day. Or, knowing my Dad, he gave them the bike on the promise that they would come back the next day and pay for it with cash, check or a different card.

Johnson was very gracious, didn't pull any "Do you know who I am?" stuff. Didn't try to big-time us. And I was in awe of him.
 
His passing, I find, makes me get all philosophical and questioning. About how some people's lives are so eventful, and others' are...not.

Mine would be among the latter group.:)
 
There was a 20- year stretch there where the San Joaquin Valley produced incredible Olympians. Bob Mathias (Tulare). Johnson (Kingsburg). Tommie Smith (Lemoore). And before that, Dutch Warmerdam (Hanford), who had the misfortune of being at his peak during World War II, but had a great career coaching at Fresno State.

RIP.
 
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Maybe it's because of the whole Dan-Dave fiasco, but the decathlon seems to have lost some of its luster as one of the "major" Olympic track and field events. Maybe it's jingoism as well, since Thorpe, Mathias, Johnson and Jenner were all Americans. But that 1960 event, when Johnson edged Yang and Kuznetsov is particularly memorable.
 
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RIP to an incredible athlete, and a great human being.
His athletic exploits were before my time, but I was extremely impressed by a 50-year-old Johnson running up all those L.A. Coliseum steps and lighting the Olympic torch during the 1984 Opening Ceremonies.
Rafer Johnson 1984.jpg
 
Maybe it's because of the whole Dan-Dave fiasco, but the decathlon seems to have lost some of its luster as one of the "major" Olympic track and field events. Maybe it's jingoism as well, since Thorpe, Mathias, Johnson and Jenner were all Americans. But that 1960 event, when Johnson edged Yang and Kuznetsov is particularly memorable.

I dunno if it's the decathlon or the entire sport of track and its inability to stay clean in the 21st century. Ashton Eaton managed to win it twice, which is more than anyone else could manage. A look at the record book indicates Americans have medaled in every Olympic decathlon since "Dan and Dave" and have won the last three.
 
There's only one thing worse than track.

Field.

RIP. Way before my time, but his run up the Coliseum steps in 1984 still resonates. Along with the baby grands.
 
I dunno if it's the decathlon or the entire sport of track and its inability to stay clean in the 21st century. Ashton Eaton managed to win it twice, which is more than anyone else could manage. A look at the record book indicates Americans have medaled in every Olympic decathlon since "Dan and Dave" and have won the last three.
Dan did all right for himself after that — set the world record that fall, won the 1993 and ‘95 world championships and took the ‘96 Olympic gold medal.
 
Maybe it's because of the whole Dan-Dave fiasco, but the decathlon seems to have lost some of its luster as one of the "major" Olympic track and field events. Maybe it's jingoism as well, since Thorpe, Mathias, Johnson and Jenner were all Americans. But that 1960 event, when Johnson edged Yang and Kuznetsov is particularly memorable.
That guy Eaton wasn't too bad at London and Rio, as I recall.
 
There's only one thing worse than track.

Field.
Absolutely WORST sport to cover in the "old" newspaper way ... running results of all scorers. I'd need a chiropractic adjustment to my neck from holding the phone against my collarbone talking to the callers.

But my leg pistons up and down when I watch an exciting race ... even one I've seen dozens of times.
 
RIP to an incredible athlete, and a great human being.
His athletic exploits were before my time, but I was extremely impressed by a 50-year-old Johnson running up all those L.A. Coliseum steps and lighting the Olympic torch during the 1984 Opening Ceremonies.
View attachment 9782

My first memory of him.
 
Before Jim Brown went into the movies, Rafer Johnson went into the movies.

Also instrumental in helping launch Special Olympics.

Some great descriptions of him competing in "Rome 1960," by David Maraniss.

To his rest.

 
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