- Billy Mills
William Mervin Mills or "Billy" Mills (born June 30, 1938) is the only Native American ever to win an Olympic gold medal. "(
Jim Thorpe won 2 gold medals in the 1912 Stockholm" "Olympics but they were later taken away because it was learned that he had played two seasons of" "minor league baseball prior to the Olympics.)" He accomplished this feat in the 10,000 meter run at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics making him the only American ever to win the Olympic gold in this event. A former United States Marine, Billy Mills is a member of the Sioux Tribe. Many consider his victory in 1964 to be the greatest upset in Olympic history.cite web|accessdate=2008-08-14
url=http://www.tecom.usmc.mil/HD/Home_Page.htm
date=August 13, 2008
quote= Then-1stLt William 'Billy' Mills, USMCR, wove through a field of lapped runners and passed the race favorite, Ron Clarke of Australia, to win the 10,000 meters race at the 1964 Olympic Games. His victory is described as one of the greatest upsets in Olympic history and he is still the only American to ever win a gold medal in that event.
publisher=Marine Corps History Division, United States Marine Corps]Biography
William Mervin Mills ("Billy") was born in
Pine Ridge, South Dakota , a Native American (Oglala Lakota (Sioux)), and was raised on thePine Ridge Indian Reservation . He was orphaned at the age of 12. Mills took up running while attending the Haskell Institute, which is now known asHaskell Indian Nations University inLawrence, Kansas . Both a boxer and a runner in his youth, Mills gave up boxing to focus on running.He attended the
University of Kansas on an athletic scholarship. He was named a NCAAAll-America cross country runner three times and in 1960 he won the individual title in the Big Eight cross country championship. The University of Kansas track team won the 1959 and 1960 outdoor national championships while Mills was on the team. After graduating with a degree in physical education, Mills entered theUnited States Marine Corps . He was a first lieutenant in the Marine Corps Reserves when he competed in the 1964 Olympics.cite web|accessdate=2008-08-14
url=http://www.tecom.usmc.mil/HD/Home_Page.htm
date=August 13, 2008
quote= Then-1stLt William 'Billy' Mills, USMCR, wove through a field of lapped runners and passed the race favorite, Ron Clarke of Australia, to win the 10,000 meters race at the 1964 Olympic Games. His victory is described as one of the greatest upsets in Olympic history and he is still the only athlete from the Western Hemisphere to ever win a gold medal in that event.
publisher=Marine Corps History Division, United States Marine Corps]1964 Olympics
Billy Mills qualified for the
1964 Summer Olympics on the U.S. Track and Field Team in the 10,000 m and the marathon.The favorite in 1964 was
Ron Clarke ofAustralia who held the world record. The runners expected to challenge him were defending championPyotr Bolotnikov of theSoviet Union , andMurray Halberg ofNew Zealand , who had won the 5000 m in 1960.Mills was a virtual unknown. He had finished second in the U.S. Olympic trials. His time in the preliminaries was a full minute slower than Clarke's.
Indeed, Clarke set the tone of the race. His tactic of surging every other lap appeared to be working. Halfway through the race only four runners were still with Clarke:
Mohammed Gammoudi ofTunisia ,Mamo Wolde ofEthiopia ,Kokichi Tsuburaya ofJapan , and Mills. Tsuburaya, the local favorite, lost contact first, then Wolde. With two laps to go only two runners were still with Clarke. On paper, it seemed to be Clarke's race. He had run a world record time of 28:15.6 while neither Gammoudi nor Mills had ever run under 29minute s.Mills and Clarke were running together with Gammoudi right behind as they entered the final lap. They were lapping other runners and, down the backstretch, Clarke was boxed in. He pushed Mills once, then again. Then Gammoudi pushed them both and surged into the lead as they rounded the final curve. Clarke recovered and began chasing Gammoudi while Mills appeared to be too far back to be in contention. Clarke failed to catch Gammoudi but Mills sprinted past them both. His winning time of 28:24.4 was almost 50
second s faster than he had ever run before and set a new Olympic record for the event. No American had ever won the 10,000 m before Billy Mills did it.After the race Mills talked with Clarke and asked if he was straining as hard as he could on the final straightaway to the finish, to which Clarke replied, "Yes." Mills has stated that he tried to be relaxed during his final kick to the finish line and felt that helped him to pass both Gammoudi and Clarke. An infrequently mentioned fact is both Clarke and Mills ran the marathon at the 1964 Olympics after the 10,000 m. Clarke finished in 9th place, Mills finished in 14th, in a respectable 2:22:55.4, approximately two-and-a-half minutes behind Clarke.
Post-Olympics
Mills later set U.S. records for 10,000 m (28:17.6) and the three
mile run and had a 5,000 m best of 13:41.4. In 1965, he and Gerry Lindgren both broke theworld record for the six mile run when they finished in a tie at the U.S. AAU nationals, running 27:11.6.Billy Mills was inducted into the United States
Track and Field Hall of Fame in 1976, and the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame in 1984. He is also in theNational Distance Running Hall of Fame , the Kansas Hall of Fame, the South Dakota Hall of Fame, the San Diego Hall of Fame, and the National High School Hall of Fame.Billy Mills is the subject of the 1984 film "
Running Brave ", starringRobby Benson .Mills also serves as the spokesperson for Running Strong for American Indian Youth, [ [http://www.indianyouth.org Running Strong for American Indian Youth] : Official Website] an organization that helps support projects that benefit the American Indian people, especially the youth.
ee also
*Olympic medalists in athletics
*Jim Thorpe Notes
External links
* [http://www.usatf.org/HallOfFame/TF/showBio.asp?HOFIDs=110 USA Track and Field Hall of Fame - Billy Mills]
* [http://www.indianyouth.org Running Strong for American Indian Youth]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.