1948 NCAA Track and Field Championships
DatesJune 18–19, 1948
Host cityMinneapolis, Minnesota
VenueMemorial Stadium
1947
1949

The 1948 NCAA Track and Field Championships were held in Minneapolis, Minnesota in June 1948. The University of Minnesota won the team title. Two NCAA meet records were broken, and one American record was tied, at the event.[1] Fortune Gordien was the high point scorer for Minnesota as he won the discus thrown and finished second in the shot put, accounting for 18 of Minnesota's points.[1]

Clyde "Smackover" Scott tied the world record in the 110-meter high hurdles with a time of 13.7 seconds.[1]

Mel Patton was the only athlete to win two events at the meet. Patton won both the 100-meter and 200-meter dashes.[1]

Charlie Fonville of the University of Michigan won the shot put competition with a distance of 54 feet, defending his 1947 NCAA title.[1]

Team scoring

1. Minnesota – 46
2. University of Southern California – 4112
3. Texas – 40
4. Illinois – 3414
5. California – 1914

Track events

100-meter dash
1. Mel Patton, Univ. South. Calif.
2. Don Anderson, California
3. Charles Parker, Texas

110-meter high hurdles
1. Clyde Scott, Arkansas
2. W.F. Porter, Northwestern
3. Craig Dixon, UCLA

200-meter dash
1. Mel Patton, Univ. South. Calif.
2. Charles Parker, Texas
3. Paul Bienz, Tulane

400-meter dash
1. Norman Rucks, South Carolina
2. Arthur Harnden, Texas A&M
3. John Hammack, U.S. Military Academy

400-meter hurdles
1. George Walker, Illinois
2. Jeffrey Kirk, Penn
3. Ron Frazier, Univ. South. Calif.

800-meter run
1. Mal Whitfield, Ohio State
2. Jack Dianetti, Michigan State
3. Bob Chambers, Univ. South. Calif.

1,500-meter run
1. Don Gehrman, Wisconsin
2. Herbert Barten, Michigan
3. Roland Sink, Univ. South. Calif.

3,000-meter steeplechase
1. Browning Ross, Villanova
2. W.O. Overton, Alabama Polytechnic Inst.
3. James Kittell, Notre Dame

5,000-meter run
1. Jerry Thompson, Texas
2. Horace A. Shenfelter, Penn State
3. Quentin Briesford, Ohio Wesleyan

Field events

Broad jump
1. Willie Steele, San Diego State – 24 feet, 1112 inches
2. James Holland, Northwestern - 24 feet, 612 inches
3. Lorenzo Wright, Wayne – 24 feet, 514 inches

High jump
1. Dwight Eddleman, Illinois – 6 feet, 7 inches
1. Irving Mondschein, NYU – 6 feet, 7 inches
3. Charles Hangar, California – 6 feet, 6 inches
3. Vern McGrew, Rice – 6 feet, 6 inches
3. Lou Irons, Illinois – 6 feet, 6 inches
3. Tom Scofield, Kansas – 6 feet, 6 inches

Pole vault
1. Warren Bateman, Colorado – 14 feet
1. George Rasmussen, Oregon – 14 feet
3. Harry Cooper, Minnesota – 13 feet, 10 inches

Discus throw
1. Fortune Gordien, Minnesota – 164 feet, 612 inches
2. Victor Frank, Yale – 164 feet, 323 inches
3. George Kadera, Texas A&M – 155 feet, 112 inches

Javelin
1. Frank Held, Stanford – 209 feet, 8 inches
2. Francis Friedenbach – 204 feet, 512 inches
3. Frank Guess, Texas – 199 feet

Shot put
1. Charlie Fonville, Michigan – 54 feet, 7 inches
2. Fortune Gordien, Minnesota – 52 feet, 738 inches
3. Rollin Prather, Kansas State – 52 feet, 378 inch

Hammer throw
1. Samuel H. Felton, Jr. – 170 feet, 914 inches
2. George Marsanskis, Maine – 170 feet, 5 inches
3. Jim Burnham, Dartmouth – 168 feet

Hop, step and jump
1. Lloyd Lamois, Minnesota – 45 feet, 10 inches
2. John Gough, Oklahoma – 45 feet, 712 inches
3. John Robertson, Texas – 44 feet, 912 inches

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Minnesota Cops NCAA Track Title: Scott Ties World High Hurdle Mark". The Nebraska State Journal. 1948-06-20.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.