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John Pennel

John Thomas Pennel (July 25, 1940 – September 26, 1993) was an American pole vaulter, and four-time world record holder.[2]

John Pennel
Personal information
BornJuly 25, 1940
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
DiedSeptember 26, 1993 (aged 53)
Santa Monica, California, United States
Height1.77 m (5 ft 10 in)
Weight76 kg (168 lb)
Sport
Country United States
SportAthletics
Event(s)Pole vault, long jump
ClubSouthern California Striders, Anaheim
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)PV – 5.44 m (1969)
LJ – 7.13 m (1963)[1]
Medal record

Career edit

A native of Memphis, Tennessee, Pennel started pole vaulting at his father's farm with an old television aerial. At Coral Gables Senior High School, where he was a member of both the gymnastics and the track and field teams, he cleared 11 feet 3 inches (3.43 m) at the age of 15. Improving steadily under the coaching of Ed Injachock he improved to 3.80 m in 1958 and in 1959 he ranked 8th among American schoolboys with 4.14 m (13 ft 7 in). At one time he also held the Dade County (Florida) record for climbing a 20-foot rope in 4.2 seconds.[3] [4]

In 1959 Pennel went to Northeast Louisiana State College (NLSC) on a track scholarship and continued to improve, clearing 4.32 m (14 ft 2 in) in 1959, and then his big breakthrough came at a meet at Chattanooga on March 19, 1960. Off a dirt runway and using a borrowed aluminium pole he cleared 4.58 m, just a quarter of an inch over fifteen feet and a national record for a college freshman. Unable to reproduce that sort of form outdoors his best for the remainder of the season was 4.39 m (14 ft. 5"). He cleared 4.47 m (14 ft 8 in) in 1961 before switching to the new fiberglass poles and within a very few months began to reap the benefits; on the last day of the year he went over fifteen feet again (4.61 m) in New Orleans and improved to 4.67 m (15 ft. 4") indoors on January 12, 1962, but again failed to repeat his form outdoors that season.

Early in 1963, by which time he is being coached by Bob Groseclose,[5] he cleared sixteen feet in training but was turned down by meeting promoters on the grounds that he wasn't good enough. He travelled to Toronto to prove himself and in his only major indoor meet of the season cleared 4.75 m (15 ft. 7¼") for second place. Outdoors, he started off with 4.80 m (15 ft. 9") and the following week, on March 23, 1963, the man who was not good enough for an indoor meet exceeded the existing world record of 4.94 m with a 4.95 m (16 ft 3") jump at home in Memphis. He did it again the following month with a 4.98 m jump, but neither mark was ratified as a world record.[2] Nineteen-year-old Brian Sternberg had the honor of being the world's first 5.00-metre vaulter in Philadelphia on April 27, 1963.[2] Interviewed afterwards he said, "I don't expect the record to stand a long time", and he was right. Just four days later Pennel surpassed the record with a 5.05 m (16 ft 6¾") leap at Monroe, Louisiana, but, again, his mark was not ratified.[2]

Again at Monroe on May 4, 4.88 m (16 ft 0 in) was enough for first place but on the same day at San Jose American Jeff Chase vaulted 8.74 m (28 ft 8 in); not to worry, they were vaulting for distance, not height.[6] The following weekend decathlete and future world record holder Yang Chuan-kwang became the first man to vault sixteen feet and lose, being beaten by Ron Morris at a meet in Fresno, California.[7] By the end of the month of May there were no less than ten men worldwide over sixteen feet and eight of them were Americans; the other "foreigner" was the Finnish athlete Pentti Nikula, who held the world record Sternberg had broken in April,[2][8] and Sternberg had equalled Pennel's "world record" at the Modesto relays on May 25. But this was not ratified as a world record. However, Sternberg got his second and final world record at Compton, California on June 7, clearing 5.08 m (16 ft 8 in), and found 5.00 m (16 ft. 4¾") enough to take the NCAA at Albuquerque the following week with Cruz, Cramer, Hansen and Watson in that order all on 4.82 m (15 ft. 9¾"),[9] and strangely he also found 4.98 m (16 ft. 4") sufficient to take the AAU title in St. Louis a week later with Pennel back in sixth place on 4.80m (15 ft. 9"),[10] (the same weekend that Bob Hayes ran the first legal 9.1 s 100 yards).

 
Pennel in 1963

Despite his poor showing in recent weeks Pennel was selected to join the squad that toured Europe that summer, so on Friday July 13 while Ron Hill was busy breaking the Commonwealth 10,000 m record Pennel was at the White City Stadium in London qualifying for the AAA Championships, which he did with ease. The following day he came back for what Mel Watman called a "superlative display" of pole vaulting. Entering the competition at 4.46 m (14 ft. 7½") he cleared first time but needed three tries at 4.57 m (15 ft. 0"), clearing on the third try by "at least eighteen inches". Further attempts were hampered by the three-mile track race being in progress so he had to time his run-up, which started on the track, quite carefully. He cleared both 4.72 m (15 ft. 6") and 4.87 m (16 ft. 0") first time. His first two attempts at the new world record 5.10m (16 ft. 8¾") were aborted as he mis-timed his approach, but on the third try he planted firmly and sailed over. But, again, the mark was not ratified as a world record.[2] He had three attempts at 5.19 m (17ft. 0¼") but they didn't come to anything.[11] By now there were thirteen men over sixteen feet[12] and the race was to be the first over seventeen feet. Tragically, Sternberg was no longer in the race. On June 29 while practising a double-back somersault with a twist on the trampoline at college, something he had done hundreds of times before, he landed hard on his neck and was paralysed from the neck down.[13] When told of Pennel's new "world record" the modest Sternberg, who turned 20 just eleven days before his accident said, "I really think it's great about Pennel. He's the most deserving of all of us to represent the United States at Moscow. I don't know of anybody who has tried harder and put more into vaulting than Pennel."[14]

The Americans won the match in Moscow by a mere five points, which Athletics Weekly reported as a "disaster", and Pennel came second in the vault behind Uelses with both of them well below their best.[15] But in Warsaw they "crushed" Poland and Pennel was described as the "star performer"[16] in duplicating his White City world record height, though a language difficulty meant he actually thought he was attempting a new record height of 5.14 m (16 ft. 10¼"). Nikula (the only European so far over 16 feet) failed to impress at the Finnish Championships in Helsinki on July 17, clearing only 4.85 m (15ft. 11") but on July 25 at Karhula the American Ron Morriss set a personal best of 4.92 m (16 ft. 1¾") and three days later at Haapavesi he improved again to 5.00 m (16 ft. 4¾")[17] Then on August 9 the German Wolfgang Reinhardt joined the sixteen-foot club in winning the West German Championships at Augsburg.[18]

Back in London on August 5, Pennel finally set a mark that would be ratified as a world record, improving on Sternberg's 5.08 m.[2] He improved the world record, this time clearing 5.13 m (16 ft. 10") and a few days later on August 25 Morris, still in Finland but now at Mikkeli, moved to third on the all-time list with a vault 5.02 m (16 ft. 5¾"). The previous day, however, at Coral Gables, Florida, using a pole he had borrowed from fellow vaulter Fred Hansen back in March, Pennel had cleared 5.20 m (17ft. 0¾") at his first attempt and just eighteen months after the world's first 16-foot vault he became the world's first 17-foot pole vaulter.[19] The world would have to wait seven years before anyone cleared 18 feet (5.48 m).

 
Pennel receiving the James E. Sullivan Award

Following those amazing performances, Pennel was asked to appear on the popular television game show, To Tell The Truth. On the September 9, 1963 episode, Pennel scored against the celebrity panel (Tom Poston, Peggy Cass, Earl Wrightson, and Kitty Carlisle), and immediately donated his winnings to the Brian Sternberg Hospital Fund. On February 27, 1966, he appeared on the popular panel show What's My Line? not as an athlete, but rather as a wine salesman, a career he had just taken up. He nearly stumped the panel, but Bennett Cerf guessed his line at the last moment. Sternberg, a University of Washington pole vaulter, was injured during practice in an accident that left him a quadriplegic. In April 1964, Pennel was awarded the 1963 Sullivan Award as the nation's top amateur athlete, and was favored to capture the gold medal at the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo. Unfortunately, he suffered a back injury six weeks before the Games and finished 11th, with a height of 15–5. American teammate Fred Hansen set an Olympic record with a vault of 16–8¾ and won the gold medal.[20]

In 1967, Pennel was featured as Bachelor Number Three on the popular television show, The Dating Game, episode 67 008, during the second set. Also featured, as Bachelor Number Two, was Burt Reynolds. Pennel was chosen as the favorite by the Bachelorette, who was a gymnast. https://youtu.be/Gcaa0Qw7CmM?t=793

After the Olympics, Hansen vaulted an unratified 17–3¾, and Bob Seagren set the mark at 17–5 two years later. Following Seagren's performance, Pennel reclaimed the record at 17–6 (5.34 m) in 1966, his third ratified world record.[2] Pennel was favored to win an Olympic gold in Mexico City in 1968, but he finished fifth. He cleared 5.40 m on his second attempt, and this would be enough for a medal, but his pole passed under the bar, which was illegal at the time; the rule was abolished next year.[21]

In 1969, Pennel set his fourth and final world record, 17–10¼ (5.44 m).[2] A series of injuries led him to retire from competition in 1970.[22]

After his pole vaulting career, Pennel moved to Glendale, California, and worked in sales for Italian Swiss Colony wines as well as marketing for Adidas and other companies. He also appeared in television commercials.

Pennel and his family appeared on an episode of Family Feud with Richard Dawson that aired on July 6, 1982. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2pv_ZD_rA2E

In the early 1990s, he was diagnosed with stomach and liver cancer and died at age 53.

Hall of Fame edit

Pennel was inducted into the USA Track & Field Hall of Fame in 2004.[23]

References edit

  1. ^ John Pennel July 10, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. sports-reference.com
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i (PDF). Monte Carlo: IAAF Media & Public Relations Department. 2009. p. 555. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 29, 2011. Retrieved August 5, 2009.
  3. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.36.14)
  4. ^ . Time. August 16, 1963
  5. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.36.15)
  6. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.22.12)
  7. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.22.11)
  8. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.23.11)
  9. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.26.17)
  10. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.27.18)
  11. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.29.24)
  12. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.26.11)
  13. ^ Raley, Dan. (May 22, 2003) Cruel Worlds: Forty years ago, promising UW track standouts fell from grace. Seattle Post-Intelligencer Reporter
  14. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.30.17)
  15. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.30.18)
  16. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.32.16)
  17. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.34.18)
  18. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW172.34.17)
  19. ^ Athletics Weekly, (AW17.35.17)
  20. ^ Athletics at the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games: Men's Pole Vault November 5, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. sports-reference.com
  21. ^ Athletics at the 1968 Ciudad de México Summer Games: Men's Pole Vault September 20, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. sports-reference.com
  22. ^ John Pennel, First Pole-Vaulter To Clear 17 Feet, Is Dead at 53. The New York Times. September 29, 1993
  23. ^ "USATF – Hall of Fame". Retrieved August 14, 2016.

External links edit

Records
Preceded by Men's Pole Vault World Record Holder
August 5, 1963 – June 13, 1964
Succeeded by
Preceded by Men's Pole Vault World Record Holder
July 23, 1966 – June 10, 1967
Succeeded by
Preceded by Men's Pole Vault World Record Holder
June 21, 1969 – June 17, 1970
Succeeded by

john, pennel, john, thomas, pennel, july, 1940, september, 1993, american, pole, vaulter, four, time, world, record, holder, personal, informationbornjuly, 1940memphis, tennessee, united, statesdiedseptember, 1993, aged, santa, monica, california, united, stat. John Thomas Pennel July 25 1940 September 26 1993 was an American pole vaulter and four time world record holder 2 John PennelPersonal informationBornJuly 25 1940Memphis Tennessee United StatesDiedSeptember 26 1993 aged 53 Santa Monica California United StatesHeight1 77 m 5 ft 10 in Weight76 kg 168 lb SportCountry United StatesSportAthleticsEvent s Pole vault long jumpClubSouthern California Striders AnaheimAchievements and titlesPersonal best s PV 5 44 m 1969 LJ 7 13 m 1963 1 Medal record Universiade 1965 Budapest Pole vault Contents 1 Career 2 Hall of Fame 3 References 4 External linksCareer editA native of Memphis Tennessee Pennel started pole vaulting at his father s farm with an old television aerial At Coral Gables Senior High School where he was a member of both the gymnastics and the track and field teams he cleared 11 feet 3 inches 3 43 m at the age of 15 Improving steadily under the coaching of Ed Injachock he improved to 3 80 m in 1958 and in 1959 he ranked 8th among American schoolboys with 4 14 m 13 ft 7 in At one time he also held the Dade County Florida record for climbing a 20 foot rope in 4 2 seconds 3 4 In 1959 Pennel went to Northeast Louisiana State College NLSC on a track scholarship and continued to improve clearing 4 32 m 14 ft 2 in in 1959 and then his big breakthrough came at a meet at Chattanooga on March 19 1960 Off a dirt runway and using a borrowed aluminium pole he cleared 4 58 m just a quarter of an inch over fifteen feet and a national record for a college freshman Unable to reproduce that sort of form outdoors his best for the remainder of the season was 4 39 m 14 ft 5 He cleared 4 47 m 14 ft 8 in in 1961 before switching to the new fiberglass poles and within a very few months began to reap the benefits on the last day of the year he went over fifteen feet again 4 61 m in New Orleans and improved to 4 67 m 15 ft 4 indoors on January 12 1962 but again failed to repeat his form outdoors that season Early in 1963 by which time he is being coached by Bob Groseclose 5 he cleared sixteen feet in training but was turned down by meeting promoters on the grounds that he wasn t good enough He travelled to Toronto to prove himself and in his only major indoor meet of the season cleared 4 75 m 15 ft 7 for second place Outdoors he started off with 4 80 m 15 ft 9 and the following week on March 23 1963 the man who was not good enough for an indoor meet exceeded the existing world record of 4 94 m with a 4 95 m 16 ft 3 jump at home in Memphis He did it again the following month with a 4 98 m jump but neither mark was ratified as a world record 2 Nineteen year old Brian Sternberg had the honor of being the world s first 5 00 metre vaulter in Philadelphia on April 27 1963 2 Interviewed afterwards he said I don t expect the record to stand a long time and he was right Just four days later Pennel surpassed the record with a 5 05 m 16 ft 6 leap at Monroe Louisiana but again his mark was not ratified 2 Again at Monroe on May 4 4 88 m 16 ft 0 in was enough for first place but on the same day at San Jose American Jeff Chase vaulted 8 74 m 28 ft 8 in not to worry they were vaulting for distance not height 6 The following weekend decathlete and future world record holder Yang Chuan kwang became the first man to vault sixteen feet and lose being beaten by Ron Morris at a meet in Fresno California 7 By the end of the month of May there were no less than ten men worldwide over sixteen feet and eight of them were Americans the other foreigner was the Finnish athlete Pentti Nikula who held the world record Sternberg had broken in April 2 8 and Sternberg had equalled Pennel s world record at the Modesto relays on May 25 But this was not ratified as a world record However Sternberg got his second and final world record at Compton California on June 7 clearing 5 08 m 16 ft 8 in and found 5 00 m 16 ft 4 enough to take the NCAA at Albuquerque the following week with Cruz Cramer Hansen and Watson in that order all on 4 82 m 15 ft 9 9 and strangely he also found 4 98 m 16 ft 4 sufficient to take the AAU title in St Louis a week later with Pennel back in sixth place on 4 80m 15 ft 9 10 the same weekend that Bob Hayes ran the first legal 9 1 s 100 yards nbsp Pennel in 1963 Despite his poor showing in recent weeks Pennel was selected to join the squad that toured Europe that summer so on Friday July 13 while Ron Hill was busy breaking the Commonwealth 10 000 m record Pennel was at the White City Stadium in London qualifying for the AAA Championships which he did with ease The following day he came back for what Mel Watman called a superlative display of pole vaulting Entering the competition at 4 46 m 14 ft 7 he cleared first time but needed three tries at 4 57 m 15 ft 0 clearing on the third try by at least eighteen inches Further attempts were hampered by the three mile track race being in progress so he had to time his run up which started on the track quite carefully He cleared both 4 72 m 15 ft 6 and 4 87 m 16 ft 0 first time His first two attempts at the new world record 5 10m 16 ft 8 were aborted as he mis timed his approach but on the third try he planted firmly and sailed over But again the mark was not ratified as a world record 2 He had three attempts at 5 19 m 17ft 0 but they didn t come to anything 11 By now there were thirteen men over sixteen feet 12 and the race was to be the first over seventeen feet Tragically Sternberg was no longer in the race On June 29 while practising a double back somersault with a twist on the trampoline at college something he had done hundreds of times before he landed hard on his neck and was paralysed from the neck down 13 When told of Pennel s new world record the modest Sternberg who turned 20 just eleven days before his accident said I really think it s great about Pennel He s the most deserving of all of us to represent the United States at Moscow I don t know of anybody who has tried harder and put more into vaulting than Pennel 14 The Americans won the match in Moscow by a mere five points which Athletics Weekly reported as a disaster and Pennel came second in the vault behind Uelses with both of them well below their best 15 But in Warsaw they crushed Poland and Pennel was described as the star performer 16 in duplicating his White City world record height though a language difficulty meant he actually thought he was attempting a new record height of 5 14 m 16 ft 10 Nikula the only European so far over 16 feet failed to impress at the Finnish Championships in Helsinki on July 17 clearing only 4 85 m 15ft 11 but on July 25 at Karhula the American Ron Morriss set a personal best of 4 92 m 16 ft 1 and three days later at Haapavesi he improved again to 5 00 m 16 ft 4 17 Then on August 9 the German Wolfgang Reinhardt joined the sixteen foot club in winning the West German Championships at Augsburg 18 Back in London on August 5 Pennel finally set a mark that would be ratified as a world record improving on Sternberg s 5 08 m 2 He improved the world record this time clearing 5 13 m 16 ft 10 and a few days later on August 25 Morris still in Finland but now at Mikkeli moved to third on the all time list with a vault 5 02 m 16 ft 5 The previous day however at Coral Gables Florida using a pole he had borrowed from fellow vaulter Fred Hansen back in March Pennel had cleared 5 20 m 17ft 0 at his first attempt and just eighteen months after the world s first 16 foot vault he became the world s first 17 foot pole vaulter 19 The world would have to wait seven years before anyone cleared 18 feet 5 48 m nbsp Pennel receiving the James E Sullivan Award Following those amazing performances Pennel was asked to appear on the popular television game show To Tell The Truth On the September 9 1963 episode Pennel scored against the celebrity panel Tom Poston Peggy Cass Earl Wrightson and Kitty Carlisle and immediately donated his winnings to the Brian Sternberg Hospital Fund On February 27 1966 he appeared on the popular panel show What s My Line not as an athlete but rather as a wine salesman a career he had just taken up He nearly stumped the panel but Bennett Cerf guessed his line at the last moment Sternberg a University of Washington pole vaulter was injured during practice in an accident that left him a quadriplegic In April 1964 Pennel was awarded the 1963 Sullivan Award as the nation s top amateur athlete and was favored to capture the gold medal at the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo Unfortunately he suffered a back injury six weeks before the Games and finished 11th with a height of 15 5 American teammate Fred Hansen set an Olympic record with a vault of 16 8 and won the gold medal 20 In 1967 Pennel was featured as Bachelor Number Three on the popular television show The Dating Game episode 67 008 during the second set Also featured as Bachelor Number Two was Burt Reynolds Pennel was chosen as the favorite by the Bachelorette who was a gymnast https youtu be Gcaa0Qw7CmM t 793After the Olympics Hansen vaulted an unratified 17 3 and Bob Seagren set the mark at 17 5 two years later Following Seagren s performance Pennel reclaimed the record at 17 6 5 34 m in 1966 his third ratified world record 2 Pennel was favored to win an Olympic gold in Mexico City in 1968 but he finished fifth He cleared 5 40 m on his second attempt and this would be enough for a medal but his pole passed under the bar which was illegal at the time the rule was abolished next year 21 In 1969 Pennel set his fourth and final world record 17 10 5 44 m 2 A series of injuries led him to retire from competition in 1970 22 After his pole vaulting career Pennel moved to Glendale California and worked in sales for Italian Swiss Colony wines as well as marketing for Adidas and other companies He also appeared in television commercials Pennel and his family appeared on an episode of Family Feud with Richard Dawson that aired on July 6 1982 https www youtube com watch v 2pv ZD rA2EIn the early 1990s he was diagnosed with stomach and liver cancer and died at age 53 Hall of Fame editPennel was inducted into the USA Track amp Field Hall of Fame in 2004 23 References edit John Pennel Archived July 10 2015 at the Wayback Machine sports reference com a b c d e f g h i 12th IAAF World Championships In Athletics IAAF Statistics Handbook Berlin 2009 PDF Monte Carlo IAAF Media amp Public Relations Department 2009 p 555 Archived from the original PDF on June 29 2011 Retrieved August 5 2009 Athletics Weekly AW17 36 14 The Borrowed Pole Time August 16 1963 Athletics Weekly AW17 36 15 Athletics Weekly AW17 22 12 Athletics Weekly AW17 22 11 Athletics Weekly AW17 23 11 Athletics Weekly AW17 26 17 Athletics Weekly AW17 27 18 Athletics Weekly AW17 29 24 Athletics Weekly AW17 26 11 Raley Dan May 22 2003 Cruel Worlds Forty years ago promising UW track standouts fell from grace Seattle Post Intelligencer Reporter Athletics Weekly AW17 30 17 Athletics Weekly AW17 30 18 Athletics Weekly AW17 32 16 Athletics Weekly AW17 34 18 Athletics Weekly AW172 34 17 Athletics Weekly AW17 35 17 Athletics at the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games Men s Pole Vault Archived November 5 2012 at the Wayback Machine sports reference com Athletics at the 1968 Ciudad de Mexico Summer Games Men s Pole Vault Archived September 20 2013 at the Wayback Machine sports reference com John Pennel First Pole Vaulter To Clear 17 Feet Is Dead at 53 The New York Times September 29 1993 USATF Hall of Fame Retrieved August 14 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Pennel John Pennel at www USATF org nbsp John Pennel at Olympedia nbsp John Pennel at Olympics com Records Preceded by nbsp Brian Sternberg Men s Pole Vault World Record HolderAugust 5 1963 June 13 1964 Succeeded by nbsp Fred Hansen Preceded by nbsp Bob Seagren Men s Pole Vault World Record HolderJuly 23 1966 June 10 1967 Succeeded by nbsp Bob Seagren Preceded by nbsp Bob Seagren Men s Pole Vault World Record HolderJune 21 1969 June 17 1970 Succeeded by nbsp Wolfgang Nordwig Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Pennel amp oldid 1220486479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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