Thrice last
autumn, while sound boiled up from all the broad decks and crowded galleries of
Melbourne's historic Cricket Ground, a rangy, dark-thatched and extraordinarily
self-possessed young sprinter from Texas fled to victory ahead of the fastest
runners in the world. Twice—in the Olympic 100-and 200-meter races—he won
individual events and became the first man to thus gain two gold medals for the
U.S. since the great Jesse Owens did so in Berlin back in 1936. He ran the
anchor lap in the 400-meter relay and made another American triumph (and a new
world record) certain with a final, unchallengeable burst of speed. In those
exciting moments Bobby Joe Morrow of Abilene Christian College and the Valley
of the Rio Grande earned clear title to the accolade: Sportsman of the Year for
1956.
Athletic prowess
was not the sole reason for Bobby Morrow's selection, although it was an
important factor indeed in a year so notable for excellence in sport. His
multiple victories, gratifying though they may have been to his countrymen,
could hardly have qualified him for the honor if they had not also served to
dramatize the spirit as well as the accomplishments of the Olympic movement.
But Bobby Morrow the unusual sprinter is also an unusual young man, and none
symbolized more eloquently than he the ideals of sportsmanship which the
athletes of the U.S. Olympic team took with them to Australia.
They were ideals
which often seemed extraordinarily perishable during the troubled Olympic year
1956, but which, by the same token, also seemed extraordinarily precious. In
seeking a successor to England's Roger Bannister (1954) and Brooklyn's cool
young Pitcher Johnny Podres (1955), it would have been difficult to deny an
Olympic athlete who embodied them as did Morrow—and who could run like a
scalded cat into the bargain.
For all this,
Bobby Morrow was hard pressed by other deserving athletes in 1956, a year of
glittering performances and great moments in many fields of sport. Mickey
Mantle gave the grand old game of baseball a peculiar kind of excitement which
it had not known since the days of Babe Ruth. The broad-backed, boyish Yankee
outfielder, now 25, had a wonderful season generally, but it was his prodigal
early-summer production of home runs that stirred the public soul. Mantle ended
up with 52, eight short of Ruth's record, but for the first time in decades,
fans turned out to marvel at soaring drives made at the expense of their own
teams. Meanwhile, that aging Giant discard, Sal Maglie, was sold to the Dodgers
and all but hypnotized National League batters in one of the most heart-warming
comebacks on the mound in modern times. And in October the Yankees' tall night
owl, Don Larsen, performed the Miracle-in-The- Bronx by pitching the first
perfect game in 34 years and the only no-hitter ever accomplished in a World
Series.
Floyd Patterson
became heavyweight champion of the world at 21—the youngest in the history of
the prize ring. Few fighters of such obvious talent were ever so consistently
downgraded by the so-called experts as was Patterson in the first four years of
his professional career. The International Boxing Club steadily refused him
fights at Madison Square Garden during his climb to the top, and after his
victory over Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson last June—won the hard way with a broken
right hand—the New York sportswriters tolerantly characterized him as a
deserving tyro who could not hit. His savage grace, his weaving, highhanded
defense and the thunderclap punching which stopped Archie Moore and won him the
championship seemed to burst upon them and upon the television public (which
had seldom been allowed to see him) as a revelation. But, revelation or not,
Patterson was enthusiastically accepted as a worthy successor to Rocky
Marciano.
Nineteen
fifty-six was not only an Olympic year, it was a great one for track and field
all around the world, and many of its memorable feats took place at Melbourne
within a few hours of Bobby Morrow's own triumphs. Russia's incomparable
Vladimir Kuts, the only other man to emerge from the main stadium a double gold
medal winner, not only succeeded Czechoslovakia's storied Emil Z�topek as the
world's greatest distance runner but—by the manner in which he won the
5,000-and 10,000-meter races—proved himself, indisputably, the greatest
distance runner of all time. Fordham's big Tom Courtney also made track
history; for sheer courage and wild drama nothing in the Games quite touched
his finish in the 800-meter run—although he was almost unconscious from
exhaustion and quite obviously beaten 30 yards from the tape, he somehow
managed a second stretch drive, overtook England's Derek Johnson and flung
himself over the line first.
Ireland's (and
Villanova University's) young Ron Delany beat the greatest field of milers ever
assembled in winning the Olympic 1,500 meters. Australia's world record holder,
John Landy, failed to gain his heart's desire, a victory for his country in the
metric mile. But Landy stamped his name on the year 1956 nevertheless; his
third-place run in the Olympics, made on crippled legs, was a feat of gallantry
in itself, and the world of track would not soon forget how he flew 8,000 miles
to California last spring and then ran two sub-four-minute miles in eight
days.
Nineteen-year-old
Charles Dumas of Los Angeles high-jumped seven feet plus a half inch at the
Olympic trials, the first amateur ever to clear the magic height in competition
(professional basketball's Walt Davis having twice jumped seven feet during
exhibitions in 1955). That dedicated old cannoneer, Parry O'Brien, threw the
16-pound shot 63 feet 2 inches—extending his own world record by more than 2
feet and heightening his pre-eminence among weight men. New Jersey's husky Milt
Campbell broke the Olympic decathlon record. At the Winter Olympics in Cortina,
Italy, Austria's engaging Toni Sailer performed sensationally as he swerved and
plummeted to victory in the downhill, the slalom and the giant slalom.
Handsome Frank
Gifford, left half back of New York's football Giants, earned the professional
leagu�s most-valuable-player award with dazzling bursts of ball carrying. Notre
Dame Quarterback Paul Hornung, playing on the worst Irish eleven since World
War I, performed game-day miracles all by himself—and was quite possibly the
best college back of the year.
Endless others
earned the right to admiration and applause: the Hungarian Olympians (see page
20) for coursing the world as flag bearers of freedom; gentle, 82-year-old
Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons for his final successes with Nashua—and his first with a
new potential champion, Bold Ruler; England's Donald Campbell for driving his
jet-powered speedboat Bluebird 280 miles an hour despite choking engine fumes
and nightmarish vibration; Althea Gibson, the Negro girl who made good in
big-time tennis, and Australia's Ken Rosewall and Lew Hoad for their domination
of all the world's courts; Avery Brundage, despite the hornets' nests he
stirred up, for his stubborn insistence on pure amateurism; California's
special boxing investigator, James Cox, and New York's boxing commissioner,
Julius Helfand, for their effective drives against the crooks and leeches of
pugilism; and many more.