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McDonald Bailey

Discussion in 'WWII Obituaries' started by GRW, Dec 8, 2013.

  1. GRW

    GRW Pillboxologist WW2|ORG Editor

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    "From 1946 to 1953, the sprinter Emmanuel McDonald "Mac" Bailey established a record for winning the most national Amateur Athletics Association titles. These 15 victories included the sprint double of the 100 yards and 220 yards at the AAA Championships every year apart from 1948. Mac, who has died aged 92, achieved his finest Olympic result in Helsinki in 1952 when he took the bronze medal in a photo finish in the 100m, with the same time – 10.4 seconds – as the gold and silver medallists.
    His achievements – including a 100m victory in 10.2 seconds in Belgrade, then in Yugoslavia, in 1951, matching the then world record established by Jesse Owens in 1936 – were won for Great Britain, where he lived, off and on, from the early 1940s until the late 1980s. He would ultimately have preferred to represent his native Trinidad and Tobago, a British colony until it achieved independence in 1962. He had been eligible to run for either his birthplace or his workplace, and for the London Olympics in 1948 had chosen Great Britain. He subsequently came fourth in the 100m despite the fact he was recovering from a leg injury. Partly with that injury in mind, a cash-strapped Trinidad and Tobago Olympics Association declared: "We have not made any provisions for Bailey." While Britain always regarded him with great warmth, official recognition in his land of origin came much later.
    Born in the south Trinidadian village of Hard Bargain, in Williamsville, he was the son of a schoolteacher. Mac was sprint champion at his primary and secondary schools, and at 16 beat JRN Cumberbatch, Trinidad's leading runner, over 220 yards in 21.5 seconds, a national record at the time.
    In 1939 he was elected along with Cumberbatch to represent Trinidad at the AAA Championships at White City, London. Mac, at the age of 18, was eligible to run in the junior events but declined, preferring to pit himself against seasoned runners in the open international events. Far from being humiliated, he had the distinction of reaching the semi-finals.
    Having returned to Britain with the RAF, he promptly made a name for himself in sprinting. His time of 10.2 seconds in 1951 stood for five years. Mac ran in an amateur era. For a season's hard work in training, he and his family had to content themselves with the prize of a toaster or a radio and the occasional under-the-table cash payment."
    http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2013/dec/08/mcdonald-bailey
     
  2. urqh

    urqh Tea drinking surrender monkey

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