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Georgia Track and Field History

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THE BEGINNING

Track and field is one of the oldest sports at the University of Georgia, first competing intercollegiately in 1897, five years after the inaugural football unit began play and just one year after the first baseball team took to the diamond.

Interest in track and field at UGA began in the late 1800s with the annual intramural field days. At the request of Nash Broyles and Thomas Reed, the Athletic Association set up the first track and field contest in school history on May 28, 1887.

A subsequent field day was added a day later. Many of the events of that weekend would be foreign to a meet held today as wrestling matches, the baseball throw, tugs of war and the greased pig chase provided the entertainment in the 19th century.

After 10 years of field days, the University participated in its first intercollegiate track contest at the 1897 Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association meet in Nashville, Tenn., where Georgia accumulated 13 points to secure a fourth-place finish out of 14 teams.

The school’s first dual meet came a year later against Georgia Tech with UGA taking a 75-30 victory.

Regarded as track and field pioneers in the state of Georgia, The Atlanta Constitution noted in a May 26, 1894 article that “the University was much further along with their track program than any other state school.”
 
COACHES

Petros Kyprianou became the 14th head coach of the Bulldog program in July 2015. A UGA assistant from 2008-14 after arriving from Boise State, Kyprianou was named the team’s associate head coach in 2014 before his promotion to head coach. Over the last eight years, his crew has been on a torrid pace, accumulating 32 NCAA titles, 63 SEC championships and *155 First Team All-American certificates (*counting the 16 honors earned during the pandemic shortened 2020 indoor season).

Former head coach Wayne Norton directed Georgia’s storied track program until 2015 after taking over for coach John Mitchell after the 1999 season. Norton, who finished with a pair of SEC women’s team titles on his resume, guided his squads to 29 top-20 national finishes and led the Bulldogs to scores of SEC and NCAA individual crowns. He previously served nine years as an assistant in charge of jumps at Georgia.

Mitchell, an esteemed member of the track and field fraternity, built his reputation at the University of Alabama, where he won three SEC Coach of The Year awards.

Mitchell led the Georgia men’s team to five top-10 finishes in the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Mitchell also helped elevate the UGA women’s team to a new level of excellence by guiding them to third at the 1995 NCAA outdoor meet, second at the 1996 indoor event and fourth in the 1999 NCAA Outdoor Championships. The women earned their first SEC team title outdoors in 1995, and Mitchell was named the SEC’s indoor and outdoor Coach Of The Year.

The first Georgia coach was John Mahan, a native of New York, who coached during the 1897 and 1898 seasons and ended his brief career with a perfect 1-0 dualmeet record. Following Mahan were Billy Reynolds, a Princeton graduate who also coached baseball, C.O. Heidler, an assistant basketball coach, and W.A. Cunningham, one of Georgia’s football coaches.

With interest in track and field waning, the sport was revived by Herman J. Stegeman, a star at the University of Chicago who developed track and field into a popular sport at Georgia. Stegeman led UGA for 17 years and built one of the strongest teams in the South during his tenure. Along with assistant Weems Baskin, Stegeman guided Georgia to the 1937 SEC championship, still the only men’s SEC team title in the program’s history. The star of the 1937 team was a youngster named Forrest Towns, whom everyone simply called “Spec”. Towns captured his second NCAA title in the high hurdles that year.

Baskin coached one more season after Stegeman ascended to the Athletic Director’s position, then turned the reigns over to another future Hall of Famer, Towns, who would enjoy the longest tenure of any coach at UGA. He coached for 34 seasons before retiring in the fall of 1975.

Taking over for Towns was his long-time assistant and fellow Georgia track and field great Lewis Gainey. Gainey directed the Bulldogs during one of their most successful periods in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

All-Americans such as Mel Lattany, Stanley Blalock, Dothel Edwards, Lester Benjamin and Herschel Walker were just a few of Gainey’s prized pupils.

Gainey was assisted by Georgia’s first three women’s coaches, Bill Katz, Steve Sitler and Mike Sheeley, before taking over the female squad in 1988. The “Bulldog Babes”, as they were known at first, immediately began producing All-Americans like Veronica Walker, Kathy Rankins, Linda Detlefsen and Gwen Torrence.
 
FACILITIES

Five different facilities have housed Georgia’s track and field teams. Herty Field, named for Dr. Charles Herty, was the first and was also shared by the football and baseball. With the construction of Sanford Field and a track around it, the team was able to relocate for another 17 years.

A new field with the same name was later constructed just 200 yards from the original Sanford Field. The second incarnation was used until World War II when the U.S. Navy came to Athens. The Navy completed a new track, described as a “million-dollar facility”, and gave it to UGA.

In 1965, the track and field team found a permanent home on the southwestern corner of the athletic complex. The facility was renamed for Forrest “Spec” Towns in a dedication ceremony held during the 1990 SEC Outdoor Championships in Athens. Towns passed away a year later, but a granite marker honoring him stands at the southeast entrance to the facility he helped make possible.
 
SEC COMMISSIONER'S TROPHY

The SEC Commissioner’s Trophy is given annually to the male and female athletes who tally the most points at the SEC meets.

Denzel Comenentia won the last two trophies for UGA at the 2018- 19 SEC Outdoor Championships. In 2019, he won his third straight league shot put crown and was second in both the hammer throw and discus to score 26 points.

Before Comenentnia, the Bulldogs most recent honorees were Patricia Sylvester and Ian Burrell. Sylvester won both the triple jump and the long jump and was the runner-up in the high jump at the 2006 SEC Outdoor Championships to rack up 28 points as her team captured the championship. She returned to score a whopping 26 points at the 2007 SEC indoor meet and was given the honor again. Burrell, standing at 5-foot-5, captured both the 3000- and 5000-meter titles on the men’s side at the 2007 SEC Outdoor Championships to pile up 20 points.

Since 1933, Georgia has had 21 high-point performers, including Graham Batchelor in 1933 and ’34, Towns in 1937, Vassa Cate in 1939, and Lewis Gainey, who tied for the outdoors honors in 1965. Mel Lattany, however, had the most points ever by a Bulldog with 108.5 in four years, including 22.5 in 1981 when he won both the indoor and outdoor awards. Lester Benjamin took the long and triple jump titles at the 1984 outdoor meet to win the trophy with 27.5 points.

One of the Commissioner’s Trophys captured by the Lady Bulldogs was in 1999 as Debbie Ferguson won the award and a total of nine have been claimed by the Georgia women. Ferguson scored 23.5 points at the outdoor championships to lead the Georgia women to a fourth place finish. Icolyn Kelly won it twice in 1995 thanks to her diverse talents. Kelly had 23 points in the indoor championships, but her 32.5 points outdoors led Georgia to its first ever women’s team crown. Kelly’s score of 32.5 points would have beaten five of the 11 teams competing. Kelly won the triple jump, took second in the long jump, fourth in the high jump, fourth in the javelin throw and fourth in the seven-event heptathlon. Kelly’s marks in the SEC meet were all season bests. Hyleas Fountain also earned double honors in 2004. Her 44 points at the SEC Indoor meet was a conference alltime points record. She also racked up 34.50 points at the outdoor meet to take home the trophy.
 
GEORGIA TRACK & FIELD TIMELINE

1887 - The UGA Athletic Assoc. sets up the first track contest in school history with a field day on May 28.
1897 - UGA participates in first intercollegiate contest at the SIAA meet in Nashville, Tenn.
1898 - Georgia completes its first undefeated season, beating Georgia Tech and winning the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association meet over Vanderbilt and Tech.
1904 - Georgia wins the first state meet, topping Emory and Georgia Tech.
1907 - The scheduled battle of the two Southern track powers, Georgia and Vanderbilt, is canceled because a bridge at the foot of Lookout Mountain in Chattanooga is accidently dynamited, delaying train passage; the meet is never rescheduled.
1913 - Captain Dave Paddock convinces referees at a meet to not announce the height of the high jump bar because he believes freshman Pope Hill will place if he does not know the exact height of the bar; Paddock is right; Hill, a superstitious star, soars above the bar and scores Georgia’s only point of the meet.
1933 - Bill David (high jump) and Graham Batchelor (broad jump, javelin) capture Georgia’s first SEC titles.
1936 - Forrest “Spec” Towns wins the Gold Medal in the 120-yd. hurdles at the Berlin Olympics.
1937 - Behind the hurdling of Towns, who never ran track until he arrived at UGA, Georgia wins its only men’s SEC title.
1949 - A 9-year drought without an SEC champion is broken by J.B. Farr in the high jump.
1960 - Mark Carr outleaps the competition in the broad jump to win the Bulldogs’ first SEC indoor title.
1976 - James Barrineau wins the first of two SEC outdoor high jump honors and then places 11th at the Montreal Olympics.
1981 - Mel Lattany wins both the indoor and outdoor SEC Commissioner’s trophies and ends his career with an astonishing 108.5 points in conference competition.
1982 - Kathy Rankins earns the first All-America honor (indoor long jump) for the women.
1983 - The Bulldogs receive their first women’s individual SEC title, thanks to heptathlete Debbie DaCosta.
1984 - Lester Benjamin, Stanley Blalock, Neal Jessie and Sam Palmer win the 400-meter relay at the NCAA Outdoor Championships; it is Georgia’s first men’s title since Spec Towns; Linda Detlefsen captures Georgia’s first women’s individual NCAA championship in the indoor 1,500-meter run.
1986-87 - Gwen Torrence sprints to an unprecedented four NCAA championships: the indoor 55-meter dash (twice) and outdoor 100-meter and 200-meter dashes.
1989 - Kim Engel hurls the javelin a school-record 196-8 to win the NCAA outdoor title.
1992-94 - Brent Noon wins three straight NCAA titles in the outdoor shot put.
1995 - Hrvoje Verzi earns the NCAA indoor triple jump crown with a leap of 54-5.5; Georgia’s women, led by All-Americans Gudrun Arnardottir, Debbie Ferguson, Icolyn Kelly, Reeta Laaksonen and Monika Ronnholm, win their first SEC title during the outdoor season and then record a school-best third-place showing at the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
1996 - Debbie Ferguson wins the 200-meter dash at the NCAA Indoor Championships in leading the Bulldogs to second place overall, the top finish in school history.
1997 - Erin Jones earns All-America honors outdoors in the 5000-meter run as Georgia celebrates its track centennial.
1999 - Ferguson captures NCAA indoor title in 60-meter dash for her fourth career national title at Georgia; Vigdis Gudjonsdottir wins NCAA title in the javelin; women’s team finishes fourth in NCAA Outdoor Championships led by Ferguson’s 21 points to register second-best NCAA Outdoor finish in school history.
2001 - Andras Haklits wins NCAA titles in the weight throw indoors and hammer throw outdoors; Thorey Elisdottir wins the NCAA indoor pole vault with the best mark-ever in the event in collegiate women’s history (14-9.50); Georgia athletes garner eight additional All-America honors.
2002 - Andras Haklits wins his fourth NCAA title, winning the hammer throw for the second straight year; UGA earns a total of nine All-America certificates on the year; legendary Lady Bulldog Gwen Torrence elected to National Track and Field Hall of Fame.
2003 - Georgia earns 14 All-America honors, including Lucais MacKay’s NCAA title in the hammer throw and Hyleas Fountain’s NCAA title in the heptathlon.
2004 - Georgia’s 13 All-America awards include Hyleas Fountain’s three national titles, as well as the American collegiate record in pentathlon for Fountain; freshman sensation thrower Jenny Dahlgren is a double All-American honoree.
2006 - The Lady Bulldogs swept both the SEC indoor (first in school history) and outdoor titles; Patricia Sylvester earns the SEC outdoor Commissioner’s Trophy.
2007 - Edging teammate Levern Spencer, who finished second, Sylvester won the NCAA indoor high jump title and Dahlgren won her second straight NCAA outdoor title in the hammer throw.
2008 - Chris Hill captured Georgia’s first NCAA men’s javelin title on the same track that he shattered the school record in the event earlier in the season at the Drake Relays.
2009 - Freshman Torrin Lawrence opens his career by breaking the school record in the indoor 200 before recording UGA’s first SEC indoor title in the event as well as an All-America certificate; Chris Hill claims his second straight NCAA javelin title for the men.
2010 - Lawrence’s 45.03 and 45.10 400 times indoors makes him one of the world’s top performances of all-time; Nikola Lomnicka debuts for UGA and wins the NCAA hammer title.
2012 - The UGA men score the most points in history (85.5) at the SEC Indoor Championships; the teams combined for the best total (217) ever at the SEC outdoor meet.
2013 - For the first time since 2007, Georgia had a pair of NCAA champions in a single year as freshmen Shaunae Miller (indoor 400m) and Freya Jones (javelin) won.
2014 - UGA combined for three top-10 team NCAA finishes with five individual national champions; the Bulldogs lost former NCAA sprint champion and record holder Torrin Lawrence in a tragic car accident.
2015 - Kendell Williams topped her NCAA record in the pent (4,678) as UGA matched its 3rd and 5th-pl. finishes from ‘14; Maicel Uibo won his second NCAA decathlon title and third consecutive SEC title.
2016 - Lady Dogs scored a team record 45 pts. to take 3rd at NCAA Indoors, match UGA best with 3rd-pl finish at NCAA Outdoors; women’s team tied UGA record with five NCAA individual titles.
2017 - Four top-six national team finishes highlighted year as women were runner-ups indoors and outdoors; Devon and Kendell Williams completed the “sibling sweep” by winning NCAA multi titles
2018 - The Lady Bulldogs captured their first NCAA team title indoors after scoring a school record 61 points to top the nearest foe by 12 points; the Georgia men answered with their first outdoor national team championship by topping the Gators by 10 points with a program record 52 points.
2019 - The Georgia men highlighted the year with a fourth-place finish at NCAA outdoors thanks in part to Johannes Erm’s national title in the decathlon with the 10th-best score in NCAA history (8,352).
2020 - The indoor season was stalled before the NCAA Championships and the outdoor season was canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic.