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in early 1938, 20-year-old
Payton Jordan was sitting in his room at the University
of Southern California when one of his fraternity brothers
handed him a letter that had just arrived from the Soviet
Union. Jordan, a junior, was a star on the Trojans track
team and one of the world’s top sprinters. The
letter was from a young Soviet runner, Gavriel Korobkov,
who had read about Jordan in a German magazine.
“Dear Paton [sic],” the letter
began, “I am a sprinter in Soviet Union and would
like to know very much what you do. I beg of you, please
give me your training program. I’d be gracious
to you forever if you help me.”
Jordan put the letter aside for a few days then responded.
He described in detail his daily training regimen, his
diet, and the strengthening and flexibility exercises
he used. He sent the letter off to Korobkov and didn’t
think about it again for 20 years.
In 1958, the American national team was invited to Moscow
for a dual meet with the powerful Soviet squad. Jordan,
who a year earlier had been named head coach at Stanford
after building a national-championship program at Occidental
College, was a member of the American coaching staff.
When the U.S. team arrived at the airport, a member
of the Soviet entourage walked up to Jordan and introduced
himself. “Do you remember receiving a letter from
a Russian many years ago?” the man asked. It was
Gavriel Korobkov, now coach of the Soviet national team.
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EAST MEETS WEST: Jordan's friendship
with Korobkov, left, brought the meet to Stanford. |
That moment kindled a friendship that four years later
produced what the San Francisco Examiner described
as “the greatest track meet of all time.”
During two remarkable days in July 1962, only weeks
removed from a Cold War confrontation that would threaten
the world, athletes from the United States and Soviet
Union competed at Stanford Stadium. For two days, the
specter of nuclear war was replaced by the spectacle
of international brotherhood. Tens of thousands of fans
who came to root for the red, white and blue ended up
cheering as enthusiastically for the Reds.
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| Glenn Matsumura |
In early 1961, Stanford’s
athletic department was reeling from a disastrous 0-10
football season the previous fall. Fans had stayed away
in droves, leaving the department $100,000 in debt,
a huge deficit at a time when a football ticket cost
$3.50 and the entire athletic budget was less than $1
million. Athletic director Al Masters desperately needed
a new source of revenue.
He approached Jordan, who a year earlier had organized
the successful U.S. Olympic track and field trials at
Stanford Stadium, and asked about the possibility of
bringing the Soviets to Stanford for a dual meet against
the U.S. team.
“It’s possible,” Jordan said. “I
have some good friendships. There’s no doubt in
my mind that we can put on a meet that will make money,
particularly with the mystique of the Russians.”
Jordan knew he first needed the approval of the U.S.
State Department. Unfortunately, the timing could not
have been worse. The United States and the Soviet Union
were locked in an ideological and political stare-down.
Both countries had amassed huge nuclear arsenals, aimed
mostly at each other. Several months earlier, the Soviets
had shot down and captured U.S. spy plane pilot Gary
Powers, provoking an international crisis. In Berlin,
the Soviets were preparing to seal off the city and
erect a wall that would symbolically and literally separate
East from West.
In this climate Jordan contacted Harold Howland, a deputy
assistant secretary of state he had worked with in 1955
when Jordan had spent three months in Athens advising
Greek track and field coaches and training Greek athletes
for the ’56 Olympic Games. (A year later, the
Greek team broke seven national records in their best
Olympic performance since 1896.) Howland pledged his
support for what he described as a “cultural exchange.”
Jordan’s other concern was the bias of the Amateur
Athletic Union, then the governing body for track and
field in the United States, which favored Eastern cities
for high-profile meets. The only previous U.S.-Soviet
meet on American soil, held in 1959 in Philadelphia,
had been a disappointment. It had drawn only 54,000
people over two days and lost money. Jordan feared that
if he used his influence to get the Soviets to come
back, the meet might end up on the East Coast instead
of Stanford. He needed leverage, and called on his Russian
friend for help.
“Gabe, I want you to come to Stanford for an international
meet between our two countries,” Jordan wrote
Korobkov. “I’m going to extend the invitation
through the AAU, but I need you to tell them that you
will only come to Stanford, because sometimes they want
to keep these meets in the East.”
A few weeks later, Jordan got his reply. “We will
do this,” Korobkov wrote. “We will do this.”
Armed with the support of the State Department and the
knowledge that the Soviets were in his camp, Jordan
took his plan to the AAU. He invited Pincus “Pinky”
Sober, the organization’s track and field chairman,
to see what the University had to offer. He introduced
Sober to school and community leaders and showed him
Stanford Stadium, where Jordan’s dual meets routinely
drew 10,000 to 20,000 fans.
Before Sober left, Jordan made a groundbreaking request.
Typically, the AAU paid all meet expenses and retained
all proceeds. Jordan told him the Stanford athletic
department was putting on the meet to pull itself out
of debt. He said Stanford would agree to pay all the
costs if the AAU would split the net profit 50-50. “I
guarantee you we will fill the stadium and make money,”
he told Sober.
A week later, the AAU “reluctantly” agreed
to the deal, with the proviso that before the split,
Stanford would cover a $53,000 debt the AAU had incurred
the year before to transport the national team to the
U.S.S.R.
Planning began. Associate athletic director Bob Young
was put in charge of operations and security; assistant
athletic director Chuck Taylor handled arrangements
for the athletes; ticket manager Eunice DuPrau was responsible
for ticket sales; and sports information director Don
Liebendorfer promoted the event.
In the weeks leading up to the meet, Jordan received
a flurry of questions from Korobkov and his superiors,
Victor Sadovski, the honorable federal secretary of
light athletics, and Leonid Khomenkov, the Soviet Union’s
minister of sport. How high above sea level is the stadium
floor? What are the typical temperatures and humidity
in mid-July? How strong are the winds? What angle does
the sun assume? What is the composition of the track?
Jordan had earned a reputation for attending to such
details, and was known in the press as “the P.T.
Barnum of track and field.” Among his innovations:
introducing athletes over a loudspeaker prior to an
event; putting athletes’ names on the backs of
their jerseys; erecting rotating signboards so spectators
could follow the results in field events; and ringing
the track with colorful pennants.
As the meet neared, Jordan worked until 3 or 4 o’clock
every morning preparing meticulous instructions for
the meet’s judges, timers, inspectors, marshals
and meteorologists.
He recruited one of his Stanford athletes, incoming
freshman Bob Stoecker, to be a so-called implement retriever.
The job required Stoecker to collect and return the
shot, discus, hammer and javelin after each throw, but
with a twist. Because all the field events were held
on the stadium’s grassy interior, Jordan was concerned
that the competitions would mar the appearance of the
field. Whenever a divot was made after a throw, Jordan
instructed, Stoecker, ’67, MA ’71, was to
run over, fill the hole with sand and spray-paint it
green.
Donald Kennedy, then a second-year biology professor
at Stanford and later the President of the University,
signed on as a lap counter. “I was terrified,”
Kennedy recalled recently. “There had been a terrible
incident at the previous meet in Philadelphia. People
were lapping each other and the lap counter got mixed
up and lost track of how many laps some of the runners
had completed. In our meet, Pyotor Bolotnikov ran away
with the 10,000-meter run. We had to keep straight who
was in second and third place, when most of the field
had been lapped. Fortunately, we got it right.”
The demands of television posed another threat to Jordan’s
preparation. ABC’s Wide World of Sports would
carry the meet to a national audience. Producer Roone
Arledge wanted to position cameramen and announcers
all over the field, but Jordan refused. “Remember,
my first obligation is to the athletes,” Jordan
told Arledge. “My second is to the fan who pays
money coming in the gate. I’ve seen what TV can
do to a track meet. It clutters up the field and destroys
the whole atmosphere, and blocks the view of the crowd.
I’m not going to let that happen.” ABC was
limited to two roving cameras on the field. Arledge
would later send Jordan a congratulatory note for “a
beautifully run track meet.”
Elsewhere, the world looked
on anxiously as the United States and U.S.S.R. edged
closer to confrontation. A summit meeting between President
John F. Kennedy and Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev
had gone badly. Soon after that Kennedy wrote in Life
magazine that the U.S. government was examining public
buildings suitable for use as fallout shelters. In early
July, days before the track meet at Stanford, a team
of Soviet technicians was dispatched to Cuba to oversee
the installation of nuclear missiles aimed at U.S. cities.
Those sites, when discovered by American reconnaissance
aircraft two months later, would result in a naval blockade
of Cuba and a perilous 13-day standoff known as the
Cuban Missile Crisis.
But no enmity faced the 61-person Soviet team and its
coaches when they arrived at Stanford on July 14. The
next day, a group of Stanford students invited some
of the Soviet athletes to play softball in the parking
lot outside Stern Hall, where both the U.S. and Soviet
teams were housed. Over the next several days, the Soviets
attended the Ice Follies in San Francisco, went to the
top of Nob Hill, drove over the Golden Gate Bridge,
and ate lunch at Fisherman’s Wharf. They visited
a Ford plant in Milpitas to see an American assembly
line.
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FULL HOUSE: The two-day attendance
total of 153,500 was the largest ever at a non-Olympic
meet. |
The Soviet and American athletes mingled throughout
the week. They danced in a Stern Hall lounge and swam
in the Stanford pool. They played soccer, attended banquets,
sat for press conferences, and enjoyed dinners in private
homes.
Although four KGB agents accompanied the Soviet team,
there was little concern over security. Event sites
were not screened in advance, and the athletes were
allowed to go to private homes unaccompanied. There
were no demonstrations or picketing at any of the events
and practices or during the meet itself.
Jordan recalled in an interview recently that he and
his crew sought to create an atmosphere of trust and
friendship. “Our philosophy was, let’s entertain
these people. Let’s treat them like human beings,
like we want to be treated. It was a week of innocence
and joy. People came with openness and without suspicion.”
The enthusiasm for the meet and the resultant ticket
sales exceeded even Jordan’s high expectations.
A two-day pass was priced at $6. Ticket lines in front
of the athletic department stretched out onto the street.
Crowds of up to 8,000 attended the teams’ practices
at Angell Field. Anticipating a near sellout, Hal Williams,
the stadium concessionaire, ordered 200,000 soft drinks,
50,000 hot dogs, 80,000 ice cream bars, 40,000 malted
milks, 50,000 frozen orange juice sticks, 20,000 pennants,
6,000 hats and 100,000 programs.
Williams guessed right. On July 21, a Saturday, 72,500
fans showed up for the first day of the meet. The next
day, another 81,000 poured into Stanford Stadium. It
was the largest two-day total in history for a non-Olympic
track meet.
The spectators—and more than 150 reporters—had
come to see U.S. stars like sprinter Wilma Rudolph,
broad jumper Ralph Boston and “Bullet” Bob
Hayes, a sprinter who would later be a star receiver
for the Dallas Cowboys. But the real draw was the Soviets,
led by long jumper Igor Ter-ovanesian and high jumper
Valery Brumel, both world-record holders. Brumel, a
20-year-old physical education student from Siberia,
had not lost a competition in more than two years and
he would go on to win the gold medal in the Tokyo Olympics
in 1964. Prior to the meet, he had dazzled coaches while
performing “kick-ups” at Encina Gym, leaping
high enough to put his foot into the basketball net,
nearly 10 feet from the ground.

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ONE FOR THE BOOKS: Tickets
cost just $6 and bought the chance to see two
world-record performances, including Brumel's
(bottom).
Glenn Matsumura |
The high jump started at 4 o’clock on Sunday
afternoon. Brumel passed at the opening height, 6-4
3/4, and again at 6-7. He cleared the next four heights
on the first jump, missed once at 7-2 then cleared it
easily on his second attempt. By this time every other
competitor had been eliminated.
Brumel used the then-standard method known as the “straddle,”
in which the jumper led with one foot and belly rolled
over the bar. The revolutionary Fosbury flop, in which
competitors arch their back over the bar with their
legs trailing behind, would not be introduced for another
six years. Brumel cleared 7-3 on the first try, and
the bar was moved to a new world-record height—7-5,
16 inches higher than the top of Brumel’s head.
Anticipating the moment, the crowd went quiet. Brumel
loped toward the jumping pit, gathered himself and leaped.
He went up and over, barely brushing the bar. The bar
quivered, then held. Brumel sprang out of the pit, arms
raised in triumph, and the crowd exploded into a standing
ovation that lasted more than five minutes.
American hammer thrower Harold Connolly set the meet’s
other world record. Connolly had finished a disappointing
eighth at the 1960 Olympic Games, and many experts thought
he was washed up. But at Stanford he broke his own world
record with a throw of 231-10.
Rudolph delighted the crowd with a victory in the 100
meters and a stirring come-from-behind anchor leg to
win the 400-meter relay. Boston, whose world record
had been eclipsed by Ter-ovanesian only months earlier,
defeated his Soviet rival in the broad jump. Hayes sped
to victory in the men’s 100 meters.
Soviet Tamara Press won both the shot put and discus,
and provided one of the meet’s humorous moments.
During the medal ceremony, Harold Berlinger, the 5-foot-3
head of the Pacific Association AAU, struggled to reach
all the way up to Press as she stood on the first-place
platform. She bent down, grabbed Berlinger under the
armpits, and held him up while he put the medal over
her head. Then she kissed his bald forehead, and the
crowd went crazy.
Boston and Brumel were honored as track and field athletes
of the year and took a victory lap to a warm ovation
from the crowd. Now 65 and living in Atlanta, Boston
recalls the electricity that accompanied that jog. “Here
our countries were enemies and there was all this tension
in the world, but there was no tension between the athletes,”
Boston says. “Most of us felt that we were the
true ambassadors. We forgot about our two governments
and their shenanigans.”
The American men won by a score of 128-107. The Soviet
women won 66-41.
After paying all the expenses and the AAU’s share,
the Stanford athletic department netted almost $150,000.
“It was the turning point for the department,”
associate athletic director Young recalled years later
in an interview with Campus Report. “It
was the first big money we ever made.”
The plan for the closing ceremonies called for the teams
to parade off the field and out of the south end of
the stadium in separate lines. The two flag-bearers,
American high jumper John Thomas and Soviet javelin
thrower Viktor Tsybulenko, met in the middle of the
field, shook hands, and started to lead their teams
out. Then Tsybulenko turned to Thomas and said, “We
go all way ’round, yes?”
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FAST COMPANY: Hayes won the
100-meter dash to help the U.S. men defeat the
Soviets. |
The men embraced, and then the two lines of athletes
did the same. Soviets and Americans waved their flags,
blew kisses to the crowd and walked arm-in-arm in a
spontaneous, unrehearsed celebration. The crowd stood
and cheered the athletes all the way around the track.
In the stands and on the field, people wept unabashedly.
Nobody wanted to leave. For nearly an hour, the Marine
Corps Band played on—“Pomp and Circumstance,”
the Soviet national anthem, “The Star-Spangled
Banner,” and “God Bless America,”
then, having run out of pre-scripted titles, improvised
with several more festive tunes.
“It was probably the most dramatic thing I’ve
ever seen in sports,” remembers longtime Stanford
play-by-play announcer Don Klein, who covered the meet
on radio. “Two enemies ready to shoot missiles
at each other were walking side by side, with their
arms around each other, the full crowd rising. It was
a tremendous emotional experience for anyone there.”
Jordan was standing off to one side of the field when
Bob Brachman, a crusty old sportswriter from the San
Francisco Examiner approached him, tears streaming down
his face. “I’ve been covering sports for
a long time,” he said, “and this is the
first time I’ve ever cried at an athletic event.”
A Soviet sprinter tore off the team emblem from his
running shirt and gave it to Kennedy, who gave the Russian
his AAU judges’ patch. “It was just extraordinary,”
Kennedy recalls. “We’re talking a serious
phase in the Cold War here, and there was this magical
moment of camaraderie.”
Bob Stoecker, the 18-year-old kid with the bucket of
sand and green spray paint—who three years later
would win the NCAA discus title—watched in disbelief.
“It was mind-blowing,” he recalls.
Boston and Ter-ovanesian remain friends to this day.
“That meet was a very, very important part of
our lives,” says Boston. “Even after we
stopped competing, we always talked about it.”
Ter-ovanesian, now first vice president of the Russian
Athletic Federation, reflected on the meet in a recent
phone interview from Moscow. “It was not two teams
[that day],” he says. “It was one team.
“Today it sounds very sentimental. But in those
days it was much more serious. Russian rockets were
going into Cuba. We were two steps from war. Suddenly,
such a warm meeting. It was a real example of how we
can live in friendship; that we can compete and still
live together.”
Jordan, 88 years old and living in Santa Barbara, Calif.,
says the lessons are still valid. “In this terrible
time of hatred and mistrust in the world, there was
this oasis of camaraderie. And out of it came an understanding
that somehow had escaped us—that there is more
good in man than bad, that we should try to embrace
the best in everybody. I think the thousands who came
to that meet were enriched and ennobled by the experience.
In those two days, we opened a lot of minds and we opened
a lot of hearts.” |