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As the
most flamboyant member of the Yale University track team,
Overton set or tied current world records in the two-mile
relay, the 1,000 yard event and the IC4A cross-country. At
the 1916 Millrose Games in New York's Madison Square Garden,
he won the Rodman Wanamaker 1.5 mile and was expected to do
the same in 1917 with a challenge coming from Ray, who was
then known for his national title in the five-mile. Ray won
that race in 6:45 (a world indoor and outdoor record).
Then at
the Madison Square Games on March 7, both Overton and Ray
won their respective best events. Overton won the Baxter Mile
in 4:19.2, a second off the world record. Three days later,
Overton broke the world record with a time of 4:16 at the
Meadowbrook Games. The next major event was the AAU indoor
nationals in which Ray went out of his way to meet Overton
in the 1,000-yard event. In that race, Overton not only defeated
his rival by 15 yards, but did so in 2:14, beating a world
record he had tied the year before.
The promotion
of a rematch began soon thereafter - a special mile race was
set for March 21 at the John Wanamaker Commercial Institute
Games billed as "THE GREATEST MILE RACE EVER RUN INDOORS."
Seats
were 25 cents or $I for box seats. More than 5,000 people
watched Ray win that race. Before a rematch could take place,
world events intruded. Along with most of his Yale classmates,
Overton signed up for military service. During most of the
spring of 1918 he trained in central France, where legend
has it he had at least one opportunity to reach the running
track. Many colorful stories surrounded Overton and his feats.
By his
own request, Overton was transferred to the front and assigned
to the 80th Company of the Sixth Marines on June 14 in the
"Bloody Red Triangle." At the height of the Second
Battle of the Marne, an allied offensive, Overton led his
company across a wheat field toward the Germans. Overton lost
his life in a heroic act of leadership. He was awarded the
Croix de Guerre with Palm from the French army. Sports-writer
Grantland Rice even marked the occasion with a forty-line
poem entitled "A Marine Comes Home."
After
his death, Yale's track coach Billy Queal, said, "Johnny
Overton was fully capable of becoming the world's first four-minute
miler if he could have continued running."
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