Fordham Track and Field – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Wed, 23 Aug 2023 12:43:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Fordham Track and Field – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Tom Courtney, Olympic Gold Medalist and Fordham Sports Great, Dies at 90 https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/tom-courtney-olympic-gold-medalist-and-fordham-sports-great-dies-at-90/ Wed, 23 Aug 2023 12:43:28 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=175411 Above: Fordham graduate Tom Courtney (No. 153) crosses the finish line, winning the gold medal in the 800-meter race at the 1956 Olympics. Photo: Getty Images/BettmannTom Courtney, one of Fordham University’s most accomplished student-athletes, a two-time Olympic gold medal winner, and a member of the National Track & Field Hall of Fame, died on August 22 in Naples, Florida. He was 90 years old.

“Tom was a true man of Fordham, and we are proud to call him a Ram,” said Ed Kull, director of athletics at the University. “He will forever be in the Fordham history books, and his character, persistence, and determination will continue to inspire our Rams for generations.”

As a track star at Fordham, Courtney won numerous individual titles. He also anchored the Rams’ relay team that set a two-mile world record at the Los Angeles Coliseum Relays on May 21, 1954. Sports Illustrated featured him in his Fordham gear on the cover of its May 2, 1955, issue, one month before he earned a bachelor’s degree in political philosophy from Fordham College at Rose Hill.

The May 2, 1955, cover of Sports Illustrated featuring Fordham track star Tom Courtney sprinting in his Fordham uniform with a baton in hand
Tom Courtney graced the cover of “Sports Illustrated” as a Fordham undergraduate. Photo by Mark Kauffman/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images

Courtney’s renown only grew after graduation, when he represented the U.S. at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia. He earned two gold medals—first in one of the most dramatic 800-meter races in Olympic history, then as the anchor of the 1,600-meter relay team.

“Few men have worked as hard and achieved such personal fame in such a short time as Fordham’s Tom Courtney,” student reporters Ronald Land and Bill Sturner wrote in The Ram less than two weeks later, upon Courtney’s triumphant return to campus.

A Record-Setting Track Star

Courtney was born on August 17, 1933, in South Orange, New Jersey. He grew up in nearby Livingston with dreams of becoming a professional baseball pitcher like his father, who had signed with the New York Yankees in 1928 and played in the minor leagues. Courtney played baseball and basketball, then switched to track in his junior year at James Caldwell High School in West Caldwell.

He received track scholarship offers from several universities, including Georgetown, Villanova, and Yale. He chose a full scholarship from Fordham after meeting coach Artie O’Connor at a New Jersey state meet. It was a decision that thrilled his mother, he once wrote, because her cousin Charlie Deubel was a 1935 Fordham graduate who had captained the Rams’ track team.

“While most runners are slender and wiry, Tom was broad-shouldered and muscular,” Raymond Schroth, S.J., FCRH ’55, wrote in his book Fordham: A History and Memoir, adding that the 6-foot-2-inch Courtney was “absolutely driven” and that “nothing was to get between Tom and his running.”

While competing for Fordham, Courtney won numerous high-profile races, including the 1,000-yard Metropolitan Collegiate and IC4A championships. He set a U.S. record in the 400-yard final at the Metropolitan AAU championship and a world record in the 600-yard final at the intercollegiate indoor championships. At the Washington Star games, an international invitational, Courtney bested the University of Pittsburgh’s Arnie Sowell, then considered the best runner in the world, by five strides.

Fordham’s record-setting 1954 two-mile relay team (from left): Terry Foley, Frank Tarsney, Bill Persichetty, and Tom Courtney

He formed a tight bond with his Fordham teammates Terry Foley, FCRH ’54, Frank Tarsney, FCRH ’54, and Bill Persichetty, GABELLI ’54. With Courtney as the anchor, the Rams’ “Fabulous Four” two-mile relay team recorded 13 straight wins in 1954.

Courtney also developed a close relationship with O’Connor, a 1928 Fordham graduate. During Courtney’s junior year, the coach “began mentioning the word Olympics to his star,” Father Schroth wrote. “For the next year and a half his training became both grueling and methodical as he kept a daily log of everything he did,” hoping to qualify for the 1956 games in Melbourne.

Qualifying for the Olympics—and a Date with Grace Kelly

Courtney had been a cadet in the Air Force ROTC program at Fordham, and after graduating in 1955, he was drafted into the Army. While completing basic training at Fort Dix in New Jersey, he continued to prepare for the Olympics, sometimes sneaking out of his bunk at night to run along the camp fence.

A black-and-white image of two men dressed in sport coat, slacks, and hat in a mostly empty stadium
Olympians Jack Kelly (left) and Tom Courtney were asked to model the U.S. team’s official apparel prior to the 1956 games. Photo from The Inside Track

“After I graduated from Fordham, I was on my own,” Courtney recalled in his 2018 memoir, The Inside Track. “But I knew what to do and each day I tried to improve, to work a little harder, and to become a little faster.”

The Olympic trials were held in Los Angeles in July 1956, and Courtney made the team. Later, he and Olympic rower Jack Kelly Jr. were asked to model the official apparel members of the U.S. team would wear in Melbourne. They became friends, and “he asked me if I would go on a date with his sister, Grace Kelly, of movie fame,” Courtney wrote in his memoir. “We had a nice time and I asked her for another date. She said she was going to Monaco the next week, and the next thing I knew she was getting engaged to Prince Rainier.”

‘The Most Courageous Race I’ve Seen’

On November 26, 1956, the day of the 800-meter final at the Melbourne Olympics, Courtney’s nerves nearly got the better of him.

“As I stepped on the track, my legs went rubbery,” he wrote in The Inside Track. “I found that I could not stand up and I sagged to the grass. I saw the hundred thousand people in the stands, and thought, is it possible that I am so nervous that I won’t be able to run today?”

He took an early lead, then lagged behind his U.S. teammate and college rival, Arnie Sowell, who was favored to win the race. With 120 yards to go, Courtney made a move and eventually caught Sowell “on the turn and slowly passed him,” he later wrote, only to see Great Britain’s Derek Johnson spurt past him with just 50 yards to go.

“The sprint was over for me, my legs were getting rubbery, my head was bobbling, and my body stiffening. I was finished. … But I looked at the tape with just 40 yards to go and realized this was the only chance I would ever have to win the Olympics,” he wrote. “I did not want to finish thinking I might have put a little more into it. I leaned as far forward as I could and threw my arms out ahead of me.”

He crossed the tape one-tenth of a second ahead of Johnson, finishing with a time of 1:47.7, before collapsing from exhaustion.

Tom Courtney, no. 153, crossing the finish line for the gold medal in the 800-meter race at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne.
Tom Courtney, No. 153, crossing the finish line for the gold medal in the 800-meter race at the 1956 Olympics in Melbourne. Photo: Getty Images/Bettmann

Journalist Bob Considine later called it “the most courageous race I’ve seen in 25 years of sportswriting.”

Courtney, however, was experiencing “a new kind of agony,” he later wrote. “I had never run myself into such a state. My head was exploding, my stomach ripping, and even the tips of my fingers ached. The only thing I could think was, ‘If I live, I will never run again!”

Five days later, he not only ran again, he earned his second gold medal, as the anchor of the 1,600-meter relay team. The 1956 Olympics were the last not shown live on television, so Courtney had to call his parents in Livingston to tell them he had won.

“Why was trying to win the 800 meters, the 400 meters, and the relay so important to me?” Courtney wrote in The Inside Track. “There was a poem by Sterling W. Sill taped to our refrigerator as we grew up. It read, ‘The average man’s complacent when he has done his best to score, but the champion does his best, and then he does a little more.’ I guess I saw triple in that quote.”

A Homecoming Parade in the Bronx

Upon returning to New York, Courtney appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, and on December 12, 1956, his alma mater threw him a parade in the Bronx, from Poe Park on the Grand Concourse to the Rose Hill Gymnasium, where he received a “huge, triple-decked, silver trophy” from Fordham President Laurence J. McGinley, S.J., The Ram reported the next day.

The Fordham University Band led the procession through the Bronx, followed by the student body and the Livingston High School band. Wearing his white Olympics sport coat and a straw hat, Courtney rode down Fordham Road in the back of an open-top orange Cadillac—an experience he recounted in his memoir.

An Olympian Returns to Fordham: Tom Courtney, standing in the back of a Cadillac convertible, arrives at the Rose Hill Gym on December 12, 1956, to the cheers of students before attending a rally in his honor.

“That was a lovely time,” he wrote, “and I was in a convertible with my coach, Artie O’Connor. He was very motivational for me. As we went along, he took my losses much harder than I did. He was a dedicated, wonderful man. He loved Fordham and it helped me to love Fordham.”

Raising a Family, Building a Career

After the Fordham parade, Courtney returned to an Army base in Boston and continued to compete, setting a world record for the indoor 600-meter before retiring from competition in 1957, the same year he received an honorable discharge from the Army.

Two years later, he earned an M.B.A. from Harvard University (where he also served as an assistant track coach), setting the stage for a long, successful career in finance. He became a senior vice president of finance at Peninsular Insurance Company in 1962, and later worked as an investor at several firms before forming his own, Courtney Associates, in 1983. He specialized in portfolio management and venture capital before retiring in 2002.

In 1963, he married Posy L’Hommedieu. Together they had three sons: Tom Jr., Peter (who earned an M.B.A. from Fordham’s Gabelli School of Business in 1997), and Frank.

A Loyal Ram—and an Inspiration for Student-Athletes

Over the years, Courtney remained a loyal Fordham graduate and generous financial supporter of the University. He made gifts to the men’s and women’s track and field program, to the Fordham Fund, and the Joseph A. O’Hare, S.J., Endowed Presidential Scholarship Fund.

Courtney also was a frequent attendee at Jubilee reunion weekends at Rose Hill and regional alumni events in Florida, and while he could not attend the June 2022 reunion celebrations in person, he spoke with attendees via Zoom. With his wife, Posy, at his side in Florida, he took questions from his longtime friend and former Fordham track teammate Bob Mackin, FCRH ’55, in the Bronx.

“Fordham was a wonderful place, and I’m thankful for my experience there—and my scholarship too,” Courtney told the assembled Jubilarians and guests.

In 2016, Courtney returned to Rose Hill, where he was honored in a ceremony in the Lombardi Fieldhouse. Photo courtesy of Fordham athletics

Along with Fordham and NFL football legend Vince Lombardi, FCRH ’37, Courtney was one of the first five people to be inducted into the Fordham Athletics Hall of Fame when it was established in 1971. He was inducted into the University’s Hall of Honor in 2011. And in 2016, to kick off Fordham’s track and field season, the program honored Courtney with a banner unveiling ceremony at the Vincent T. Lombardi Memorial Center at Rose Hill.

At his virtual Jubilee appearance in June 2022, Courtney received a special thank-you from Brian Horowitz, FCRH ’10, GSE ’11, head coach of the men’s track and field and cross country teams.

“Walking into the Lombardi Center each day and seeing the Olympic rings and knowing that you represented Fordham so well is a real inspiration for myself as a coach and for the current members of the team,” Horowitz said. “We hope to continue to make you proud.”

In addition to his wife, Posy, and their three sons, Courtney is survived by a brother, Kevin, and nine grandchildren.

—Adam Kaufman and Ryan Stellabotte

Watch Tom Courtney’s come-from-behind victory in the 800-meter race during the 1956 Summer Olympics. In this clip from “Greatest Thrills from the Olympics,” produced in the lead-up to the 1960 Olympics, host Bob Considine interviews Courtney, calling his epic victory “the most courageous race I’ve seen in 25 years of sportswriting.”

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Arthur Gooden Jr., FCRH ’21: An Anchor of Support, On and Off the Track https://now.fordham.edu/commencement/arthur-gooden-jr-fcrh-21-an-anchor-of-support-on-and-off-the-track/ Thu, 13 May 2021 21:18:22 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=149305 Courtesy of Fordham SportsArthur Gooden Jr. never planned to run track; his first sport in middle school was baseball. But at his afterschool program in the Bronx, one of his teachers set up a makeshift track.

“He literally took a piece of chalk and drew a circle around a part of the park,’” Gooden said with a smile.

From there, Gooden went on to Fordham Prep and began running competitively.

“I’d run a mile and that was OK to me, but then what my coach used to do was he’d continuously add miles and just didn’t tell me,” he said with a laugh. “We started running two miles and then I’d say, ‘Coach, it felt a little longer today.’ And he’d say, ‘Oh, don’t worry about it, you’re just getting really good at it.’ Eventually, I started to realize that I ran three miles and he just wasn’t telling me.”

That baseline work set the stage for Gooden’s track and field career at Fordham, where he’s run a variety of mid-distance races, from 400 to 800 meters. During the 2018-2019 season, Gooden, who received an athletic scholarship to run at Fordham, earned two medals for Fordham within two weeks: He was a bronze medalist at the Atlantic 10 Championship in the 500-meter run, and he earned another bronze at the IC4A Championship in the 500-meter race while also helping the relay team place fifth.

Those two weeks were intense, Gooden said.

“Two of our best 400-meter runners went down, an old captain of mine and one of my teammates, and the team definitely needed me to just be able to be there for them and the ability to be able to give them 100% with both my individual [races], and my relay was, it was a really great feeling,” he said.

Finding Motivation as the Anchor Leg

While Gooden has had strong individual performances, his coaches said he really shines when passing the baton to others.

“He really thrives in the relays, and I think that’s because he’s such a team player,” said Brian Horowitz, head track and field coach. “[He has] exceptional performances on the track, and he’s definitely a good role model for some of our freshmen and sophomores this year, bringing them under his wing.”

Gooden, a senior English major at Fordham College at Rose Hill who loves to write, said it’s the competition in relays that fuels him.

“Being the anchor leg …is definitely a very big activation for me to ‘hunt down’ whoever is in front of me,” he said. “I love just being able to get parallel with somebody else and say, ‘OK, let’s see how much we can give.’”

Gooden said that he felt the team was really hitting its stride right before the COVID-19 pandemic hit last spring.

“We missed the school record by 0.2 [seconds],” he said. “We’d come really close to that. And that was a really big step for us.”

Advocating for Fellow Athletes

For Gooden, that passion and drive also extends to his commitments off the field, where he’s working to improve the lives of student-athletes and grow partnerships between the athletics program and the Bronx community. As someone who has faced discrimination and racial microaggressions throughout his athletic career, he said he wants to make sure other student-athletes don’t have to face the same issues. And being a commuting student-athlete gave Gooden insight into the needs of others like him—such as the importance of schedule flexibility to fit in training, or having to factor in commuting time to get to programs and activities.

“Being a student athlete, it seems like the life, [but]it’s a lot of hours, especially for me,” he said.

Gooden used his participation as a member of the Fordham Athletics Social Justice Task Force, Fordham Connect, and the Athletics’ Advisory Committee, to bring these issues to light. He’s also been working with his coaches and staff to implement changes, such as improved advising, more support, and an updated handbook for student-athletes on their rights. The handbook includes a new reporting protocol for bias-related incidents and hate crimes, a policy on student demonstrations, and an updated mission and purpose statement.

“I’m trying to encourage a lot of coaches to look beyond just the athlete, and look at the personal side, the home side, the individual themselves,” he said. “I think, one, that makes a strong team and two, it allows a coach to nurture an overall better athlete when you take all those things into account.”

Making Strides in Diversity

Horowitz said that Gooden, who has also had to battle hamstring injuries, has been a leader for other teammates and athletes.

“Arthur was quick to just jump in and lend his voice and work with myself and the entire Athletics Department to make sure that we are focusing on all the needs of our student athletes and being as inclusive in everything as possible,” he said.

Gooden highlighted the athletics department’s diversity initiatives, which he has been a part of, and his coaching staff’s attentiveness to the needs of student-athletes as signs of progress, in addition to the handbook, he said.

“There’s been different implementations of diversity training within the athletic staff now in a variety of ways, from guest speakers to workshops,” Gooden said.

‘Unfinished Business’

Gooden said he plans to continue working on his creative writing, and possibly pursue law school after getting a master’s in English.

“I fell in love with writing—when I have time, I write poetry for myself. I like stories. I love storytelling, spoken word poetry, and when I have more time I write music and things of that nature,” he said.

His goal is to continue running at Fordham in graduate school, as he had a few years left of eligibility due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I would definitely like to fifth year because those school records hang on my mind—when I was a sophomore, I missed the school record by 0.3 or 0.4 [seconds], so I definitely have an air of unfinished business to take care of,” he said.

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