Bobby Joe Morrow, 3-time winner in 1956 Olympics, dies at 84
He was not on the list.
Bobby Joe Morrow, the Texas sprinter who won three gold
medals in the 1956 Melbourne Olympics while a student at Abilene Christian
University, died Saturday. He was 84.
Morrow’s family said he died of natural causes at home in
San Benito.
Morrow won the 100 and 200 meters in Melbourne and anchored
the United States’ champion 400 relay team, matching the world record of 20.6
seconds in the 200 and helping the relay squad set a world record.
Earlier in 1956 he successfully defended his AAU 100-yard
title and swept the sprints for Abilene Christian at the national college
championships. He was honored as “Sportsman of the Year” by Sports Illustrated,
and won the AAU’s James E. Sullivan Award the following year.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with the Morrow family,”
Abilene Christian tweeted on its sports account.
Morrow spent most of his life in the Rio Grande Valley along
the Gulf of Mexico near the Mexican border. He was born in Harlingen and grew
up in San Benito. He starred in track and football at San Benito High School,
where the football stadium is named Bobby Morrow Stadium.
“Mr. Morrow’s legacy will live on forever in San Benito,”
the San Benito school district said on Facebook.
Morrow was inducted into the National Track and Field Hall
of Fame in 1989.
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