Mike Murphy | |
---|---|
Born | Michael Charles Murphy February 26, 1860 |
Died | June 4, 1913 | (aged 53)
Years active | 1886–1913 |
Known for | Track coach, athletic trainer, football coach |
Spouse |
Nora Long (m. 1892) |
Children | 3, including George |
Michael Charles Murphy (February 26, 1860 – June 4, 1913) was an American athletic trainer and coach at Yale University (1887–1889, 1892–1896, 1901–1905), Detroit Athletic Club (1889–1892), University of Michigan (1891), Villanova University (1894), University of Pennsylvania (1896–1901, 1905–1913), and the New York Athletic Club (1890–1900). He coached the American track athletes at the Summer Olympics in 1900, 1908, and 1912. He spent a year in approximately 1884 as the trainer of heavyweight boxing champion John L. Sullivan.
The Washington Post in 1913 called Murphy "the father of American track athletics."[3] He was considered the premier athletic trainer of his era and was said to have "revolutionized the methods of training athletes and reduced it to a science."[1] He is credited with establishing many innovative techniques for track and field, including the crouching start for sprinters.[2]
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