Gerry Lindgren

Biographical information

RolesCompeted in Olympic Games
SexMale
Full nameGerald Paul "Gerry"•Lindgren
Used nameGerry•Lindgren
Born9 March 1946 in Spokane, Washington (USA)
Measurements167 cm / 54 kg
AffiliationsJohn Rogers High School
NOC United States

Biography

Possibly America’s greatest ever high school distance runner, Gerry Lindgren first achieved international fame when he defeated two Soviets at the 1964 US-USSR meet over 10K. Considered a contender for the 1964 Olympic 10K, in which he competed just after high school graduation, he was hampered by a sprained ankle and finished ninth. Lindgren then attended Washington State and won 11 NCAA championships indoors, outdoors, and in cross-country, winning as follows: 1966: 3-mile, 6-mile, indoor 2-mile, Cross-country; 1967: 3-mile, 6-mile, indoor 2-mile, Cross-country; 1968: 5,000 metres, 10,000; and 1969: Cross-country. He was AAU 3-mile champion in 1967, and in the 1965 AAU 6-mile, he finished in a near dead-heat with Billy Mills, gold medalist in the 1964 10K, but they both finished in the world record time of 27:11.6, and shared the record.

In the 1980s, Lindgren later left the mainland, divorced his wife and left his family and settled in Hawai’i. He eventually became a track coach for the University of Hawai’i women’s team. Lindgren was one of the first runners who trained by attempting ultra-high distances, often running over 200 miles (320 km.) per week. Lindgren was inducted into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame in 2004.

Personal Bests: Mile – 4:01.5 (1964); 2 miles – 8:34.0 (1972); 5000 – 13:33.8 (1968); 6 miles – 27:11.6 (1965); 10000 – 28:40.2 (1967).

Results

Games Discipline (Sport) / Event NOC / Team Pos Medal As
1964 Summer Olympics Athletics USA Gerry Lindgren
10,000 metres, Men (Olympic) 9