David Hemery

David Hemery
Personal information
Born 18 July 1944 (1944-07-18) (age 72)
Cirencester, Gloucestershire, England
Height 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in)
Weight 72 kg (159 lb)
Sport
Sport Athletics
Event(s) 400 m, 110 m hurdles, 400 m hurdles, decathlon
Club Hillingdon AC, London, UK
Boston University Terriers, USA
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s) 400 m – 46.6y (1968)
110 mH – 13.4 (1970)
400 mH – 48.12 (1968)
Decathlon – 6893* (1969)

David Peter Hemery, CBE (born 18 July 1944) is a British former track and field athlete, winner of the 400 metres hurdles at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City.[1]

Early life

Hemery was born in Cirencester, Gloucestershire, but his father's accounting work took the family to the United States, where he attended school and graduated from Boston University. At one point the family had returned to Britain for a time, and Hemery moved back and forth across the Atlantic during his training.[1][2]

Athletics career

Hemery's first International title came at the 1966 Commonwealth Games, where he won the 120 yd hurdles in 14.1 seconds, a title he retained four years later at the 1970 Commonwealth Games (by then it was the 110m hurdles which he won in 13.8 seconds). Video on YouTube at 3:35.

At the Mexico City Olympics in 1968, Hemery won the 400m hurdles in 48.12 seconds, [3] a new world record. His margin of victory was the largest since the 1924, beating second-placed Gerhard Hennige from West Germany by almost a second. BBC coverage of the race is notorious for the words of the commentator David Coleman, shortly after Hemery crossed the line: "who cares who's third – it doesn't matter!" Hemery's British teammate John Sherwood turned out to be the bronze medal winner in a close finish that had to be settled by photo finish. It was an early example of so-called Colemanballs.[2] Hemery's performance helped him win the 1968 BBC Sports Personality of the Year.

In 1969, Hemery won a silver at the European Championships in the 110m hurdles, but missed the next European Championships in 1971 due to injury. At the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, Hemery defended his title, but could only finish third, behind John Akii-Bua from Uganda and Ralph Mann from the United States. He was also a member of the silver medal winning British 4 × 400 m relay team.

Superstars

David Hemery won the first ever British Superstars competition, held in 1973, registering a second victory in 1976, and was recognised as Britain's best Superstar from 1973 to 1977.

As a recently retired athlete, Hemery was free to participate in the professional Superstars contests and keep any prize money he won – unlike many other competitors (like Kjell Isaksson or Andy Ripley). Noticing the very high standard of competition within a short time of the event starting, Hemery created his own training regime, becoming adept at the gymnasium tests and canoeing and propelling himself into national fame.

After winning the original British title, Hemery then entered the 1974 event though he was struggling with illness. Eventually narrowly beaten by John Conteh, Hemery then went on to the 1975 European contest where he was beaten again, this time by Ties Kruize. When Kruize suffered serious injuries in a car crash before the final, Hemery was invited to participate and performed bravely, scoring points in every event. He was soundly beaten by Kjell Isaksson, but could still finish second. The rules for European Superstars allowed athletes to compete in "near specialist" events with a handicap, meaning that both Hemery and Isaksson were allowed to run in the 100m and Steeplechase, but only after giving the other finalists a head start. In the final 600m Steeplechase event Hemery had to make up a 100m handicap on his rivals in order to finish in overall second, and valiantly did so, but only after again falling badly at the water jump. Hitting the ground hard while challenging Isaksson for the lead, Hemery rose with a grimace of pain on his face then sprinted for the line, grabbing third. However, as soon as the race was over he collapsed, with the TV cameras showing huge swelling to his injured leg – he had run the last 100m with badly torn ankle ligaments.

In 1976 Hemery won back his British title with a dominating performance. He could not qualify for the European Final this year (beaten by Isaksson again), so he then tried his hand at the American version, qualifying for the final before finishing a disappointing 11th. Because of this sojourn to the USA, Hemery was not eligible to compete in the inaugural 1977 World Final, and he did not compete again in individual Superstars again until the 1981 Challenge of the Champions, where he finished joint fourth with his great hurdling rival John Sherwood. Winning the 1983 Past Masters event enabled him to compete in the 1984 International Final (where he finished third, though 40 years old).

Superstars record

Year Event Position
1973 British Final 1st
1974 British Final 2nd
1975 UK Heat 2nd
1975 European Final 2nd
1976 British Final 1st
1976 US Heat 1 3rd
1976 US Final 11th
1976 Swedish Heat 3rd
1981 Challenge of the Champions 4th
1983 UK Past Masters 1st
1984 International 3rd

Later life

After his running career, Hemery worked as a coach in the United States and Great Britain. In 1969 he was made an MBE followed by the Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2003.[4] For a period in the 1970s he taught at the famous English school Millfield. In 1998, he was elected as the first president of UK Athletics.[5] In 2011 Hemery became the first Briton to be awarded the European Olympic Committee’s Laurel Award for services to sport. In 2015 he ran the London Marathon to raise money for the charity that he had founded - '21st Century Legacy'.[6][7]

Author

Hemery has become the author of several books.[8]

References

Bibliography

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