Scarecrow Press
Pages: 288
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-0-8108-5423-9 • Paperback • March 2005 • $97.00 • (£75.00)
Frank Zarnowski has served as the color commentator for many televised track and field meets including the 2004 NBC coverage of the Athens Olympic Games. He is a professor of Economics atMount St. Mary's University and the author of five books on the decathlon.
Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Introduction: A Word about History
Part 3 Part 1: Early Track and Field History
Chapter 4 1 Track and Field in Antebellum America
Chapter 5 2 American Track and Field after the Civil War
Chapter 6 3 The All-Around and the Evolution of Modern Combined Events
Part 7 Part 2: Biographies of All-Around Men
Part 8 Professionals and Caledonians
Chapter 9 4 Donald Dinnie
Chapter 10 5 James Fleming
Chapter 11 6 George Davidson
Chapter 12 7 George Goldie
Chapter 13 8 Duncan C. Ross
Part 14 The Gilded Age of Amateurs
Chapter 15 9 Malcolm W. Ford
Chapter 16 10 Alexander A. Jordan
Chapter 17 11 J. Fred Powers
Chapter 18 12 Harry L. Gill
Part 19 All-Around Men of Ireland
Chapter 20 13 Patrick Davin
Chapter 21 14 Thomas F. Kiely
Chapter 22 15 Martin J. Sheridan
Part 23 All-Around Men of the New Century
Chapter 24 16 Fred C. Thomson
Chapter 25 17 Jim Thorpe
Chapter 26 18 S. Harrison Thomson
Chapter 27 19 Harold Osborn
Part 28 All-Around Men of the Modern Era
Chapter 29 20 Bob Richards
Chapter 30 21 Charlie Stevenson
Chapter 31 22 Tom Pagani
Chapter 32 23 Bill Urban
Chapter 33 24 Bill Walsh
Chapter 34 25 Lloyd Sigler
Part 35 Eccentric Additions Complete the Story
Chapter 36 26 Ellery H. Clark
Chapter 37 27 Avery Brundage
Part 38 Appendix: The All-Around Record Book
Part 39 Bibliography
Part 40 Index
Part 41 About the Author
I always was interested in knowing where my event, the decathlon, came from. The title 'world's greatest athlete' is usually bestowed on the Olympic decathlon champion. But I have always wondered who earned that title before there was an Olympics? Or before there was a decathlon? Frank Zarnowski's new book, All-Around Men: Heroes of a Forgotten Sport, illustrates that track and field was a thriving and popular sport in the 19th century, and that its versatile "all-around men" were its stars.
— Dan O'Brien, 1996 Olympic Decathlon Champion
The All-Around, a ten-event track and field contest of endurance, speed, and strength, was introduced to the Olympic Games in 1912 and discontinued in 1977. Zarnowski, a professor at Mount St. Mary?s College who has served as a commentator for televised track and field events, chronicles the careers of the men who excelled in the event, including the All-Around?s most famous athlete, Jim Thorpe. B&w photos and statistical data are included. The book will hold appeal for sports historians as well as fans,athletes, and coaches...
— Reference and Research Book News
The All-Around, a ten-event track and field contest of endurance, speed, and strength, was introduced to the Olympic Games in 1912 and discontinued in 1977. Zarnowski, a professor at Mount St. Mary's College who has served as a commentator for televised track and field events, chronicles the careers of the men who excelled in the event, including the All-Around's most famous athlete, Jim Thorpe. B&w photos and statistical data are included. The book will hold appeal for sports historians as well as fans, athletes, and coaches.
— Reference and Research Book News