Sneha Girap (Editor)

Mac Wilkins

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
American

Personal best(s)
  
70.98 m (1980)

Weight
  
115 kg

Event(s)
  
Discus throw

Height
  
1.93 m


Sport
  
Athletics

Role
  
Athlete

Country
  
United States

Name
  
Mac Wilkins

Movies
  
Prefontaine

Mac Wilkins Oregon Sports Legends Mac Wilkins39 3 Discus World Records

Full name
  
Maurice Malcolm Wilkins

Born
  
November 15, 1950 (age 73) (
1950-11-15
)
Eugene, Oregon, U.S.

Olympic medals
  
Athletics at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's discus throw

Similar People
  
Wolfgang Schmidt, Steve Prefontaine, Steve James, Brian McGovern

Mac wilkins discus throw tribute video


Mac Maurice Wilkins (born November 15, 1950) is an American athlete, who competed mainly in the discus throw. He was born in Eugene, Oregon and graduated in 1969 from Beaverton High School in Beaverton, Oregon.

Contents

Mac Wilkins Mac WILKINS Discus gold medal at 1976 Olympic Games

1976 olympic games mac wilkins


College

Mac Wilkins Mac Wilkins The Wonderful World of Throwing

Famous distance running coach Bill Bowerman recruited Wilkins to the University of Oregon, where he threw the javelin 257' 8" (78.44m) as a 19-year-old freshman. As a senior, he was NCAA champion in the discus and won the first of eight U.S. national championships in the discus. He was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 1994.

Olympics

Mac Wilkins Four Stories From Mac Wilkins Throwholics

Wilkins competed for the United States in the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal, Quebec, Canada in the discus throw, where he won the gold medal with a distance of 221' 5" to defeat Wolfgang Schmidt of East Germany by four feet. Wilkins qualified for the 1980 U.S. Olympic team but did not compete due to the 1980 Summer Olympics boycott. He did however receive one of 461 Congressional Gold Medals created especially for the spurned athletes.

Mac Wilkins Mac Wilkins The Wonderful World of Throwing

Wilkins won a silver medal in the discus throw at the 1984 Summer Olympics held in Los Angeles. He placed 5th in the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, Korea.

World records

Wilkins broke the world record four times in his career. During his discus throw series on May 1, 1976 in San Jose, California, he set the world record three times with consecutive throws of 69.80 m, 70.24 m, and 70.86 m. In 1976 and 1980, Wilkins was ranked #1 in the world in the discus throw. In 1977, he was the indoor national champion in the shot put, with a throw of 69' 1.5" (21.06 m).

Coaching

From 2006 thru 2013, Wilkins was the throws coach at Concordia University, an NAIA school in Portland, Oregon. His throwers won 26 individual national championships and earned 94 All-American honors. When Al Oerter died on 1 October 2007, Wilkins became the earliest surviving Olympic champion in the men's discus. He is not the oldest; Viktor Rashchupkin—the 1980 champion—is almost a month older. In August 2013, Wilkins left Concordia University to coach for USATF in Chula Vista, California.

References

Mac Wilkins Wikipedia