Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Tom Churchill (athlete)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
College
  
Oklahoma

Role
  
Athlete

Nationality
  
American

Died
  
1963

Honors
  

Education
  
University of Oklahoma

Name
  
Tom Churchill


Tom Churchill (athlete)

Sport
  
Baseball Basketball Football

High school
  
Central (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma)

Conference
  
Missouri Valley Conference

Positions
  
Pitcher, Basketball positions, End

Tom churchill first principles


Thomas "Tom" Churchill, Sr. (1908–1963) was an American star athlete in the 1920s who participated in the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, Netherlands as a decathlete, and was a multi-sport standout for the University of Oklahoma between 1927–28 and 1929–30.

Contents

Early life

Churchill was born in Blair, Oklahoma. He attended Central High School in Oklahoma City where he has a successful sports career. Churchill participated on the football, track and field, baseball, basketball and swimming teams and was chosen as a scholastic All-American. He also earned all-state honors in both football and basketball, and he was considered the best all-around high school athlete in the state of Oklahoma.

Early OU days

Churchill enrolled at the University of Oklahoma in the fall of 1926, but due to collegiate athlete athletics rules at the time, freshmen were not allowed to play for their schools' varsity teams. He decided to box for his first year and won titles in both light-heavyweight and heavyweight classifications. When he became eligible to play for the school's sports teams as a sophomore in 1927–28, Churchill played for the football and basketball teams and was selected to the All-Missouri Valley Conference Team in basketball. That season, the basketball team finished 18–0 and were MVC champions. Even though he was a star athlete in multiple sports, basketball was considered his best sport.

1928 Summer Olympics

In the spring of 1928, Churchill won the Kansas Relays' decathlon event. He repeated as the Kansas Relays decathlon champion in 1929.

Churchill also qualified to participate in the 1928 Summer Olympics as a member of the United States track and field team. In the field of 38 decathletes, Churchill finished in fifth place in the Olympic decathlon competition.

Later OU days

Churchill returned to Norman in the fall of 1928 for his junior year. While the football team only finished with a 5–3 record and finished third in the Big Six Conference (OU's new athletic conference as of that year), the basketball team had more success. For the second season in a row they were crowned conference champions as they finished with a 13–2 record. Churchill was once again named all-conference, and at the end of the season he was also honored as a consensus All-American.

In 1929–30, his senior year at Oklahoma, Churchill had the most success of his football career. Playing at the end position, and occasionally as a running back, he was honored as an all-conference performer and was also named as a third-team All-American by the United Press and NEA. He was invited to play in the East–West Shrine Game as well. In the winter, the basketball team failed to three-peat as conference champions, and Churchill also failed to repeat as all-conference and All-American. In the springtime, however, he earned his lone varsity letter as a pitcher for the baseball team. The Sooners had great success that season and were crowned co-conference champions under head coach Lawrence Haskell.

When Churchill's collegiate athletics career was over, he had earned 10 varsity letters in four sports, earned multiple all-conference selections and played on teams that won three total conference championships (not including boxing titles).

Professional baseball and coaching

After college, Churchill signed a contract with the New York Yankees farm league. A damaged shoulder prematurely ended his career. Chuchill then went on to coach the University of New Mexico men's basketball team for the 1931–32 and 1932–33 seasons.

References

Tom Churchill (athlete) Wikipedia