Go,
Henry, Go!
by
Eric Englund
by Eric Englund
DIGG THIS
On April 8,
1974, Henry (Hank) Aaron broke Babe Ruth’s all-time home run record.
For a twelve-year-old baseball junkie, watching this event on television
was the highlight of a lifetime – even bigger than watching Neil
Armstrong walk on the moon – after all, I was just a kid. Exactly
four years later, another athlete named Henry entered my consciousness.
On April 8, 1978, while running for Washington State University’s
men’s track team, Henry Rono broke the world record in the 5,000
meters. In my hometown of Spokane, WA, which is 80 miles from WSU’s
Pullman campus, this was exciting news. Henry Rono had become a
local hero. And then, sadly, in a few short years he had completely
fallen from grace. Yet, some 29 years after setting the aforementioned
world record, personal redemption
and triumph are at hand for Henry Rono.
Is it fair
to mention Henry Rono in the same breath as Hank Aaron? In many
respects, the answer is "yes." Both competed before steroids,
human growth hormone, blood doping, and other unethical practices
infected their respective sports. Hence, both Henrys took their
natural talents to the outer limits of athletic excellence.
Although it
is difficult to compare a distance runner to the man who hit 755
home runs (the ethical way), Henry Rono’s list of athletic accomplishments
is nothing short of astonishing:
- Henry Rono
is one of three men in history to win the NCAA Men's Cross Country
Championship three times; doing so in 1976, 1977, and 1979.
- 1977 NCAA
indoor champion in the 3,000 meters
- 1978 NCAA
steeplechase champion
- 1978 winner
of gold medals in the 3,000-meter steeplechase and the 5,000 meters
at the Commonwealth Games
- 1978 winner
of gold medals in the 3,000-meter steeplechase and the 10,000
meters at the All-Africa Games
- During a
span of 81 days, in 1978, Henry Rono set an astounding four world
records:
- April
8, 1978: In Berkeley, CA, Rono runs the 5,000 meters in
13:08.4. This shaves fully 4.5 seconds off of the previous world
record.
- May
13, 1978: In Seattle, WA, Rono runs the 3,000-meter steeplechase
in 8:05.4 beating the world record by 2.6 seconds.
- June
11, 1978: In Vienna, Austria, Rono shatters the 10,000 meters
world record by 8.1 seconds. His time was 27:22.5.
- June
27, 1978: In Oslo, Norway, Rono breaks the 3,000 meters
world record by a full three seconds. His time was 7:32.1.
- 1979 NCAA
steeplechase champion
- September
13, 1981: In Oslo, Norway, Henry Rono breaks the world record
again in the 5,000 meters. His time was 13:06.2. He beats his
own world record by 2.2 seconds.
As George Malley,
a former American record holder in the steeplechase, stated: "Over
the years we've all heard many athletes declare themselves to be
‘artists.’ Rono never claimed anything; he just ran. But if ever
there was a ‘performance artist’ in our sport, it was Rono."
Additionally, as Mark Zeigler of the San Diego Union Tribune put
it: "Rono did it running alone out front, without challengers
to push him, without pace-setting rabbits."
As Rono’s gaudy
résumé took just a few years to build, Hank Aaron’s impressive résumé
was built over 23 baseball seasons which includes most lifetime
runs batted in (2297), most years with 30 or more home runs (15),
1477 extra-base hits, 6856 total bases, and most career home runs
(755). Hank Aaron’s high level of consistency and durability is
unparalleled.
Henry Rono’s
final world record most certainly came the hard way. This world-class
athlete had become an alcoholic as he struggled to handle his fame.
In his own words: "I did well. I just didn't know how to manage
it. Maybe it was an African guy coming to the Western world for
the first time – it's hard to handle that life." In 1981, while
spending time in Europe, Rono had difficulty entering races. Track
officials saw an out-of-shape athlete and Henry had to plead his
way into the competitions. Gradually, Rono raced himself back into
shape. On September 12, 1981, he went on an all-night bender in
Oslo, Norway. When he woke up on the morning of September 13th,
Henry ran for an hour to sweat out the alcohol. He went back to
the hotel, ate lunch and took a nap. That evening, he ran the 5,000
meters and broke the world record – the one he had set in 1978.
No human growth hormone, no steroids, no blood doping; just pure
talent, guts, determination, and some residual alcohol.
By 1984, Henry
Rono was in a tailspin. Any opportunities to participate in the
Olympics had come and gone. Kenya, regrettably, had boycotted the
1976 and the 1980 Olympics. Accordingly, while Henry was in his
prime, he was denied the world-stage he so richly deserved. Yet
none of this mattered much as compared to getting that next drink.
And then, for the better part of two decades, Henry Rono – the Nandi
tribesman from Kiptaragon village in Kenya’s Rift Valley – had become
a lost soul in America.
Oh, how the
mighty had fallen. Rono had gone from the world’s highest-paid track
athlete to little more than a drifter. From 1986 to 1996 Henry moved
from city to city. He had been in and out of a dozen rehab centers.
He lived in homeless shelters in Washington, D.C. and Salt Lake
City. Odd jobs were the order of the day – such as parking cars
in Portland, OR and working as a skycap at the Albuquerque airport.
Heck, he even pleaded for a job as a janitor at Nike’s headquarters
in Beaverton, OR. His former sponsor turned him away. Talk about
adding insult to injury.
In complete
contrast, after retiring
as a baseball player, Hank Aaron moved into the Atlanta Braves’
front office as an executive vice-president. There he became an
advocate for minority hiring in baseball. He was elected to baseball's
Hall of Fame in 1982. His autobiography, I
Had a Hammer, was published in 1990. In 1999, to celebrate
the 25th anniversary of breaking Ruth's record, Major League Baseball
announced the Hank Aaron Award – given annually to the best overall
hitter in each league. He was honored with the Presidential Medal
of Freedom in 2002. To be sure, Henry Aaron is a role model.
Eleven years
ago, in 1996, Henry Rono did settle in Albuquerque, NM. Better yet,
for the past five years, he has been sober. This man, who did earn
his bachelor’s degree from Washington State University, is now a
teacher in Albuquerque’s Truman Middle School. Not surprisingly,
he is also coaching track.
At age 55,
Henry Rono is running competitively once again. One of his objectives
is to break the world record, in the mile, for the 5559 age
group. The current record stands at 4:40.4. Another objective is
to compete in the World Masters’ Championships, in Italy, this coming
September. Rono’s sixth-place
finish (for his age group), in Spokane’s 12k Lilac
Bloomsday Run, shows that Rono is making great progress toward
competing at the upper echelon of his age category. Notably, Bloomsday
draws world-class runners from around the globe while also serving
as a fun-run for the less serious – 50,000 participated in the 2007
race.
Today, just
as Hank Aaron does, Henry Rono stands before the world as a role
model. As Rono stated in a recent interview:
"I want to teach the people that you can come back from the
streets, and being homeless, and recover your life." Henry
Rono does not duck from the tough questions reporters ask about
his lost years…nor does he run from his past. Instead, he is running
towards his future and setting a fine example not only for aspiring
distance runners, but for anyone struggling with chemical dependency.
Presently,
Hank Aaron is being hounded by the question
as to whether or not he will attend the game in which Barry Bonds
breaks his all-time home run record. Aaron has no intention of attending
that game. Instead, Aaron implied that he’d rather go golfing than
watch Bonds hit that 756th home run. Some accuse Hammerin’
Hank of running away from the issues surrounding Bonds. To the contrary,
attending the game would be tantamount to giving a personal stamp
of approval regarding Bonds’ unethical and dishonest approach to
baseball. Aaron has taken a position of great principle and sends
a strong message to all athletes and sports fans alike – the ends
do not justify the means.
When
Barry Bonds surpasses Hank Aaron’s home run record, I will harken
back to the magical dates of April 8, 1974 and April 8, 1978. In
my mind’s eye I will first see Henry Aaron’s home run trot, around
the base paths, as he breaks Babe Ruth’s most famous record…and
then I will see Henry Rono, running ferociously, as he begins his
assault on track & field’s record books. Two men, of great natural
ability and character, who took very different paths to becoming
role models. When Bonds hits number 756, my response will simply
be: "Go, Henry, go!"
June
6, 2007
Eric
Englund [send him mail], who
has an MBA from Boise State University, lives in the state of Oregon.
He is the publisher of The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr. Gerald Swanson. You
are invited to visit his website.
Copyright
© 2007 Eric Englund
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