Richard Stebbins
Richard Stebbins| Personal information |
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| Birth name |
Richard Vaughn Stebbins |
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| Born |
June 14, 1945 (1945-06-14) (age 71) Los Angeles, California, U.S. |
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Richard Vaughn "Dick" Stebbins (born June 14, 1945) is an American former athlete, winner of gold medal in 4 × 100 m relay at the 1964 Summer Olympics.[1]
At the Tokyo Olympics, Richard Stebbins finished seventh in 200 m[2] and ran the third leg in the gold medal winning American 4 × 100 m relay team, which set a new world record of 39.0.[3]
Stebbins was born and raised in Los Angeles, and later attended Grambling State University, where he played football and ran track. Following his college career, he was drafted as an end (wide receiver) by the New York Giants in 1967.[4]
Stebbins was a social studies teacher at Mayfield Woods Middle School, in Elkridge, Maryland, from the 1991-2 school year until what appears to have been his retirement at the end of the 2010-11 school year.
References
- ↑ "Dick Stebbins". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
- ↑ "Richard STEBBINS". the-sports.org. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
- ↑ "Former Olympian from Maine recalls gold medal experience". seacoastonline.com. Retrieved 2009-01-25.
- ↑ "Richard Stebbins". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2011-09-17.
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- 1912
Jacobs, Macintosh, d'Arcy, Applegarth (GBR)
- 1920
Paddock, Scholz, Murchison, Kirksey (USA)
- 1924
Murchison, Clarke, Hussey, LeConey (USA)
- 1928
Wykoff, Quinn, Borah, Russell (USA)
- 1932
Kiesel, Toppino, Dyer, Wykoff (USA)
- 1936
Owens, Metcalfe, Draper, Wykoff (USA)
- 1948
Ewell, Wright, Dillard, Patton (USA)
- 1952
Smith, Dillard, Remigino, Stanfield (USA)
- 1956
Murchison, King, Baker, Morrow (USA)
- 1960
Cullmann, Hary, Mahlendorf, Lauer (EUA)
- 1964
Drayton, Ashworth, Stebbins, Hayes (USA)
- 1968
Greene, Pender, Smith, Hines (USA)
- 1972
Black, Taylor, Tinker, Hart (USA)
- 1976
Glance, Jones, Hampton, Riddick (USA)
- 1980
Muravyov, Sidorov, Aksinin, Prokofyev (URS)
- 1984
Graddy, Brown, Smith, Lewis (USA)
- 1988
Bryzhin, Krylov, Muravyov, Savin (URS)
- 1992
Marsh, Burrell, Mitchell, Lewis, Jett (USA)
- 1996
Esmie, Gilbert, Surin, Bailey, Chambers (CAN)
- 2000
Drummond, Williams, Lewis, Greene, Montgomery, Brokenburr (USA)
- 2004
Gardener, Campbell, Devonish, Lewis-Francis (GBR)
- 2008
Carter, Frater, Bolt, Powell, Thomas (JAM)
- 2012
Carter, Frater, Blake, Bolt, Bailey-Cole (JAM)
- 2016
Powell, Blake, Ashmeade, Bolt, Minzie, Bailey-Cole (JAM)
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| Coaches |
- Bob Giegengack (men's head coach)
- Edward P. Hurt (men's assistant coach)
- Payton Jordan (men's assistant coach)
- Charles Walter (men's assistant coach)
- Ed Temple (women's head coach)
- Jack Griffin (women's assistant coach)
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