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The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
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Mister Jennings Offline
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The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
Ireland's Only Boston Champion, ETSU's Only Boston Champion
by PJ Browne

Sometimes it’s Better to Be Lucky Than Good.

April 16, 2009 - When Neil Cusack arrived in Tennessee on a partial athletic scholarship, it was perhaps the luckiest day in the coaching career of Doug Walker, the athletics coach with a gridiron background.

Almost single-handedly, Cusack put the athletics programme at ETSU on the map. He established new training routines, followed his own instincts, and Walker wisely decided to let Cusack take the programme to a place beyond his capabilities.

Cusack was aided and abetted by the Leddy brothers, PJ and Eddie, Ray McBride and Frank Greally. Cusack washed dishes in his first year to stay at ETSU. Needless to say his partial scholarship status was rectified as he amassed a stack of NCAA titles.

In 1972, he won the NCAA Cross Country Championships. Steve Prefontaine was injured that year and his supporters maintained that he would have won had he been healthy. Donal Walsh, (Villanova, Leevale, and Ireland) doesn’t buy this.

“Don’t be coddin yourself boy,” says Walsh. “Sure I nearly bate Prefontaine meself one year. No one would have beaten Cusack in ‘72. It was as well for Pre that he was injured because Cusack would have ran him ragged.”

When Neil Cusack won the 1974 Boston Marathon – the first and only Irishman to accomplish this feat – he received massive media publicity, a wreath and a coveted winners medal. There was no prize money.

This year’s winner will receive $125,000, a specially designed crystal trophy, appearance fees and innumerable lucrative performance bonuses.

He entered the 1974 race as an unknown entity; the favourite was Tom Fleming of NJ. Cusack recalled: “I started the race as an unknown and crossed the finish line into immediate international recognition. I didn’t realise how big this event was until I crossed the line. It was bedlam.”

“The Irish in Boston went mad -they were stuffing ten and twenty dollar bills into my bag. I was the toast of Boston.” ETSU paid his way to the race but Cusack, on an impulse, decided to pin a shamrock to his fishnet vest. Little did he know how important an element that shamrock was to play in his win.

The late George Sheehan watched Cusack do a comprehensive warm-up before the start. “I’m watching this guy in a string vest doing what I felt was an intense warm up for maybe half an hour. I thought this hotshot might run ten maybe twelve miles tops. I was gob-smacked when he won the race so easily.”

In the aftermath of his win, legendary American broadcaster, Walter Cronkite asked Cusack how he proposed to celebrate his victory: “By drinking lashings of porter,” the 22-year old former St. Munchin’s runner replied. The tabloids saw a good story line: “Irishman wins Boston, trains on beer.” (New York Daily News)

After a moderate start, Cusack hit the front at 6 miles and was never headed thereafter. At 13 miles he was 1 minute ahead of Fleming: “I was on a 2:09 pace coming off Heartbreak Hill and feeling no strain, running on my own. I didn’t see another body from six miles to the finish.”

In the meantime word filtered back that an Irishman was leading and the sight of the shamrock brought the Irish in Boston to life. Larry Rawson saw to that. He had been listening to radio coverage of the race and realised that the commentator was giving out innacurate information about Cusack as soon as he hit the front.

“He was saying that Cusack was a student at the University of Tennessee,” Lawson recalled. “In fact he went to ETSU, and was a native of Ireland and a collegiate cross-country champion.” An incensed Rawson drove to the marathon press-box, where he joined the commentary and quickly apprised the Boston public of the facts.

Cusack cruised home 46 seconds ahead of a tearful Fleming in a time of 2:13.39, the second fastest winning effort up to that point. Finishing well down the field was an up and coming Bill Rogers, who subsequently became synonymous with Boston and New York. We may never again see a more popular athlete/individual than the likeable ‘Boston Billy’

Cusack won many of the major road events in America before corporate sponsorship got involved. Consequently, he lived a hand to mouth existence, going to various races from his base in Florida.

In February 1975, a standout field gathered in New Jersey for the inaugural edition of the Newark Distance Run (12 miles) – Amby Burfoot, Bernie Allan of England, Eddie Leddy (1976 10,000m Olympian), and one Will (Bill) Rogers GBTC. Cusack (58:38.8) beat Rogers by 10 seconds despite going off the course slightly. Burfoot was a minute back in third. Leddy would finish 6th in 1:00.07.

One month later Rogers finished 3rd In the WCC in Rabat, Morocco, and in April, cruised to an American record 2:09.55 win at Boston.

Ray McBride won the accompanying 4 mile race in 21:39. The course actually measured 4.3 miles! For his victory Cusack received a TV, and partial reimbursement for petrol and lodging. What became of that TV is anyone’s guess.

For all his undoubted talent, Cusack never realised his full potential as an athlete. This can be attributed to working full time in Ireland to pay off a mortgage - barman, truck driver for a chicken delivery company, and for a short period a sports shop – all time consuming with erratic hours. More important was his approach to training.

By his own admission Cusack says he trained too hard and never rested enough. Donie Walsh trained with him in Limerick: “Racing was easier. He was a terror, but he rarely got injured.” Cusack would scale the heights one more time by winning the Dublin Marathon in 1981.

One of the saddest days for the Limerick man was being a spectator on the day the Irish Men’s team finish 2nd in the famous1979 WCC in Limerick. In normal circumstances he would have been an automatic choice but the fatigue of the long working hours prevented him from getting enough training.

Cusack represents one of the compelling ‘What If’ stories of Irish Athletics. This peculiar form of counter factual history, currently in vogue, wouldn’t impress Cusack. Still, one is tempted to ask what if he had been able to hang on in America for a few more years. What if he had been able to train full-time in Ireland? Cusack, with his distinctive goatee and bushy hairstyle, could walk around his native Limerick unnoticed. Compare that to the adulation Rogers got in Boston and the mind boggles.

Even so, Cusack’s athletic accomplishments are considerable. He is unassuming about his achievements. “It’s all in the record books,” is his stock answer. He has no regrets. Reflecting on Boston he says: “I still don’t know why I actually decided to run the race. It was a howl and I’m still above the ground and able to talk about it. I have a lifetime of memories to draw on but Boston is right up there.” There was no luck involved in that success.

Cusack represented Ireland 13 times in the WCC; competed in the 1976 Olympic marathon, won 10 NCAA titles including an outright victory in the NCAA CC in 1972.


Read more: http://www.letsrun.com/2009/cusack0416.p...z18ButLFJO
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12-15-2010 09:37 AM
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TheShadow Offline
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RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
DAVE Walker...that's kind of important.

Otherwise, fairly good story. I didn't know an ETSU guy had ever won the Boston Marathon.
(This post was last modified: 12-15-2010 09:42 AM by TheShadow.)
12-15-2010 09:41 AM
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Mister Jennings Offline
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RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
Hey...minor mistake when the commentators were saying he ran for Tennessee. I'm glad that Larry Rawson noticed and had the announcers correct it. Those kind of mistakes seem to be a way of life when you are a Buc...sometimes its just hard to get respect. Dave Walker eventually won so many times that his name is no longer misidentified as Doug.

Another note...ETSU was already on the athletic map before Cusack. Terry Bradshaw knew about ETSU although he claims to this day he doesn't remember...he doesn't want to remember! Then you have the Bucs basketball team of 1968....This was when the tournament was small... Look what Madison Brooks team did... East Tennessee State, 79. Florida State, 69 beat those Seminoles. 2nd game the Bucs gave the Buckeyes a hard time....Ohio State, 79 East Tennessee State, 72.
(This post was last modified: 12-15-2010 09:57 AM by Mister Jennings.)
12-15-2010 09:50 AM
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EastTennesseeState Offline
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RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
I remember Cusack winning the BM. The December 1984 issue of The Runner magazine selected Johnson City as the #1 running city in America--#2 Atlanta, #3 Boston, #4 Boulder, CO, #5 Eugene, OR. It featured a two page spread about Dave Walker and the cross country team with several photos. Those were the days. Our rifle teams were among the elite back then as well.
12-15-2010 11:26 AM
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posterformerlyknownasthedoctor Offline
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RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
It was more like 5 or 6 pages, I believe - four at least.......and yeah, lots of good pics......

What great fun it was in Johnson City in those days! (And especially to be a runner.)
And what a great bunch of fun those guys were. Those of you who decry recruiting foreign athletes really don't know how much some of them have enriched this area - it's been a great thing.......
12-15-2010 05:21 PM
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Mister Jennings Offline
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RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
Our rifle teams were among the elite back then as well.
[/quote]

Rifle is still an NCAA sport. With the Bucs strong ROTC program...rifle fit right in. It qualifies as one of many ideas behind the dome that was a great idea at the time. ETSU invested in an indoor rifle range that is still there to the best of my knowledge. ETSU has several top 10 rifle finishes...and has been on target for national championships only to come up short.

I don't know anything behind the cancellation of the program...not even when it happened.

For those who care...here are the standings from 2010. It used to be littered with Southern Conference teams.

TCU claimed its first National Collegiate Men’s and Women’s Rifle Championships team title on Saturday at Daniel-Meyer Coliseum in Fort Worth. The host Horned Frogs became the first all-female team to earn the national title. TCU finished the two-day competition with 4,675 points. Alaska Fairbanks was second with 4,653 points, followed by West Virginia with 4,641.
12-15-2010 06:17 PM
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Buc Island Offline
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Post: #7
RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
Thanks for posting - this was a bit before my time, so always good to catch up on the highlights from those times.

As for why not rifle, that is a head-scratcher; doesn't really cost much - facility is already in place, not really much expensive equipment to buy, don't have to award scholarships, and it's men's and women's (so no Title IX issues). Maybe travel costs are what shot it down (bad pun intended)?
12-16-2010 08:38 AM
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posterformerlyknownasthedoctor Offline
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RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
I'm pretty certain they did have scholarships; may have only been partials, but I think they did. I knew a few of those guys (and girls), too, who were totally wonderful people.
12-16-2010 10:41 AM
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Mister Jennings Offline
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RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
(12-16-2010 10:41 AM)posterformerlyknownasthedoctor Wrote:  I'm pretty certain they did have scholarships; may have only been partials, but I think they did. I knew a few of those guys (and girls), too, who were totally wonderful people.

Yes they did...but as the story about Cusack states...it was only a partial... that's why he had to wash dishes and such. Sad thing is he won Boston...but it was before they paid the runners.

Cusack is a lover of the Irish...but also a real Buc and serious follower of coach Walker. They had their own community to be certain...and once it was developed...it multiplied on its own. I don't know for certain...but I don't think Walker ever crossed the pond to get these guys...they came on their own.
12-16-2010 10:50 AM
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Bucs14 Offline
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RE: The Neil Cusack Boston Marathon Story
I was playing football at the time and remember the Irish Brigade well. Those guys were crazy. I remember they would be out in freezing cold temperatures before the sun was up running around campus. Coach Walker would be following in his car. They were in the training room regularly with various problems but kept on running. I believe at the time, that only football and basketball had full scholarships. I don't remember any baseball players being on full. Neil was a hero to the football team not only for his BM victory but because he was genuinely a nice guy.
12-18-2010 10:33 PM
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