Phil Shinnick

Dr. Phillip Kent "Phil" Shinnick (born April 21, 1943 in Spokane, Washington) is an American track and field athlete, known primarily for the long jump. He represented the United States at the 1964 Olympics.[1] He qualified for the Olympics by finishing third at the 1964 United States Olympic Trials, where winner Ralph Boston set the world record at 8.34 m (27 ft 414 in), to beat the 8.31m of Igor Ter-Ovanesyan set two years earlier and equalled by Boston a month earlier. However on May 25, 1963 Shinnick jumped 27 ft 4 in (8.33 m) at the 1963 Modesto Relays more than a year earlier. Shinnick was credited with beating Boston at that meet, but a wind reading was not taken on Shinnick's jump. So in effect, had the jump been officiated properly and the wind legal, Boston should have been beating Shinnick's mark. Boston had problems with the wind himself. He jumped 8.49 m (27 ft 1014 in) to win the trials, but that jump was wind aided. Boston added another centimeter to the record at the 1965 Modesto Relays.

When Shinnick jumped his 27'4" there was only one wind gauge at the meet. Shinnick was a jumper for the University of Washington, not expected to be setting a record. At the same time he was jumping on the east runway, the wind gauge was measuring a legal +1.6 mps for the 220 yard hurdles on the west straightaway.

“They didn’t know who I was. Ralph [Boston] told me later ‘when I saw that jump, I went into shock. I just was absolutely in shock.’ And I think that the track world never recovered from that shock. They couldn’t believe the unbelievable. How could a guy who’s just twenty-years-old, and jumped in only four or five college meets in his life, break the world record?”

Meet officials voted to submit the mark as a world record, but it was not accepted by the IAAF, the world governing body.

“First of all it wasn’t a wind. It wasn’t even a breeze… Whatever it was, it wasn’t enough to blow out a match…even a hummingbird’s feather would have dropped to the ground without drifting in its descent at the moment young Shinnick made his phenomenal jump.”
Arthur Robinson, Sacramento Bee

Shinnick grew up to become an Acupuncturist and mind mapping research scientist[2] in Manhattan. For forty years he waged a battle to get his record recognized, enlisting the support of Olympic Gold Medallists Lee Evans, Tommie Smith, Hal Connolly, and Bob Beamon. He has affidavits from virtually every person involved. He has had expert wind analysis of film of the jump done.[3][4]

“I saw the attempt and it was real.”
Ralph Boston
"There is no reason in the world why the record shouldn't be recognized,I was right there and can testify there was hardly any wind."
Hilmer Lodge, meet official[5]
“I have regretted this happening all these years, also as I have always felt that the wind was under the allowable and you should have a world record.”
Tom Moore, Modesto Relays meet director i 1995

Shinnick's minor victory came when United States Track and Field recognized his mark as the American record for that point in time, in December 2003.[6][7][8] IAAF has changed records based on affidavits in the past and has changed historical records when new information is available.

Shiitic continued jumping, finishing fourth in the 1968 Olympic Trials, and a non-qualifying 13th in 1976.[9] After his time at the University of Washington, he jumped for the United States Air Force. He received his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley.[10]

Shinnick has spent his life as a political activist. He is the founder of Athletes United for Peace[11] and the Moscow Peace Marathon. Some have suggested his activism might have set his record cause back. In 1976, his name was associated to having knowledge about the kidnapping of Patty Hearst.[12] While a professor at Livingston College, part of Rutgers University, he went to jail for refusing to cooperate with the FBI.[13] He was elected into the University of Washington Sports Hall of Fame in 1992.

References

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