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Home > Olympics > Gold Medalists > Michael Larrabee
Michael Larrabee
Michael Denny Larrabee was born on the 2nd of December 1933 and he died on the 22nd of April. He was an American athlete, who was winner of two gold medals at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. Born in Ventura, California, Larrabee was a young running talent in the mid 1950s. In 1952, his athletic performances earned him a scholarship in the University of Southern California, which he graduated as a geologist. But a series of injuries hampered his running career, until he adopted a new weight training program as he turned 30, which helped him to produce his best ever season in 1964. At first he won his only AAU, Amateur Athletic Union, title in the 400 meters, then he won the 400 meters, tying the world record of 44.9 seconds, at the 1964 Olympic Trials in Los Angeles. In Tokyo Olympics final, Larrabee was in fifth place going into the final turn, when he passed everyone in front of him with a burst of speed to win the gold medal in 45.1 seconds. Larrabee also ran the second leg on United States gold medal winning 4 by 400 meter relay team that won in the world record time of 3 minutes and 00.7 seconds. After the Tokyo Olympics Larrabee worked as a mathematics teacher, ran a beverage distributing company with his brother and worked part-time as an Adidas’ U.S. shoe representative to track and field, a position that allowed him to travel and keep connected with the sport. Larrabee remained physically active well after his running career had wound down, taking up tennis, scuba diving, skiing, hiking, for which he raised llamas as pack animals and mountain climbing. Although he was diagnosed with advanced pancreatic cancer in 2001 and was only expected to live a few weeks, he continued to live life to the fullest for two more years, thanks to chemotherapy treatments. Mike Larrabee died in his home at Santa Maria, California, aged 69. He was posthumously added to the Track and Field Hall of Fame in December of 2003.
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