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Dyrol
Burleson was
Oregon's first great
middle-distance
runner, reaching the
Olympic finals in
the 1,500 meters in
both 1960 and '64.
Born in Cottage
Grove in 1940,
Burleson won the
national
championship in the
mile in 1959, '60
and '61, and was the
world's top-ranked
runner in the 1,500
in 1961 while still
competing for the
University of
Oregon. He was
unbeaten throughout
his college career
and helped the Ducks
win the 1962 NCAA
championship.
Burleson was the
first to best the
4-minute mile
barrier at Hayward
Field, when he ran
3:58.6 during a meet
in 1960. The time
established an
American record.
Prior to the '64
Tokyo Summer Games,
he was featured on
the cover of Sports
Illustrated.
He placed sixth
in the 1,500 in the
1960 Rome Olympic
Summer Games and
fifth in Tokyo in
1964. An injury kept
him from competing
in the 1968 Olympic
Trials. Burleson
worked 31 years as
an administrator for
the Linn County
regional parks
department before
retiring in 1997,
and regularly ran 50
miles per week. He
was inducted to the
Oregon Sports Hall
of Fame as part of
the inaugural class
in 1980, the
University of Oregon
Athletics Hall of
Fame in 1993 and the
USA Track and Field
Hall of Fame in
2010.
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