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Steve Pauly rose
to greatness at
Beaverton High and
then Oregon State,
where he played
basketball and
developed into an
Olympic-caliber
decathlete.
At Beaverton,
Pauly played
football, basketball
and competed in
track, where he
experienced
considerable
success. He won the
120-yard and
180-yard hurdles
finals and finished
fourth in the shot
put in 1958, leading
the Beavers to the
team title. In 1959,
he won the javelin
and 120 hurdles,
finishing ahead of
future NFL Hall of
Famer Mel Renfro. He
finished second to
Renfro of Jefferson
in the 180 hurdles.
At OSU, Pauly won
the javelin at the
Pacific Coast
Conference Northern
Division meet as a
freshman.
He competed
in the 1960 U.S.
Olympic Trials in
the decathlon and
placed 13th with
6,494 points.
Pauly, who stood
6-foot-4, played
alongside Mel Counts
and Terry Baker on
the 1963 OSU
basketball team that
reached the NCAA
Final Four.
That same year,
Pauly, age 22, won
the decathlon at the
Amateur Athletic
Union national
championships held
in Corvallis,
scoring 7,852 points
to improve on his
third-place showing
the previous year.
His total was the
sixth-best on the
international level
that year. His win
also earned him a
spot on the U.S.
team that competed
in a dual meet with
the Soviet Union in
Moscow that summer –
having competed
against the Russians
in the annual meet
the previous year in
Palo Alto, Calif.
Pauly scored 7,536
points in that meet
and finished third
behind two Russians.
He did not compete
in the Olympic
Trials in 1964. He
had interest from
several NFL teams,
but chose to pursue
a degree in
dentistry and
established a
practice in
Portland, where he
played in adult
basketball leagues
and coached track at
Reynolds High for
several years.
Pauly was
inducted to the
Oregon Sports Hall
of Fame in 1988 and
the Oregon State
University Sports
Hall of Fame in
1991.
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