Dr. Phil Edwards - Track and
Field
Dr. Phil Edwards was
inducted to the McGill Sports Hall of Fame in 1997. Philip Aron
Edwards, was born on Sept. 13, 1907 at Georgetown, British
Guiana. He graduated from McGill medical school in 1936, and
received a graduate diploma in medicine in 1945, specializing in
tropical diseases.
He was the first black athlete from McGill to
compete in the Olympics and the first Canadian Olympian to win
five Olympic medals, racking up five bronzes over three
Olympiads -- in 1928 at Amsterdam Games, 1932 at Los Angeles and
1936 in Berlin.
In Amsterdam he won bronze in the 4x400m relay
and finished fourth in 800m. At Los Angeles he captured three
bronze medals (800m, 1500m and 4x400m).
At Berlin he won bronze
in the 800m, placed fourth in 4x400m relay and was fifth in
1500m. In 1936, Edwards became the first winner of the Lou Marsh
trophy, as Canada’s best athlete.
He was consistently McGill top
scorer in track & field and led the Redmen to six consecutive
championships, captaining the team in each of his last five
seasons (1931-36).
Edwards was also Canadian intercollegiate
track champion in various events numerous times and established
many McGill, Canadian and American track records.
The only
four-time winner of 600-yard race at American indoor track
nationals (1928-31) he held 13 national bests, seven second-best
performances and five third bests from 1927 to 1936.
He competed
for British Guiana at British Empire Games (1930-34) and won
gold in half mile at 1934 Games in London.
Edwards was a member
of Martlet Society and a McGill fraternity. He also served as a
captain with the Canadian army in World War II.
He died in
Montreal on Sept. 6, 1971 and shortly afterwards, the "Phil
Edwards Memorial Trophy", was established to be presented
annually to Canada’s most outstanding track athlete. He was also
inducted into the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame in 1997.
Phil Edwards: The Man of
Bronze
The unknown hero. Phil Edwards has won more medals than
any other Canadian Olympian.
Winner of five bronze medals, Phil
Edwards is Canada's most decorated Olympian. He is also one of
the least known. Christened the "man of bronze", Edwards
represented Canada at three Olympics, including the notorious
1936 Berlin Olympics in Nazi Germany.
Edwards was born in 1907
in Georgetown, British Guyana, the son of a wealthy magistrate. Edwards' father saw his child's
promise as a runner and became his first coach.
"Grandad would
take him to Georgetown and just take him for runs all the time.
And I guess saw his potential and just had him running and he
would run with him," says Edwards' daughter Gwen Emery.
But
British Guyana held limited opportunities for athletes. To pursue his running
career, Edwards moved to the United States.
In 1926, Edwards
enrolled in New York University and joined the track team as a
middle-distance runner. Immediately he began smashing
intercollegiate records with times fast enough to qualify for
the 1928 Olympics.
But there was a problem. As a British
subject, Edwards could not compete for the United States and
British Guyana didn't have an Olympic team. Edwards' solution? Go North!
In
1927, Canadian Bobby Robinson, the founder of the Commonwealth
Games, approached Edwards and invited him to join the Canadian
team that was going to the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam. In the
end it was Canada, not the United States like his father
thought, that would give Edwards a chance to fulfill his Olympic
dream.
Edwards hoisting the victorious Percy Williams at the
1928 Olympics in Amsterdam. The 1928 games in were a triumph for
Canada in track and field. The women's team won two gold, a
silver and a bronze. Percy Williams won gold in the 100 and 200 metres. Edwards won a bronze as a member of the 4x400 relay
team.
After Amsterdam, Edwards reached a crossroads. He'd
graduated from New York University, and wanted to study
medicine. But he also wanted to keep running. He decided to
enroll at McGill University in Montreal, which had a top-notch
medical school and track program.
At McGill Edwards met Jim
Worrall, a strapping 6'5 hurdler.
"Phil was the backbone of the
McGill team. Phil was an outstanding human being. I would like
to describe him as a gentleman and a gentle man. He was not
overly modest. But he didn't push himself forward. He was a team
player," say Worrell.
Ab Conway was a runner at the University
of Toronto who often competed against McGill. He saw first-hand
Edwards' team-first mentality.
"He was always unbeatable in the
intercollegiate, and usually tried to bring another McGill man
along with him. He would ultimately fall back and let the other
McGill man win," remembers Conway.
Edwards was a member of the
Canadian team that went to Los Angeles for the 1932 Summer
Olympics. He participated in three events—the 800 metre, the
1500 metre and 4x400 relay. He won a bronze in each.
Ray Lewis
was Edwards teammate on Canada's relay foursome. He studied
Edwards' style a noticed a pattern. "Nobody else was in the race
when the gun went off. Phil went out on his own pace, which was
fast."
Olympic teammate Ray Lewis noticed that Edwards was a
"bit of a loner", who "stayed fairly well to himself." But to
according Lewis, after setting the pace early, Edwards would
tire and fail down the stretch. Despite his trouble finishing
races, Edwards came home from Los Angeles with three bronze
medals. Canada won 15 in total.
Edwards had won four bronze over
two Olympic Games. Yet his most memorable race was to come four
years later.
On July 1936, the steamship Duchess of Bedford set
sail from Montreal on route to the Summer Games in Berlin. On
board, in their smart new uniforms, was Canada's Olympic team.
Worrall had made the track team as a hurdler. He and his
teammates chose Phil Edwards as their captain.
"He just exuded
confidence and calmness and you sort of got into that feeling,"
says Worrall.
Conway was also a member of that 1936 team. "It
was just the way he spoke and the way he conducted himself and
on the standards that we'd been taught in those days, he just
seemed to exemplify them," says Conway.
When the athletes
arrived in Berlin, they found a city filled with excitement and
tension. The drumbeat of war was still distant, but the dark
Nazi ideology was well known. It forced many countries,
including Canada, into a difficult choice: how to acknowledge
Adolph Hitler during the opening ceremonies.
The track and field
team, Phil Edwards, and the rest of Canada's Olympic team
decided to give Hitler the Olympic salute.
"Were (we) going to
salute in the sort of army method, or we were going to give the
Olympic salute? Not the Nazi salute, the Olympic salute. But the
Nazis had taken it over. We decided that we were not going to
let them do it, that the Olympic salute was the Olympic salute
and we were going to give the Olympic salute," explains Conway.
Worrall carried the flag as the Canadian team entered the
stadium. As they raised their arms, the crowd erupted into
cheers, thinking the Canadians were giving the Nazi salute.
"We
took a lot of backlash criticism for that. But it was done, I
think, well you might say, the kindest thing you might say is it
was done in naivety," says Worrall.
The salutes gave Hitler a
propaganda victory, but he wanted more. He planned to use the
entire Games to promote the Nazi credo of a white master race.
The plan fell apart, largely because of American track star
Jesse Owens, who won four gold medals. But there were other
black athletes who shone in Berlin. One of them was Edwards, who
with John Woodruff of the United States staged one of the most
dramatic duels of the Games in the 800 metre final.
Edward (74)
finishes third in the 800 hundred metre, at the 1936 Olympics in
Berlin, behind the winner John Woodruff (745).When the gun fired
to begin the race, Edwards, like usual, exploded off the start,
taking the lead and setting a brisk pace.
Edwards fell out of
the clear lead and into a battle with Woodruff.
"Woodruff was a
huge man and he had a tremendous stride. It was interesting that
he passed Phil, and then Phil passed him. And then down the
backstretch on the second lap, it was rather amusing to watch,
because all of a sudden these two bodies started to merge, and
you could see one body but four legs. Woodruff eventually pulled
ahead and Phil unfortunately couldn't quite hold onto second
spot," remembers Worrall.
It was the same old story for Edwards:
fast start, weak finishing kick, and a bronze medal.
"That was
his style of running. It was certainly effective in getting him
almost to the gold, not quite, but almost to the gold," says
Worrall.
On their way home from Berlin, the Canadian team
stopped in London, England. When they arrived at their hotel,
patrons began raising a fuss because they were uncomfortable
with the though of staying in the same hotel as a black man.
The
officials, with full team backing decided not to stay at that
hotel as a team. The incident revealed the deep affection that
the team had Edwards.
Conway tells the story: "The officials,
with full team backing decided not to stay at that hotel as a
team. I think probably the best quote came from Cathleen Hughes-Hallett,
a girl fencer. When this little episode happened at the hotel
she said, 'if this hotel is too good for Phil Edwards, it's too
good for me.'"
The Berlin Games in 1936 were Edwards' third and
last Olympics. That same year he was named the first-ever winner
of the Lou Marsh award as Canada's outstanding athlete.
Dr. Phil
Edwards was an expert in tropical diseases. With his running
career over, Edwards joined the staff of the Royal Victoria
Hospital in Montreal, and became an expert in tropical diseases.
He put that expertise to use on a number of international
medical missions.
In early 1971, Edwards fell ill with heart
problems. He died that September at the age of 64.
"I think we
lost a very fine individual. A fine person. A very good man, a
good Canadian, a good doctor, and in my estimation a sports
hero," says Worrall.
Edwards' five Olympic medals still stand as
the highest total ever won by an individual Canadian. But it
wasn't until 1997 that he was elected to Canada's Sports Hall of
Fame, and only after a vigourous campaign led by Worrall.
Lewis,
Edwards' Olympic teammate, thinks it's foolish to measure an
athlete solely by the number of gold medals they have hanging
around their neck. According to Lewis, it is the competitive
spirit that is the mark of a true Olympic champion.
"He was one
of the greatest that ever ran for Canada. To make three
Olympics, '28, '32 and '36. And bring home five bronze medals.
Forget about going for the gold, but he was competing. And
anytime anybody competes that successfully for 8 years, '28 to
'36, you've got to be good."
From McGill
University web site.