Hasely Crawford - Olympic Champion
Hasely Joachim Crawford (born 16 August 1950) is a former track and field athlete from Trinidad and Tobago. In 1976, he became his country's first Olympic champion
Crawford was born in San Fernando, Trinidad and Tobago, one of the eleven children of Lionel Crawford and Phyllis Holder. He began pursuing athletics at the age of 17, in the schoolyard at San Fernando Boys’ Government School and in his neighborhood, where he discovered his gift for running, emerging victorious against everyone who raced against him.
He pursued secondary and post-secondary education at ASJA Boys College and the renowned San Fernando Technical Institute. At the latter, he earned qualifications to be accepted as a special apprentice by the Texaco Oil Company.
Throughout these years, his running slowly career gained momentum and his talent soon earned him an athletics scholarship to Eastern Michigan University in the United States.
Hasely Crawford made his international début at the 1970 Commonwealth Games, where he won a bronze medal in the 100 metres. In 1972, he surprisingly qualified for the 100-meter final at the München Olympics, but pulled his hamstring after 20 metres and did not finish. Crawford won a silver in the 100 meters at the 1975 Pan American Games, and as university student, he won the 1975 NCAA 100-meter title. At the 1976 Olympics, Crawford narrowly won the 100-metre final in a time of 10.06, just 0.02 in front of Don Quarrie of Jamaica, winning Trinidad and Tobago’s first Olympic gold medal. Hasely Crawford remained Trinidad and Tobago’s lone Olympic gold medallist for 36 years.
No hero in Trinidad and Tobago had ever been accorded greater adulation than Hasely Crawford, the man who won the country’s first Olympic gold medal. In tribute, Crawford received the most unique laurel of all when the country sang, jumped, and danced to five calypso songs composed in his honour.
After his athletic career was over, he became the Head of Community Relations, at The National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago. There, Hasely ensured that a number of national sporting, training, and cultural programmes were successfully executed. He was instrumental in the creation of NGC’s ‘Right on Track Programme’, which taught the fundamentals of track and field to young people throughout Trinidad and Tobago. This programme was later introduced in Grenada, St. Vincent, St. Lucia, and Dominica.
Hasely has won several accolades, the most prestigious being the nation’s highest award, the Trinity Cross in 1976 and Trinidad and Tobago’s Athlete of the Millennium in 2000. In 1996, Trinidad and Tobago’s National Stadium was officially renamed the Hasely Crawford Stadium. He is a member of the Caribbean Hall of Fame, along with Ato Boldon and Arthur Wint, one of only three track and field athletes to be inducted.
Sources: Wikipedia - Hasley Crawford [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasely_Crawford], Olympics.com [https://olympics.com/en/athletes/hasely-crawford], and National Gas Company of Trinidad and Tobago [https://ngc.co.tt/corporate-social-responsibility/above-beyond-programme/hasely-crawford-1976-fastest-man-alive/]