Bill Green (hammer thrower)
William Green (born April 28, 1960) is an American former track and field athlete. He is a former United States record holder and finished fifth in the hammer throw in the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, California.
Personal information | ||||||||||||||
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Birth name | William Hipkiss | |||||||||||||
Born | Laurel, Maryland | April 28, 1960|||||||||||||
Occupation | Current: Insurance Executive Former: Professional Athlete | |||||||||||||
Employer | Medical Insurance Exchange of California (MIEC) Oakland, California | |||||||||||||
Spouse(s) | Julie Green | |||||||||||||
Medal record
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Personal life and family
Bill Green grew up in the Silicon Valley region of the San Francisco Bay Area, graduating from Fremont High School in Sunnyvale, California in 1978, and California State University, Long Beach in 1984 with a bachelor's degree in Political Science. He is married to Julie Green and had two children, William John Jr. ("Jack") and Victoria ("Tori"). Green's son Jack died tragically at 19 years old September 5, 2020 by suicide following a psychiatric breakdown brought on by the Covid19 quarantine.[1] At the time of his death Jack was a recruited water polo player at UC Irvine, following his father into a career in athletics.[2] The family currently resides permanently in Huntington Beach, California[3] and part-time in the Lake Tahoe community of Fallen Leaf Lake.
Green is the son of William Hipkiss, an attorney and actor in community theater who in the 1970s and 1980s performed in over 20 productions at the Frauenthal Center for the Performing Arts in Muskegon, Michigan and other parts of Western Michigan.[4][5] His mother is Barbara Green, former mayor and city councilwoman in the historical Lake Tahoe town of Truckee, California, who also served one term as County Supervisor for Nevada County, California.[6] Bill was adopted at age five by Barbara Green's second husband Kenneth Green, and raised in California since the age of three.[7]
Athletic career
Green was asked by the Fremont High School (Sunnyvale, CA) coaching staff to try out for the sport of track and field, based upon observations made in a physical education weightlifting class. A discus thrower for two years in high school who failed to qualify for the California state meet, he was recruited by renowned throwing coach Art Venegas near the beginning of his career. Venegas would later develop 33 national champions in 28 years as assistant and head coach at UCLA, a record never approached by any other university.[8] Encouragement to try the hammer throw as a college freshman resulted in an NCAA All American designation and an AAU National Junior Champion title in 1979 in just five months with the event, and a ranking of third in the United States at the senior level three years later in 1982.[9]
He placed tenth at the 1980 United States Olympic Trials. Competing collegiately, he was in the top five hammer throwers at the NCAA Men's Outdoor Track and Field Championship from 1981 to 1983. He had his first podium finish at the USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in 1982, but fell back to fourth in 1983. He won his first national title at the 1986 USA Outdoor Championships, and was runner-up in 1987.
Green competed at the height of hammer throw performance historically, a time when the event was dominated by the Eastern Bloc communist sports system.[10][11] Technical advancements in the hammer throw pioneered by the Soviet Union in the late 1970s were increasing distances at a furious pace by the early 1980s and the complex biomechanics of these changes, which evolved the hammer throw from a strength event to a focus on speed, were not well understood in other parts of the world.[12] Based on experience competing against Russian prodigy Igor Nikulin at the USA vs USSR Junior National Team competitions in 1979, an athlete who go on to become one of history's all-time performers and an Olympic medalist in 1992, Green and Venegas believed they could adopt the new technical changes and reestablish the United States as a viable competitor internationally after more than 25 years with no Americans on the Olympic podium. In 1983 and 1984 he set three American Collegiate Records, three United States National Records,[13] and, after winning the American Olympic trials, he placed fifth at the 1984 Olympic Games. He is one of only three Americans since 1952 to place in the top six in Olympic competition,[14] and his performance in Los Angeles established a prelude to the country's first Olympic medal in 40 years with Lance Deal's second-place finish in the 1996 Atlanta Games.
Endorsements and media appearances
He appeared in television shows, commercials, print advertisements and did product endorsement for such companies as Eastman Kodak, The Hershey Company (Care Free gum), the Ford Motor Company, Mazda, Seafirst Bank, Mizuno Corp., and Nike, Inc. Green also worked as a consultant on the children's movie "Matilda", advising actress Pam Ferris, whose character in the story Miss Agatha Trunchbull had been an Olympic hammer thrower.[15]
Retirement from athletics
Green became disillusioned with the lack of support and training resources necessary for an American athlete to challenge in an area of sports dominated by the Eastern Bloc athletic system at the height of its success in the 1980s.[16] This factor, combined with the belief that drug use was required to medal at a second Olympic Games and a limited interest in the event in the United States, eroded his enthusiasm for Track and Field.[17]
In August 1987, he became embroiled in a controversy generating international headlines when he was disqualified for doping at the Pan American Games in Indianapolis, Indiana, where he had won the silver medal.[18] He had tested positive for testosterone with a T/E ratio of 11,2-1.[19] In April 1988 IAAF handed him an eighteen-month ban from sports for the anti-doping rule violation.[20]
After a ten-month appeal process, according to one of Green's lawyers, under threat of litigation for violating American due process rights the general secretary of International Association of Athletics Federations allowed him to compete in the 1988 United States Olympic Trials.[21] Without sufficient time to prepare given the delays, he did not defend his title at the 1988 Olympic Trials or compete in the Olympic Games in Seoul, South Korea. Green retired from track and field in 1987 at age 27.
He was inducted into the Long Beach State Athletic Hall of Fame in October 2001.[22]
Professional career
Beginning as a trainee at the Century City, California office of international insurance broker Johnson & Higgins, he became a sales and marketing executive with the SCPIE Companies (a division of Johnson and Higgins). He served as Vice President of Sales at SCPIE until 2006, and later held the same title at The Doctors Company in Napa, California. He has been Director of Marketing for the Medical Insurance Exchange of California (MIEC) in Oakland, California since 2010.[23]
International competitions
Year | Competition | Venue | Position | Notes |
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1983 | Universiade | Edmonton, Canada | 4th | Hammer throw |
1984 | Olympic Games | Los Angeles, United States | 5th | Hammer throw |
1987 | Pan American Games | Indianapolis, United States | 2nd DQ | Hammer throw |
National titles
- USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships
- Hammer throw: 1986
- United States Olympic Trials
- Hammer throw: 1984
- USA Outdoor Junior Track and Field Championships
- Hammer throw: 1979
References
- "Jack Green".
- "Former Napa Resident Jack Green signs with UC Irvine".
- "Green Residence Huntington Beach".
- "Attorney William Hipkiss".
- "William Hipkiss Life Story Digital Film".
- "History of Truckee Town Council". Archived from the original on August 24, 2013.
- "Boynton Morris Green 1891-1987" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2013.
- "International Festival of Athletics Coaching". Archived from the original on May 31, 2015.
- "Sports Reference Olympic Sports". Archived from the original on April 18, 2020.
- "Soviet Dominance and Modern History".
- "Hammer Throw Champions and Records".
- "A Technique Analysis of the Hammer Throw for Men and Women".
- "US Mark Broken in Hammer Throw". The New York Times. July 16, 1984.
- "Olympic Games Track and Field History: Men's hammer Throw Final, 1900-2012". Archived from the original on October 21, 2013.
- "Full Cast and Crew for Matilda".
- "86.74 is Going to Stand For a Long Time".
- "Restoration of Respect for American Hammer Throwing in the Olympics".
- "Six Fail Drug Test". Archived from the original on February 21, 2015.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
- Green seeing red over results, The Telegraph, August 23, 1987
- IAAF hands down suspensions, Gettysburg Times, April 19, 1988
- Cart, Julie (October 11, 1988). "Turned in Circles". Los Angeles Times.
- "Seven inducted into Hall of Fame". CSULB Online 49er. August 9, 2001.
- "Linkedin".
External links
- Bill Green at World Athletics
- Olympic Games video clip
- Montage of Olympic Games hammer throwers
- Soviet Union documentary on the Hammer Throw-footage from the 1986 Goodwill Games
Records | ||
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Preceded by Jud Logan |
United States National Record May 15, 1984 — July 15, 1984 10:00 AM |
Succeeded by Dave McKenzie |
Preceded by Dave McKenzie |
United States National Record July 15, 1984 3:00 PM— April 28, 1985 |
Succeeded by Jud Logan |
Preceded by Al Schoterman |
American Collegiate Record February 28, 1982 — June 7, 1985 |
Succeeded by Ken Flax |
Preceded by David Fuller |
Long Beach State School Record February 28, 1981 — Present |
Succeeded by Incumbent |