Claude Allen (athlete)
Claude Arthur Allen (April 29, 1885 in Olean, New York – January 18, 1979 in Roselle, New Jersey) was an American track and field athlete who competed in the 1904 Summer Olympics and a college basketball head coach. In 1904, Allen placed fifth in the pole vault competition.
Allen coached the Niagara basketball team for the 1909–10 season and the St. John's basketball team for the 1910–11 season. Allen's St. John's team finished the season with a 14–0 record[1] and was retroactively named the national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo-Porretta Power Poll.[2][3]
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External links
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| 1876–1878 New York Athletic Club |
- 1877: George McNichol
- 1878: Alfred Ing
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| 1879–1888 NAAAA |
- 1879–81: William Van Houten
- 1882: B.F. Richardson
- 1883–86: Hugh Baxter
- 1887: Tom Ray (GBR) & Hugh Baxter
- 1888Note 1: G.B. Quinn
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| 1888–1979 Amateur Athletic Union | |
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| 1980–1992 The Athletics Congress | |
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| 1993–onwards USA Track & Field | |
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| Notes |
- Note 1: In 1888 both the NAAAA and the AAU held championships
- OT: The 1920, 1928, 1932, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2012 championships incorporated the Olympic Trials, otherwise held as a discrete event.
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- Charles McGrath (1905–1906)
- Jack Reed (1906–1908)
- Robert Yates (1908–1909)
- Claude Allen (1909–1910)
- Alfred Heerdt (1910–1911)
- A. V. Barnett (1911–1915)
- Tom Tracey (1915–1917)
- John O'Shea (1917–1919)
- John Blake (1919–1923)
- Pete Dwyer (1923–1927)
- William McCarthy (1927–1931)
- John J. Gallagher (1931–1943)
- No team (1943–1944)
- Edward Flynn (1944–1946)
- John J. Gallagher (1946–1965)
- James Maloney (1965–1968)
- Frank Layden (1968–1976)
- Dan Raskin (1976–1980)
- Peter Lonergan (1980–1985)
- Andy Walker (1985–1989)
- Jack Armstrong (1989–1998)
- Joe Mihalich (1998–2013)
- Chris Casey (2013– )
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Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.
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