Tracking a Long-timer
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| Buehler:
trail blazer |
| Photo:
Jon Gardiner |
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l
Buehler is always on the move. A knock on his office door
has him up, jumping out of his seat as if it's hotter than
the jazz playing on his stereo. And then he's sitting you
down, throwing lively, intricate stories at you while he
prances around this spacious room in Cameron Indoor Stadium.
His fit, crewcut-topped, five-foot-eight-inch, 130-pound,
and seventy-two-year-old body is bouncing along so quickly that it's hard
to focus on those objects in the room remaining stationary--seven
trophies, twelve certificates, and thirty-seven plaques,
to go along with three couches, three folded tailgate chairs,
four cushioned seats, and seven stacked classroom chairs.
Add that to the tattered brown chair behind the desk, and
you could fit in twenty-three people. It's just enough
room for Coach Al to cram in his "History and Issues
of Sport" class, analyzing changes in American sports
over even more years than he's lived.
He's popped out into the daylight now, bopping down a few
steps and seating himself--for just a minute--in the alumni
box at Wallace Wade Stadium. From here, the recently retired
track coach has a good view of the stadium that saw him
lead Duke's cross-country team from bottom of the barrel
to undefeated conference champions in his first three seasons,
that saw him push under-recruited athletes into twelve
All-American and four Olympic track stars, that saw him
longer than it saw anybody else--forty-five years, the
longest tenure of any coach at the university.
Yet he's more interested in telling stories about Duke
football, as if it were the program it used to be, when
this stadium's namesake was still around. Coach Al mentions
in passing that the renovations to the track surrounding
the football field should have been done much earlier. "But
we didn't have the money," he says. He finally admits
that he was a champion runner himself, winning the Southern
Conference half-mile title in 1951 and 1952 while at the
University of Maryland. But he cuts himself off, talking
instead about how he turned his ankle playing volleyball
at a fraternity house while on the road for the Olympic
trials, about how well his teammates did that year.
But now he's up again, out of Wallace Wade and sprinting
out of the way of an oncoming bus, hopping up onto the
sidewalk on his way for a walk. He strides down a steep
path, right by the big blue sign reading "Al Buehler
Trail." He's remembering when the Duke track team
had to use bamboo shoots for pole vaulting and when the
cross-country team had to train on the university golf
course, until this trail was built around it. That was
when they told him, "Al, I know you've had great success
out here on the golf course, but you run your ass off,
and we'll build you a trail so you won't be running right
down the middle of the fairway."
Coach Al's taking longer strides down the trail now. He's
tough to keep up with. He's moved on to stories about his
greatest pupils--Olympians Joel Shankle '55, Dave Sime
'58, and Bob Wheeler '74--when a young Duke tennis player
who took his class last year runs toward him. Coach Al
breaks from his story to smile, "Hey there! Good to
see ya! Lookin' good!"
Now he's remembering 1969, when police broke up the takeover
of Duke's Allen Building by black students, while less
than a quarter mile away at Wallace Wade, Duke's all-white
track team was practicing with North Carolina Central's
all-black squad. He brushes off talk of any deeper meaning
there, instead turning his head to another runner, probably
one he doesn't even know, and says, "How ya doin'?
Good to see ya!"
He stops to point out his home of thirty-five years, one
that overlooks the fifteenth fairway and is connected to
the trail by a hundred-foot path--he lives on a road named
after him.
Farther down that road, he's smack-dab in the middle of
a story about the USA-USSR dual meet that he organized
in 1974, when 56,000 fans came to Wallace Wade and forgot
about Communism for a day. He's describing how a USSR coach
made him try on a blazer from his own closet, just to prove
it really was his house, not some fake facility used to
throw a cocktail party and impress the Soviets. The coach
was hugging him, crying tears of joy. But now another jogger
comes along. "Hey, Coach Al! How are you?"
"Good," Coach Al says. He's good all right, or
at least he hasn't slowed down. He rushes through talk
of his decision in 2000 to step down as coach, wanting
instead to talk about why he chose to stay on as professor
and chair of the physical-education department, why he
chose to keep his life at Duke moving. "I decided
I wanted to live another life."
What he's finding out, he says, is that just teaching "is
a great way to downsize. Because I think I was not prepared
to quit totally. So being a teacher and chairman of physical
education allows me to keep things goin'."
--Matt Sullivan
'06
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