George Rhoden
Vincent George Rhoden (born
December 13,
1926) is a former
Jamaican
athlete, winner of two
Olympic gold medals in 1952.
Rhoden, who lived in
San Francisco, was one of the successful long sprinters from Jamaica in the late
1940s and early
1950s, along with
Arthur Wint and
Herb McKenley. He competed in the
1948 Summer Olympics, but did not medal, being eliminated in the heats of the 100 m and the semi-final of the 400 m. He was also a member of the heavily favoured Jamaican 4 x 400 m relay team, but when Wint pulled a muscle in the final, their chances at a medal were gone. On
August 22,
1950 at
Eskilstuna,
Sweden, Rhoden set a new
world record in 400 m of 45.8 s. He also won the
AAU championships in 400 m from
1949 to
1951 and as a
Morgan State University student, won the
NCAA championships in 220
yd in 1951 and in 440 yd from 1950 to
1952.
At the
1952 Summer Olympics in
Helsinki, George Rhoden was more successful. He was one of the pre-race favourites in the 400 m as a world record holder. He won a close battle with his compatriot McKenley, who had also been second in the 1948 Olympic 400 m. As the anchor runner of the Jamaican relay team, Rhoden added a second Olympic gold, edging the
United States by a tenth of a second, and setting a new world record (3:03.9).