Mike Larrabee (Michael Denny Larrabee; December 2, 1933 – April 22, 2003) was an
Americanathlete, winner of two gold medals at the
1964 Summer Olympics.[1]
Born in
Hollywood, California and raised in
Ventura, Larrabee was a young running talent in the mid-1950s. In 1952, his athletic performances earned him a scholarship at the
University of Southern California, from which he graduated as a
geology major. A series of injuries hampered his running career, causing him to miss out on the 1956 and 1960
Olympics, but he had his best season in 1964.
He won his only
AAU title in 400 m, then he won the 400 m (tying the
world record of 44.9 seconds) at the
1964 Olympic Trials in
Los Angeles. In the
Tokyo Olympics final, Larrabee was in fifth place going into the final turn, then passed everyone in front of him with a burst of speed to win the gold medal in 45.1. Larrabee also ran the second leg on United States gold medal winning 4 × 400 m
relay team that won in the world record time of 3:00.7.
After the Tokyo Olympics Larrabee worked as a
mathematics teacher at James Monroe High School, ran a beverage distributing company with his brother and worked part-time as
Adidas’ U.S. shoe representative to track and field, a position that allowed him to travel and keep connected to the sport.