Bud Winter

BIOGRAPHY by Urla Hill

Lloyd ‘Bud’ Winter architect of ‘Speed City’ who propelled San José State to the pinnacle of track and field during the mid-1900s

Coach Winter created a legacy not only through his ability to coach, but also through his ability to mentor other coaching hopefuls, and promote the sport of track and field. In all, he would coach 102 All Americans, 27 Olympians, and 49 NCAA and 37 world record holders throughout his career as the Spartans’ coach, which took place between 1940 and 1970. Notable Spartans include sprinters Ray Norton and Bob Poynter, ranked Nos. 1 and 2 in the world, respectively, during the late 1950s and 1960; 1968 Olympians Tommie Smith and John Carlos, who placed first and third, respectively, in the 200 meters, and Lee Evans, who took the gold in the 400, and on the 4×400 meter relay team; Ben Tucker, a prominent member of SJSU’s ’62 and ’63 NCAA cross country championship teams; Olympian Willie Steele, who captured the gold in the long jump in ’48 (He competed at SJS before enlisting in World War II.); and ’68 Olympic Greek pole vaulter Christos Papanikolaou, who became the first to vault 18 feet.

Of Winter’s nomination, Poynter noted: Other track and field coaches – such as Stanford University’s Payton Jordan or the University of Oregon’s Bill Bowerman – may have received more recognition and acceptance because their programs had great wealth and media support, but Bud was a creative, competitive, fun-loving teacher, who had great passion for the sport.

“I learned how to develop a quality track program on meager resources, how to organize a track team, and build a support group,” said Poynter, who coached Olympians Millard Hampton (’76) and Andre Phillips (’88) while at San José’s Silver Creek High School. “He taught me that it was important to be a good teacher and to share the knowledge with others. He was a fun-loving coach who made the grueling practices fun, and encouraged all racial and ethnic groups to work together. I have been blessed to have mentored hundreds of athletes with his basic principles.” Poynter also coached sprinters at San José City College for six years, and SJS for eight years. He began coaching sprinters at West Valley College upon retirement, and is in his 12th year.

Bud Winter had three children with his wife Helen: Michael, Jane and Kathi. Kathi and Bert Bonanno, his assistant during the mid fifties, recall Winter’s effort in having the Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing’s (3M Company) Tartan track placed on SJSC’s campus during the late 1960s. It all started with a “test strip” laid in the early ’60s on the infield.

“I remember him in meetings with 3M and talking about it all the time,” said Kathi, who spoke on her father’s behalf at the induction ceremony when he was inducted into the National Track & Field Hall of Fame in 1985. “He was so excited about it. I recall dad working on it multiple times, calls that came in at night to discuss the funding and his work with the college.”

“It was invented so the horses could run in the snow and rain,” Bonanno said. “Bud thought, ‘If the horses could run on it, why couldn’t we?’ ”

Bonanno, who became an assistant coach for the 1968 Mexican Olympic team with Winter’s assistance, was in Mexico when 3M provided the world with its first artificial turf for Olympic competition. “It had been red cinder at the Olympic Games up until then. 3M hired Jesse Owens to assist them to convince the Mexican Olympic Committee to put that track in,” said Bonanno, whose storied career as coach and athletic director at San José City College includes Olympians who either train or attended SJCC from Hampton to Bruce Jenner, to John Powell and Marion Sidler, to Mac Wilkins and Al Feuerbach. Bonanno also coached the Peruvian Olympic team in 1972; and numerous indoor and outdoor teams in countries including Hungary, Scotland, and New Zealand throughout the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s; and brought the USA Track & Field Championships to San José for the first time in 1984, and then in ’88. Bonanno also started the Bruce Jenner Invitational, which ran for nearly 20 years.

Lloyd ‘Bud’ Winter – San Jose State: 1940-1970 Posthumous 2010 Pacific Association Legacy Coach Award Recipient

Part one of a multi-part article.  Biography was compiled by Urla Hill, M.A., Guest Curator at SJSU.