Lost in the media madness over his Team USA teammate Michael Phelps’ eight-gold triumph at the 2008 Beijing Olymoics and Jamaican Usain Bolt’s dominance in the sprints, Glendora, Calif.’s Bryan Ezra Tsumoru Clay, the reigning champion in the grueling decathlon, is virtually unknown in his own country.
Victory in what is considered track-and-field’s toughest event — 10 running, jumping and throwing competitions — once conferred larger-than-life status to guys like Bob Mathias, Rafer Johnson and Bruce Jenner. Not for Clay, son of Japanese American Michelle Ishimoto and African-American Greg Clay, who is competing at the U.S. Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Ore., this weekend. (Update: Clay was forced to scratch from the USATF championships due to a hamstring injury).
Clay was tested by SPARQ to establish his SPARQ Rating across a number of different sports. The test is meant to measure sport-specific athleticism and in the football test Clay recorded a score of 130.40, the highest ever recorded. By comparison, Reggie Bush scored a 93.38. NFL?
But the devoutly Christian Clay is not bitter. “My family and I have everything that we could ever ask for. We’ve got a house, a roof over our head, we have food, we have our cars, my wife gets to stay at home and take care of the kids, our kids are happy. So really, I can’t be mad. I’ve got what I need.”
Listen to Diana Nyad’s NPR feature on Clay and America’s fickle adoration of athletes.
The Score: Track and Field Blues—06/18/09
Clay, whose grandparents, Tsumoru and Kay Ishimoto of Honolulu, cheered him on in Beijing, is proud of his Japanese American heritage.
“Japanese culture and food were a huge part of my life growing up. My mother made sure I knew who I was and where I came from. Our house was always full of grandparents and aunts and uncles and cousins. We ate ozoni [a traditional Japanese rice soup] on New Year’s Eve. My life was very Japanese.”
Clay was understandably upset about his injury in Eugene, but there was also good news. He’s been nominated for and ESPY Award.
- Clay Resumes 2012 Medal Quest, Meri-Jo Borzilleri, Ultimate Sports
- Bryan Clay’s Official Web Site
- Clay is Gold, Epicanthus
- In An Age of Hybrids Decathlete Bryan Clay Is the Ultimate All-American Athlete, 08/20-08, Epicanthus
The Olympic Decathlon, the two-day, ten-event test of all-around athletic skill and human endurance, has produced some of the greatest icons of the American sports pantheon. Decathlon gold medalists Jim Thorpe, Bob Mathias, Rafer Johnson and Bruce Jenner were easily the biggest names to emerge from their respective Olympics. But comes along 28-year-old, Kaneohe, Hawaii-born Bryan Clay and the mainstream media seems a bit skeptical.
Beijing is Clay’s second Olympics. He won a silver in Athens as the event’s rising star. Following Athens, Bryan captured a World Track Championship gold in 2005 and was ranked as the No. 1 decathlete in the world by 2006. Last year, he forced out of the World Championships in Osaka with a foot injury. Earlier this year, 12 pounds lighter and injury-free, he stunned the track and field world with a remarkable 8,832-point performance in winning the U.S. Olympic Trials in Eugene, Ore.
Ten years ago, Clay was a troubled kid. The product of a broken home, Bryan is the son of Japanese American mother Michelle Ishimoto and an African American father, Greg Clay, who divorced when their son was in the fifth grade.
At the Athens Olympics, Bryan’s mother, stepfather and wife, Sarah, stayed away not wanting to be distractions. In Beijing, however, the Ishimoto clan will be in full force. Sharing the two-day event with Bryan at the “Bird’s Nest” will be his maternal grandparents—84-year-old Tsumoru and 82-year-old Kay Ishimoto—along with “a bunch more family and many friends” to root Bryan over the top.
About his Japanese heritage, Clay reveals, “Japanese culture and food were a huge part of my life growing up. My mother made sure I knew who I was and where I came from. Our house was always full of grandparents and aunts and uncles and cousins. We ate ozoni [a traditional Japanese rice soup] on New Year’s Eve. My life was very Japanese.”
Earlier this month, Clay told NBC, “I think that if I am healthy, and if I am competing well and in shape, I don’t think there’s anybody out there that can beat me. I really don’t think so.
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