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Sammy McIver
Sammy
was a memorable individual. His all to brief life ended in
1983 but not before he had made a lasting impression on many within
athletics.
Sammy once travelled with a bunch of his Sefton Harrier
friends to Bristol for a road relay. On arrival it was discovered that
Sefton were a man short, being some distance from home and as it was not
going to effect the prizes Sammy was roped in to run as a ringer for the
day.
Sammy was spotted by a Liverpool Harrier who just happened to be at
college in Bristol at that time. He was duly reported and had to
stand on the carpet in front of Charles Rice who just happened to be
another Liverpool Harrier and secretary of the Northern Counties (almost the almighty of
athletics at the time) The outcome was that Sammy got a three
month ban!!
Ken Beisty
(taken from Ken Beisty book, Reflections of a Runner)
" Every club, athletic or otherwise, has it's own characters who
contribute to making ie special. When I reflect on the golden years of
my athletic youth spent with Pembroke, it is the characters like Sammy
who spring to mind. Sammy certainly made an impression on me when I met
him; he was one of the sundry that Ossie Hey introduced me to on that
first wonderful evening in September 1952 when I joined the Pembroke
club.
Even then, at barely twenty years of age, he was a runyonesque type. He
had a side-kick
Harry Sholicar by name, engaged me my attention with their rapid and
witty banter. They left me breathless in verbal competition that
evening, a condition often repeated when we raced.
Sammy was a Pembroke man, one of the everlasting thread
of club men who sustain the harrier tradition of British cross
country and road running. He rarely raced on the track, a disposition
most of us shared with him. But rarely did he miss a road or cross
country effort, race or training stint. as may be, able always to
enliven tired comrades with a throw away gag or encouraging line. Sammy
taught me what club loyalty was.
He won his fair share of honours, especially when he
moved to the marathon and ultra distance events. In a quite fashion he
fitted himself to run a creditable London to Brighton race, to place in
his Lancashire Counties 20 mile championship and to represent the County
in the Inter Counties race at that distance.
The last word must be left to Mike Turner who it
happens is another Liverpool Harriers
Mike Turner
Sam McIver
is dead. The wardrobe holds the suits he made
For me in Bold Street, by the bombed out Church.
Up fifty broken stairs to reach his room,
I climbed each winter to inspect the bunch
Accept his judgement of the latest style,
Be pinned and chalked, and patted into shape.
No jew or gentile tailor took more pride
In collar, cuff, lapel, revers or waist.
Category 2A is far to young
To die. Pembroke were relying on him
Already he has missed a months training:
It'll take him some time to get back his form
Slightly overweight was always his problem
I shall remind him in the pit head baths
At Sherdley Park. The West Lancs race begins
In the change room an hour before the start.
I forget, there is no fitness for death.
No reason for those last few hundred miles:
No pissing in the hedge before the start:
No freezing balls suspend in wet jock.
But could he swap a thousand years of heaven
For one more run along the Blackpool road
Or sloshing through the mud at Arrowe Park:
He'd chuck the chance of paradise for good.
There are so many lines I had prepared
To counter the service of his verbals,
to level the score, or at least return
The ball into his court. His first remark ,
A stinging volley well below the belt,
Delivered to changing room at large,
That left you helpless, dangling from a peg,
With your discoloured underpants and vest.
King of the one line gag, yet his friends
Were common men from Bootle and Oriel Road
I enjoyed his respect for something that
Just happened to please his sense of humour
And because I lost an epic race
To Ron, his hero more than twenty years.
Sixty seconds silence is superflous,
Each changing room bears witness to his life.
Only spare a thought for the Almighty
Forcing the pace with the great one liner.
Charles Gains
About 200 former athletes gathered for Sammy's funeral
at the gates of Ford Cemetery, Bootle. This must have been a family
request as Sammy had been living in Newton-le-Willows. In due course the
cortege arrived, the chat ceased and the mourners fell in behind the
last vehicle. At the Chapel though everything ground to a halt. The
building wasn't even open! Confusion was rife as employees of the
funeral company scattered to look for the grave and the missing priest.
In due course the priest was to arrive (Irish of course) muttering
something that sounded faintly blasphemous under his breath. For some
reason the cortege had begun to solemnly circle the chapel awaiting his
appearance. Meanwhile the mourners stood still, all clearly embarrassed.
As the vehicles entered the third `lap' a voice at the back (could it
have been Sammy himself?) quietly said, 'Don't worry, Sammy, they are
taking late entries today'.
Sammy would have liked that.
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