Education
University of California, Los Los Angeles
University of California, Los Los Angeles
He was the Bronze medalist in the 1975 Pan Am Games. At the Pan Am Games, his name shows the additional name of Abdul Rahman, and in the 1976 Olympic Trials and 1976-1977 National Championships he used the name Caleb Abdul Rahman but he has not gone by that name in other competitions since that period in time. In 1978 he used Milan Tiff in the National Championships.
A childhood victim of Osgood-Schlatter disease, he did not walk until he was age 8.
He went on to become the first American to jump 57 feet while winning his second United States of America Outdoor Track and Field Championships. He expected to retire from the sport after the Olympics, but continues to jump in Masters athletics events into his 60s.
He has held several Masters World Records as he has passed through the age groups. In 2009, small gust of wind is all that prevented him from equalling the M60 world record.
Growing up in Shaker Heights, Ohio, set the national high school record for the triple jump in his senior year.
He was ranked in the world top ten twice, 1975 and 1977. A talented painter, he spends many hours working on art He approaches many other activities with an artistic perspective.
Like several athletes of his era he acted in the 1982 movie Personal Best.
Later he trained Emilio Estevez for two of his mid-1990s film roles. He has continued to train athletes at University of California, Los Angeles including many National Basketball Association players.
In 1991 he wrote a book on his own form of exercise called "Traveling light: an original form of exercise". He was later credited on James Ingram"s album "lieutenant"s Real" as "giving us the map."
In 1979, he was inducted into the Mountain.
SAC Relays Hall of Fame.
Later he joined Bush as an assistant coach After completing University of California, Los Angeles, he was a member of the Southern California Striders.