Background
Born in Ireland, Duffy grew up in Edinburgh, Scotland after moving there with his family as a child.
Born in Ireland, Duffy grew up in Edinburgh, Scotland after moving there with his family as a child.
According to his own later account, Duffy participated in cross-country races in Scotland, winning many of them. In 1911 he emigrated to Canada, where he worked in Toronto as a tinsmith and stonecutter. In his spare time he visited the Central Young Men’s Christian Association, the director of which quickly recognized his talent.
Representing the Central Young Men’s Christian Association, Duffy came in second in the 1911 Ward Marathon, a twenty-mile event in Toronto.
During the race Duffy stopped to argue with supporters of another runner. In May 1912, he ran the Spectator Marathon in Hamilton, Ontario, which served that year as the Canadian Olympic trial.
The race, which was reduced to nineteen miles, was run in exceedingly hot and humid weather. Only eight of twenty-five starters finished the race.
Representing the Eaton Athletic Club of Toronto, Duffy placed fifth in the marathon at the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm, which also took place in very high temperatures, resulting in the death of Portuguese runner Francisco Lázaro.
After the Hamilton Bay race Duffy accepted full-time coaching from athletic trainer Tommy Thomson, who persuaded him to relocate to Hamilton, where he joined the Ramblers Club. His success had gotten around and he was so much the favorite that the Boston bookmakers would not take high bets on his victory. The race developed into a thriller, with fellow Canadian runner Édouard Fabre matching Duffy"s pace throughout.
Only in the final mile did Duffy gain a small lead, winning the race by fifteen seconds.
Duffy"s first request after his victory was for a cigarette, and after his post-race medical examination he asked for a bottle of beer. After the Duffy turned professional, losing his first professional race to Édouard Fabre.
Duffy enlisted in the Canadian Army at the outbreak of World War I. He joined the 91st Argyle Regiment and was subsequently transferred to the 16th Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force.