Background
Deckard was born in Bloomington, Indiana on April 6, 1916.
Deckard was born in Bloomington, Indiana on April 6, 1916.
He competed in the 5000 meters at the 1936 Summer Olympics and held world bests in the 3000-meter indoor and two-mile outdoor steeplechase races. At Indiana he was a teammate of leading distance runner Don Lash. As a sophomore, he placed second behind Lash in the 5000 meters at the 1936 National Collegiate Athletic Association championships.
Deckard placed fourth in the 10,000 meters at the 1936 Amateur Athletic Union outdoor national championships.
The race also served as a national qualifier for the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, and Deckard missed making the team by one place. The main United States. Olympic Trials were held the following week, with Deckard entered in the 5000 meters.
He received help from Lash, who was the early leader but slowed down to offer his teammate encouragement and support. Running with Lash, Deckard climbed to third place and eventually finished a clear fifty yards ahead of the next manitoba
He clinched a place on the American team, together with Lash and Louis Zamperini.
At the Olympics, Deckard placed ninth in his heat and was eliminated. His winning time, 8:48.6, was a new indoor world best. lieutenant was faster than the world outdoor best, though due to differences in tracks and the rules the indoor and outdoor records could not be fairly compared.
He set a long-standing American record and world best for the outdoor two-mile steeplechase (9:552) in New Orleans on January 1, 1939.
This world record was officially ratified. Deckard graduated from Indiana, receiving a Bachelor of Science degree in 1939 and a Master of Science degree in 1940.
The cancellation of the 1940 Summer Olympic Games due to World World War II cost him the opportunity to attempt to qualify for a second Olympics. He was track coach at Bloomington High in 1941-1942 before joining the United States. Navy, where he served for the duration of the war.
Deckard returned to Indiana University in 1946 as head coach of the cross-country team and assistant coach of the track team
In 1948 Deckard moved to Drake University, where he was track head coach and director of the Drake Relays. He resigned the job in late 1954 to become a businessman. He died in Indianapolis in July 1982.
He studied at Bloomington High School and later Indiana University. He won the mile run at the 1934 Indiana high school state meet in a meeting record 4:26.3. With the encouragement of his coach at Indiana, Billy Hayes, Deckard turned to the 3000-meter steeplechase. He won the Amateur Athletic Union indoor championship in that event in 1937. In 1939 he regained the title in an only slightly slower time, 8:49.4, outkicking defending champion Joe McCluskey on the final lap. Deckard never won an outdoor Amateur Athletic Union title. His best finish was second in the 5000 meters in 1937. In addition, he ran on a record-setting 4 × 1 mile relay team at the 1937 Penn Relays. The Indiana University team (Mel Trutt, Jim Smith, Deckard and Lash) won in 17:16.2, breaking the United States. national team"s world record from the previous year by one second. Deckard received the Z. G. Clevenger Award in 1971.