Harold Morioka, born in WWII internment camp, enters hall of fame

Harold won his first world masters title in 1989.

M70 coach Harold Morioka is the subject of a great profile in his British Columbia newspaper after being inducted into the B.C. Athletics Hall of Fame. It told me something I didn’t know — that he was born in a Japanese internment camp during World War II. I wasn’t aware the Canadians followed FDR’s lead: “Following the attacks on Pearl Harbour in 1941, the federal government enacted the War Measures Act and Morioka’s father was sent to live in an internment camp in the Slocan Valley with all boys and men of Japanese heritage, despite having lived in Surrey since 1924. Eventually he was joined by his wife and three children, and Harold was born in 1943. Memories of his time in Slocan and the treatment of his parents and siblings are topics he would prefer not to focus on.” Lots of other revelations about gent I’ve known for about 20 years.

Here’s the story for posterity:

Surrey athlete Harold Morioka was born to run, although it took nearly 30 years for his world championship journey to begin.

Morioka was recently inducted into the B.C. Athletics Hall of Fame at a ceremony held Nov. 19, 2016 in Richmond. The honour recognizes his 40-plus years as a sprinter, mentor and coach.

For Morioka, 73, his running career began in the Slocan Valley in the Kootneys in south-central British Columbia.

Following the attacks on Pearl Harbour in 1941, the federal government enacted the War Measures Act and Morioka’s father was sent to live in an internment camp in the Slocan Valley with all boys and men of Japanese heritage, despite having lived in Surrey since 1924.

Eventually he was joined by his wife and three children, and Harold was born in 1943.

Memories of his time in Slocan and the treatment of his parents and siblings are topics he would prefer not to focus on.

By the time he was six years old, Morioka and his family were back in Surrey, living near 96 Avenue and King George Highway.

As an athletic kid in school, Morioka knew he could run, often pushing himself against his older brother, but school and work on the family farm occupied much of his time.

After graduation from high school in 1961, Morioka went on to university to become a high school biology teacher, however other than playing some intramural soccer and baseball as a youth, he didn’t participate in organized sports.

But when he turned 29 he noticed a story in a local newspaper about an upcoming track meet at Simon Fraser University and he wondered out loud if he had the speed to compete.

“My wife told me I was out of my mind,” he said laughing. “She told me all those young kids on track scholarships would kill me.”

But he knew he could run.

So after some minor issues with paperwork and having no official credentials or athletic numbers, Morioka received an amateur athletic card from B.C. Athletics and was allowed to compete in the 100m.

When he arrived at SFU on race day, he looked around and thought to himself he was in way over his head.

“I thought, ‘my wife is right, look at these guys. They look so fast… why did I enter?’ ”

But when the gun went off in his heat, despite wearing only runners instead of track spikes, instinct took over for the untrained sprinter and he finished in second place in 11 seconds.

However, because of his inexperience, after the race he just went home without checking his time or even looking to see if he had made the finals.

By the next season, at the age of 30, after beginning some basic sprint training over the winter, Morioka became the fastest man in B.C., winning the 100m and 200m in the open division at the B.C. Championship against all the best sprinters in the province.

By the age of 36 he decided to hang up his cleats, despite running under 11 seconds in the 100m and sub-50 seconds in the 400m.

“I thought I was too old to run, but B.C. Athletics still selected me for the Western Canada Games in Saskatoon,” he said.

By age 40, Morioka began to get the itch to run again, so he joined the masters circuit, and by 46 he was smashing world records.

In 1989 he won his first Masters World Championship in Eugene, Oregon in the 45- to 49-year-old age group, running the 400m in 50.60 seconds and he broke the world record in the 100m in the same age group with a time of 11.11 seconds.

That same year he won the SportBC Athlete of the year award, against all other athletes in BC, the first and only time that a masters athlete has ever won that title.

His most successful year as a Masters athlete was when he turned 50, setting three worlds records in the indoor 60m, 200m and 400m races at the United States Nationals.

Later that year he won three gold medals at the Masters World Championships in Miyazaki, Japan in the 400m, 800m and 400m hurdles.

And at age 51, became the oldest person ever to match their age in the 400m, running the event in a time of 51 seconds.

Despite running with tremendous knee pain for many years, Morioka retired from competitive athletics at age 62.

He still volunteers as a coach for the Greyhounds Track Club.

Looking back on his long career on the track, Morioka feels his youth and upbringing were the keys to his success.

“You have to have some natural ability. We knew we were fast, my brother and I, but I was a hard worker, I trained so hard I knew it from my youth, you’re not going to be successful at anything unless you work hard all year round,” he said.

But as far as looking at the current group of Olympic sprinters and wondering what could have been if he had begun his career earlier in life, Morioka would prefer to not second-guess his decisions.

“Maybe if I had started out earlier, I may not have been so successful. I have no regrets.”

Numerous knee injuries have slowed him down over the years and the pain keeps him from competing, and going down stairs is a real problem, “but I can still run,” he said.

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January 14, 2017

10 Responses

  1. Peter L. Taylor - January 15, 2017

    “The Great Harold Morioka” is what Sid Howard and I used to call him. Harold really lit up a meet whenever he decided to compete there, and it was my wonderful pleasure to announce him in a few races.

    I would put him on my short list of the greatest masters tracksters I’ve ever announced. Well done, Harold. You were fast, you were courageous, and you added a lot to our sport.

  2. Stephen Robbins - January 15, 2017

    Harold–congratulations! An honor that’s well deserved. We had a lot of terrific races against each other and I miss seeing you at the starting line. But you’ve proven to excel as a coach, just as you did as a competitor. BTW, let me be the first to wish you a Happy 74th. As I remember, your birthday is something like February 3rd–3 days after mine.

  3. Christa Bortignon - January 15, 2017

    This honor was long overdue! He had already been inducted into the Canadian Masters Hall of Fame in 2011. Thanks to a great coach.

  4. Peter Crombie - January 15, 2017

    Congratulations Harold on your new award. Like Steve Robbins, we had plenty of really good tussles over the years. You were a superstar amongst the greats, with such a diversity of performance from 60m to 800m at world level, including the 400m hurdles.

  5. .tOnY yOuNg - January 15, 2017

    Watched H Morioka run a decade or so back at the Dempsey (UW) in a 400. Nobody was paying much attention because of the 12 heats being run, but I was in awe of his so beautiful efficiency as he hung in there with some collegiate runners. 51.? As a 50+ year old!!!!!! Still in awe!!

  6. Gary Snyder - January 16, 2017

    Congratulations – I enjoyed ‘following’ you in a number of races the first being my first masters 200m in Boston.

  7. Bill Collins - January 17, 2017

    Congratulations Harold, You are one of the best on and off the track, our conversations will always be with me. You always showed up and showed out, like Peter Crombie said in a wide range of events you showed your great ability. Your life like many of us has had its ups and downs, but as athletes our times on the track have been wonderful. With the friendships we have made that will last a lifetime makes it all worthwhile. May God continue to bless and keep you well.

  8. Warren Hamill - January 17, 2017

    A shining light on and off the track. Congratulations, Harold. Has any other runner broken world records at every distance from 60-800m? Plus, the 400 hurdles! Like Christa noted, the recognition is long overdue.

  9. wayne bennett - January 17, 2017

    I want to echo everything Bill Collins said above. You always were gracious enough to talk with those of whom you barely knew and were not in your age group or ability. That meant a lot to me.

  10. Harold Morioka - January 21, 2017

    Thank you everyone for your compliments and kind words. I am honoured to have met so many great people during my career in track and field. I was fortunate to compete with and against some of the very best Masters athletes in the world. Who has more information and makes announcing more colourful/interesting than Peter? My heart is good now but my knees are not. I don’t train anymore but I do a few strides with my Greyhounds teammates. I will be in Daegu to watch Christa compete so if you are there, I would love to see you.

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