Chris Huffins Explained

Fullname:Christopher Allen Huffins[1]
Birth Date:15 April 1970[2]
Birth Place:Brooklyn, New York
Height:6 ft 2+1/2 in
Weight:185 lb

Chris Huffins (born April 15, 1970) is an athlete from the United States who competed in the field of Decathlon. He was the Director and Head Coach of the Men's and Women's Track and Field and Cross Country programs at the University of California from 2002 to 2007. He married Monique Parker in 1997 with whom he had one son Zachary. He earned a degree from the University of California in Political Economies of Industrial Societies in 2007. Huffins is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity. He is currently married to Tamika Huffins with whom he had another son, Jaxon.

Athletic career

Chris Huffins first became interested in decathlon while a student at the University of California. Sidelined with a broken toe, he watched other students performing decathlon and decided that that was the sport for him. Before becoming a decathlete, Chris Huffins was also a basketball player, sprinter, and long jumper.

As a decathlete, Huffins acquired a reputation as a fast starter but a slow finisher, prone to surging ahead on the first day of the competition, but fading on the second day. Huffins denied this accusation, saying that it was an accident of ordering because his two weakest events (javelin, 1500m run) happened to be the final two events of the decathlon.[3]

2000 Sydney Olympics

Leading into the Sydney Games, Huffins established himself as one of the best decathletes in the world. In 1998, he finished second in the Goodwill Games, and in 1999, Huffins won the Pan American Games and finished third at the 1999 World Championships in the decathlon. At the 2000 USA Olympic trials, Huffins finished second behind Tom Pappas and ahead of Kip Janvrin, his future teammates at Sydney.

At the Sydney Olympics, Huffins performed consistently, and after the first nine events, including the javelin, he led eventual winner Erki Nool by 14 points. In the concluding 1500m event, Huffins ran a hard race, beating his previous best time by almost 13 seconds. It was enough to capture the bronze medal. Huffins score was a season's best of 8595 points and only 46 points short of gold medalist Erki Nool.

On the topic of not winning the gold medal, Huffins later said there were as many bronze medals as gold medals, so he didn't feel any less honored for finishing third.

Coaching career

After spending some time as an assistant coach for Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and Georgia Tech in Atlanta, Georgia, Huffins was hired at his alma mater, the University of California, to coach his old team, The Golden Bears. Under his direction, the team has won 14 All-American honors, set 12 new school records, sent five athletes to the 2004 Summer Olympics, and in 2005, two of Huffin's athletes were ranked in the top 10 in the United States.

On May 29, 2007, Huffins announced his resignation from his position as director of track and field at the University of California.

After brief stints at Boise State University, Eastern Michigan University, the University of Oklahoma & Clemson, he is currently (2014-2015) going into his second year coaching the Purdue Boilermakers.

Achievements

Huffins holds the heptathlon world best in the 60 m dash with a time of 6.61 seconds.

Personal bests

Information from World Athletics profile unless otherwise noted.

EventPerformanceLocationDatePoints
Decathlonalign=right 8,694 pointsJune 20, 1998 align=center 8,694 points
100 metersalign=right 10.22 (+0.9 m/s)June 21, 1996 align=center 1,042 points
Long jumpalign=right (+2.5 m/s) April 18, 1996 align=center 1,079 points
Shot putalign=right June 21, 1996 align=center 878 points
High jumpalign=right June 19, 1998 align=center 973 points
400 metersalign=right 48.05June 21, 1996align=center 907 points
110 meters hurdlesalign=right 13.82 (+1.5 m/s) June 12, 1997 align=center 998 points
Discus throwalign=right June 20, 1998 align=center 938 points
Pole vaultalign=right June 12, 1997 align=center 880 points
Javelin throwalign=right August 25, 1999 align=center 803 points
1500 metersalign=right 4:38.71 September 28, 2000 align=center 688 points
Virtual Best Performance 9,186 points

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chris Huffins. https://web.archive.org/web/20200417175431/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/hu/chris-huffins-1.html. dead. 17 April 2020. sports-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. 4 June 2015.
  2. Web site: Chris Huffins. usatf.org. USA Track & Field. 4 June 2015.
  3. Bud Greenspan (Producer/director) . 2001 . Sydney 2000 Olympics: Bud Greenspan's Gold from Down Under . Television production.