Lee Edward Evans was born on February 25, 1947, in
Madera, California, to Dayton and Pearlie Mae Evans. At the age of four, his family moved to
Fresno. He attended Madison Elementary School and in his last year there, he trained for his first race by racing his friends at school. Evans went on to Central Union High School where he was classified in the C class for the 660 yard dash due to his height, weight, and age. Due to his mother contracting
Valley fever, the Evans family moved to
San Jose, California, during Lee's sophomore year. While running for
Overfelt High School, Evans was undefeated, improving his 440-yard time from 48.2 in 1964 to 46.9 in 1965. and attended
San Jose State, where he was coached by Hall of Famer
Bud Winter. In 1966 as a freshman, he won his first
AAU championship in 440
yd (402.34 m). He won the AAU title four years in a row (1966–1969) and again in 1972 and he added the
NCAA 400 m title in 1968. His only defeat during that streak came at the hands of San Jose State teammate
Tommie Smith. The two were so competitive, Winter could not let them practice together. Evans achieved his first
world record in 1966, as a member of the USA national team which broke the 4 × 400 m
relay record at
Los Angeles, the first team to better 3 minutes (2:59.6) in the event. The next year he helped break the 4 × 220 yd (201.17 m) relay world record at
Fresno in a time of 1:22.1. In 1967, Evans won the 400 metres at the
Pan American Games, in an
automatic time of 44.95, which (in the era of hand times) was the first bona fide automatic time to break 45 seconds. == Olympics ==