Born in
Atlanta, Georgia, Metcalfe grew up in Chicago and graduated high school from
Tilden Tech in 1930. He accepted a track
scholarship to
Marquette University in
Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, and equaled the record of 10.3 seconds in the 100 m on a number of occasions, as well as equaling the
200 m record of 20.6 seconds. He became the first man to win the
NCAA 200 m title three times consecutively. At the
1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, he virtually dead-heated with his rival
Eddie Tolan, with the gold medal awarded to Tolan only after extended study of the photograph; both recorded a time of 10.38 seconds in the
100 meters. Metcalfe also earned a bronze medal at these games, in the
200 meters. He competed again at the
1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, and again took silver in the
100 meters, this time behind four-time gold medalist Owens. They won
gold in the
4 × 100 meter relay with
Foy Draper and
Frank Wykoff; the U.S. won by 1.1 seconds over runner-up Italy, and Germany took bronze. Fierce rivals on the track, Metcalfe and Owens became lifelong friends.
Olympic controversies 1932 Metcalfe was convinced to the end of his life that the 100 m should have been awarded as a tie between him and Eddie Tolan: "I have never been convinced I was defeated. It should have been a tie." Film evidence and that of observers of the race seem to support Metcalfe's verdict. The
AAU later changed their rules to have the winner being the first athlete to cross the line not merely breast the tape. It was the latter that Tolan was judged to have done first. The AAU went further and awarded the race as a tie but the
International Olympic Committee has never agreed to this change. They maintain the result stands because the judges decided in line with the rules at the time that Eddie Tolan's entire torso had passed the finish line on the ground before Metcalfe's. In addition, even though credited with same time as Tolan, 10.3 s, a time that equaled the then world record, Metcalfe's time was never ratified as a world record. In the 200 m, Metcalfe was embroiled in further controversy. Observers at the time claimed the marking for his starting holes were 3–4 feet behind where they should have been. Others claimed this discrepancy was the result of an optical illusion because George Simpson in the lane outside cut his holes on the outside of his lane whilst Metcalfe used the inside of his. In any case, Metcalfe was offered a re-run but refused because he feared the United States would not be able to repeat its 1–2–3. In all he won 16 national titles at the AAU Championships, NCAA Championships and Final Olympic Trials.
World records Metcalfe 16 times broke or equaled world record times at various distances. However, only 5 of these were ever officially ratified by the athletics governing body, the
IAAF. The ratified times were: • equaled the world record for 100 m of 10.3 s on: • August 12, 1933 in Budapest, Hungary. • September 15, 1934 in Nishinomiya, Japan. • September 23, 1934 in Darien, Japan. • equaled the world record for 200 m (straight course) of 20.6 s on August 12, 1933 in Budapest, Hungary. • broke the world record for the 4 × 100 m relay with 39.8 s on August 9, 1936 (United States 1936 Olympics team of
Jesse Owens-Metcalfe-
Foy Draper-
Frank Wykoff). ==Military and political career==