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SportsOctober 30, 2004

The knees, hips and ankles are still holding up. Jim Ryun is thankful for that at 57, a generation removed from the days when he held the world record in the mile. He also knows how foolish it would be to time himself on the track now. "I think I'd have to use a sundial instead of a stopwatch," he says...

Fred Lief ~ The Associated Press

The knees, hips and ankles are still holding up.

Jim Ryun is thankful for that at 57, a generation removed from the days when he held the world record in the mile. He also knows how foolish it would be to time himself on the track now.

"I think I'd have to use a sundial instead of a stopwatch," he says.

Ryun tries to run every day, but finds that hard to do during a campaign. He is up for re-election Tuesday, seeking a fifth term in Congress as a representative from Kansas.

Ryun's track exploits are practically legend in his home state, but he insists his aura of celebrity is balanced by the fact that he's lived in his district and his children have gone to school there.

"I've had the experience of letting them see me as who I am," he told The Associated Press by phone from Lawrence, Kan., between campaign stops.

Ryun is among a few big-name sports figures going before voters. Also up for re-election in Congress are two fellow Republicans -- Rep. Tom Osborne of Nebraska, the former coach of championship Nebraska football teams, and Sen. Jim Bunning of Kentucky, the Hall of Fame pitcher.

Bunning is going for a second term in the Senate after a dozen years in the House. His big lead has eroded amid gaffes and editorials questioning his mental fitness at 73.

Colorado's Ben Nighthorse Campbell, a one-time Olympic judo competitor, is retiring from the Senate. Montana Gov. Judy Martz, a former Olympic speedskater, chose not to run again.

President Bush, of course, is a former owner of the Texas Rangers, although his foray into baseball was hardly his springboard to the national stage.

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Darrell West, a political science professor at Brown University and author of "Celebrity Politics," says voters are willing to pull the lever for ex-jocks, who bring important assets to their new line of work.

"Athletes have many attributes of successful politicians," he says. "They're in the public eye, used to dealing with the media. Their thick skins help them overcome their critics."

But the sports figure-turned-politician is bolstered by something even more valuable. He -- and it's predominantly men who have jumped from the sports arena to the political arena -- is already a familiar face before hitting the campaign trail.

"The advantage for the candidate is name recognition and visibility and the cult of personality," says Andrew Kohut, president of the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press. "The disadvantage is the image of the athlete as not very thoughtful."

West suggests the stereotype of the athlete as all brawn and no brain might not be such a detriment.

"They're helped because it keeps expectations low," he says. "If they're in a debate and do halfway well, it works to their advantage."

Ryun is an ardent conservative who speaks openly about his faith. He won nearly two-thirds of the vote two years ago.

In Congress in recent years, those athletes who have crossed into politics for the most part have been conservative. Two notable exceptions are ex-basketball stars Bill Bradley in the Senate and Tom McMillen in the House, both no longer in office.

While the regimentation and discipline of sports might suggest an easy explanation for such leanings, West offers another possibility.

"Athletes tend to be instant millionaires -- they've made a lot of money fast," he says. "They go into shock when they see how much in taxes is taken out of their paycheck."

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