Where Are They Now?
Andy Bessette
Men's Track and Field, 1971-75
Track and field is not a typical
team sport. Determination, perseverance and resiliency are not attributes your
teammates can instill in you on the field between plays. These qualities come
from within one.
When these attributes aligned
for Andy Bessette during the summer of 1971, he realized he had the potential to
become one of the best hammer throwers not only at the University of Connecticut
but in the country.
“Track and field is not a
glory sport, the drive for success comes solely from within,” said Bessette.
“You try to be better today than you were yesterday.”
Though a musician during his
days at Cumberland High School in Rhode Island, Bessette was recruited to many
major track and field programs for the hammer throw.
The words of his father and
the quality of the UConn coaches were what inspired him to become a Husky.
“My father told me, ‘I know that
these coaches are honest and they’ll train you well’.”
Bessette is shown here to the
left with the late Bob Kennedy, former UConn track and field coach.
The summer before Bessette
came to UConn, he became the first high school athlete ever to be invited to
the Olympic Committee Track and Field throwing camp at Dartmouth.
Following his freshman year at
UConn in 1972, he qualified for the United States Junior National Team as a
hammer thrower and was part of the first team to ever compete against a Russian
Junior Track and Field team.
As a senior at UConn in the
spring of 1975, Bessette finished third at the NCAA Championships to earn
All-America honors. He set the UConn school record for the hammer throw with a
mark of 65.10 meters – 213 feet, seven inches – a mark which still stands today.
“I always tried to throw my
best at the biggest meets of the season,” Bessette said while recalling the
record.
Following graduation at UConn
with a degree in economic geography, Bessette earned a master’s degree from the
University of Rhode Island in 1977.
In 1977, through the United
States Olympic Committee (USOC) Job Opportunities Program, that helped
potential Olympic athletes obtain full time jobs that allowed them to train,
Bessette worked in hotel sales for the Sheraton Hotel group for three years.
Bessette spent those three
years training for the 1980 Summer Olympic Games, while learning what it was
like to be part of a team. Bessette credits much of his achievement to his
technical and strength coaches as well as his trainers.
Bessette set the all-time
distance record at the Olympic trials for the hammer throw while finishing
first, fulfilling his lifelong dream of becoming an Olympian.
“The most fulfilling part was
throwing my personal best at the Olympic trials,” says Bessette.
As the summer games
approached, Bessette remembered something he had said to his mother over 20
years before at the age of seven. While watching the Summer Olympic games in
Rome in 1960 on television, he turned to his mother and said, “I’m going to be
in the Olympics someday.”
Just months before the 1980
Summer Olympics in Moscow were to take place, the athletes were informed that
the United States would boycott the games because they were being held in
Communist Russia.
Following that disappointing
turn of events, Bessette competed in the Freedom Games held in Philadelphia and
finished third overall in the hammer throw.
Even though there was a
lingering disappointment about not competing in the Olympics, Bessette managed
to put a positive spin on his outstanding finish at the Freedom Games. Bessette
considers his Olympic Trials victory the pinnacle of his athletic career.
In 1980, Bessette started his
career at Travelers Insurance Companies while making one last attempt to make
the Olympic team in 1984. He eventually finished as an alternate in the hammer
throw at the 1984 Olympic trials.
Between 1980 and 2002,
Bessette held a variety of jobs from entry level through the vice president
level. In 2002, Bessette left Travelers to become an executive vice president at
the St. Paul Co.,which subsequently merged with Travelers forming St. Paul
Travelers. He currently serves as Executive Vice President and Chief
Administrative Officer of St. Paul Travelers.
Bessette lived in Connecticut
most of the time between 1971 and 2002. Since 2002, he and his family have lived
in Minnesota. He does make frequent trip to Connecticut for business purposes.
He and his wife, Cherrie, have
two children; -- Noelle 17, and Christopher 12. While Noelle is looking at
colleges to apply to across the country, Christopher is just beginning to take
an interest in the hammer throw. Though too young at 12 to begin any serious
training, Bessette looks forward to encouraging Christopher in whatever his
aspirations are.
Being a competitive athlete
has shaped both Bessette’s personal and professional lives.
“I always tried to push
myself, overachieve and have a positive attitude,” says Bessette. “Today, I
apply that to my business life."
To be successful in life, one
only needs to look at two of Bessette’s key mottos,
“Try to be better today than
you were the day before” and "I've found that results are achieved much more
effectively when you work as a team."
-- Curran Kennedy |