The Running Man is the second podcast from ESPN Investigates. It started in 2016 when freelance reporter Mike Kessler took a call from Andrew Zenoff, the husband of his wife’s good friend. Zenoff had a story to tell about his older brother, Victor.
In the mid-1970s, Andrew and Victor spent several summers at Camp Greylock, an upscale sports camp for boys in Massachusetts. Just before his 18th birthday, Victor fell 700 feet and died during a hiking trip in Yosemite National Park — two weeks after confessing his despondency over what happened to him at Camp Greylock.
Victor says his brother Andrew was molested for three consecutive summers by a track coach, an athlete from the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games who drew small groups of Greylock’s best athletes into a special “squad” with the promise that he could make them world-class athletes. The coach’s name: Conrad Avondale Mainwaring.
This is the story of an obscure former Olympian and alleged serial sexual predator — and the 13-month ESPN investigation that brought him out the shadows. It’s the tale of more than 50 men who say that, over the course of the past 40-plus years, they were physically abused and mentally manipulated by their “coach.” And it’s the story of how they banded together, decades later, to find justice.
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The Running Man is available now for fans to binge-listen. The episode lineup is:
Episode 1: Meeting Conrad Our search for Conrad Mainwaring began with a single tip, from a California man named Andrew Zenoff. Andrew reached out to reporter Mike Kessler and told the story of his older brother, Victor. The siblings had attended a summer camp in the late 1970s, where Victor was allegedly molested by Mainwaring. By 1980, just short of his 18th birthday, Victor would die unexpectedly — just days after telling his mother about the abuse. For years, the Zenoffs grappled not only with the loss, but with so many unanswered questions. Beginning in 2017, after Andrew called Kessler, we began to look for answers. And we started with a question that seemed simple enough, but proved quite elusive: Who was Conrad Mainwaring?
Episode 2: Mind Games In the fall of 1980, Robert Bender was an incoming freshman at Syracuse University, hoping to make the gymnastics team as a walk-on. Within minutes of arriving on campus, Bender was greeted by an athletic man with a charming British accent. Soon, Bender — and so many other young men — would become members of Conrad Mainwaring’s elite “Squad.” Mainwaring’s recruits had to follow important rules to stay on his team: There could be no drinking or drugs, and certainly no carousing with girls; but, above all else, there could be no talking about the Squad to outsiders. Mainwaring had a secret, and he wanted it kept.
Episode 3: The Blog Tym De Santo says he was 17 when Conrad Mainwaring sexually abused him in the mid-’70s. But even 35 years later, he hadn’t processed it as abuse. Like so many others who had trained under Mainwaring, he still saw the coach as a positive force in his development, as someone who taught him how to be mentally strong, how to bring out the best in himself as an athlete and as a man. So, Mainwaring was far from De Santo’s mind when he took a trip to England with his mom and wrote about the journey on his personal blog. And yet, unbelievably, that innocuous post would begin the unraveling of the secret world of Conrad Mainwaring.
Episode 4: Confronting Conrad When David O’Boyle decided to head to the UCLA track on the morning of June 28, 2016, he didn’t really have a grand plan; he just knew he had to confront Conrad Mainwaring. He wanted to stop him, but he wasn’t really sure how. So, when O’Boyle showed up, he started recording on his phone, and for 12 uncomfortable minutes, he called out Mainwaring as a child abuser. Then he left, unsure what exactly he had accomplished. What he didn’t know — what he couldn’t have known — was that his confrontation was one in a series of unlikely events that ultimately would bring Mainwaring to face justice.
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