The first man to break two hours, ten minutes was Derek Clayton, who did it in 1968 in Fukuoka, Japan. In 1969, Clayton ran 2:08:34, and in his own words, he never recovered.
Derek Clayton was my manager at Runner’s World. Every once in awhile, he would let his guard down and tell us about his competitive days. It was fascinating to see a man who was so self made, both in business and athletics. He did not fancy that he had talent, he did believe that his drive was his best asset.
After considering the six foot six Australian ( via Ireland and England), for most of the past twenty six years, I consider Clayton to be one of the most driven and talented athletes of his time, parallel to the great Ron Clarke. His punishing training and his lack of a coach who he could trust was probably what did his career in. The concepts of recovery have changed much in the last thirty years, as have training shoes, racing flats and spikes and nutrition.
If one notes, however, that all of the great marathoners have had their challenges, their dark days, and their human frailty shown on global tv, then Haile Gebrselassie is like many of his predecessors. And then, he is also not like many of his predecessors. Allow me to digress.
Haile Gebreselassie has been on the world stage for fourteen years. From the time he won his first record at 5,000 meters in Hengelo in 1994 to his 2:03:59 in real,-Berlin yesterday, Haile has challenged himself, his competitors and the notion of the marathon.
Recently, we had a twenty one year old Olympic marathon winner. This is after the Olympic and World champions getting older and older. The other theory is that some runners can run for records, some can run for championships, but rarely is there one who can run for both.
Haile has had some bad days on the road to marathon deity. He dropped out of London one year, he dropped back from the lead at London one year, and it was always with that, that one said, well, Haile has to throw in the towel.
Now, Mr. G speaks about running until 2016, if he is healthy. His 10,000 meter run in Beijing was masterful. He pushed the negative split idea to its zenith–13:48, then 13:13. Afterwards, Haile chastised himself about not running the first half faster so he could have had a better chance at a medal!
The 10,000 meter speed is key to his success! He may not win medals but 26:51 does give a runner a certain amount of confidence when one needs to run 29 minute 10k’s to set a record.
Where can he go from here? Mr. Butcher has a few suggestions!
HAILE MARCHES ON
Haile Gebrselassie needs no invitation to keep on running. There’s no stopping him, as his latest world record, 2.03.59 in the real_Berlin Marathon on Sunday demonstrates. It was his 26th world record or world best, and today (Monday), he reiterated that he feels himself capable of at least 2.03.30 for the distance.
“After the race, I didn’t feel so tired,†he said. “But today, I couldn’t wake up. I didn’t train this morning. But it feels great to be the first man under 2.04 in the marathon.
That led to the perennial question of when the first sub-two hour marathon will happen. “I don’t expect it before 20 years,†replied the man who has taken rival Paul Tergat’s record of 2.04.55, in Berlin 2003, down by almost a minute. “Myself, I can do 2.03 something. If I don’t get injured, maybe 2.02.59, but considering my shape and my age, 2.03.30, or 2.03.20″.
He also said that running in the Olympic 10,000 metres in Beijing, where he finished sixth was the right decision. He had qualified for the Ethiopian team with a 26.51.20 run in Hengelo in May.
“It helped a lot here. When you can run 26.51, running 10 kilometres in a marathon in 29 minutes (average) is nothing. It’s easyâ€. Only if your name is Haile Gebrselassie.
In the 14 years since he set his first world record (12min 56.96sec for 5000 metres in Hengelo, Netherlands in 1994), Gebrselassie has altered our perceptions about the possibilities and limits of human endurance in long distance running. That span of 14 years is itself a record for longevity in record breaking. And owes much to Geb’s capacity, like all ‘greats’ to reinvent himself. As recently as 1999, he won the world indoor 1500 metres title.
Now he is rearranging the marathon records. The 42.195 kilometre event has long been a haven for the ageing or slowing track runner. But, despite suggesting he is in that category at 35 years of age, Geb has also taken that perception and wrung its neck.
His next race is a 15 kilometres in Melbourne, Australia on November 30. In contrast, Irina Mikitenko, winner of the Berlin’s women’s race with a massive personal best, 2.19.19, has decided not to challenge for the half-million dollar prize that would go with a victory in the New York Marathon in early November.
Gete Wami of Ethiopia, who won in Berlin last year, went on to finish second in New York five weeks later, and won the $500,000 for being points winner in the World Marathon Majors, the series which includes Boston, London, Berlin, Chicago and New York.
Mikitenko and Wami are currently tied on 65 points in this year’s series. But the Kazakh-born German, 36, has decided against following Wami’s example from last year. “Money isn’t everything,†Mikitenko said on Monday. “I’ve already done very well, winning London and Berlin. If you’re in a sport at this level, you need goals and targets, and my goal is next year’s World Championships marathon here in Berlin. The most important thing is to win. If you win, money followsâ€.
This was originally posted at www.globerunner.org. All glory, honour and of course, copyright goes to Mr. Pat Butcher, all knowing and global bon vivant,
and athletic observer.
Author
Larry Eder has had a 52-year involvement in the sport of athletics. Larry has experienced the sport as an athlete, coach, magazine publisher, and now, journalist and blogger. His first article, on Don Bowden, America's first sub-4 minute miler, was published in RW in 1983. Larry has published several magazines on athletics, from American Athletics to the U.S. version of Spikes magazine. He currently manages the content and marketing development of the RunningNetwork, The Shoe Addicts, and RunBlogRun. Of RunBlogRun, his daily pilgrimage with the sport, Larry says: "I have to admit, I love traveling to far away meets, writing about the sport I love, and the athletes I respect, for my readers at runblogrun.com, the most of anything I have ever done, except, maybe running itself." Also does some updates for BBC Sports at key events, which he truly enjoys. Theme song: Greg Allman, " I'm no Angel."
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