Thank you and RIP
Printable View
Thank you and RIP
A real hero RIP
The pictures of his first sub 4-min mile are very evocative of a bygone age.
A pioneering neurologist and runner and by all accounts a true Gentlemen.
Let's not forget the impact he had on staircase safety as well.
Nice one Nick, had to think about that last line ..... just for a moment!
Indeed a great man in his own right .... I don't know how many times I've seen the footage of his record breaking run - it's akin to scenes in "Chariots of Fire", with great names like Brasher & Chataway acting as his pacers for the early laps.
Yes, a great man, simple but effective training - 400 metre repeats at 4 minute mile pace - but sub-4; did he? All 4 timers got the same time; manual timers under-estimate by about 1/4 of a second. Sure, he did it by the standards of that era.
I should add that his Textbook of Neurology, written believe it or not with a chap called Brain - was excellent - it made a potentially very difficult subject relatively easy to get to grips with.
How would his average speed have compared to the 1500 metre world record at that time?
Roger Bannister 1,609.344 metres 1954 3:59.4.
I suppose if anybody could be bothered to work it out
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1500_m...rd_progression
3:43.0 Werner Lueg (FRG) 1952-06-29 Berlin, Germany
if my reading of it is correct these two are 1500 times taken from a mile event.
3:42.8+ Wes Santee (USA) 1954-06-04 Compton, United States
3:41.8+ John Landy (AUS) 1954-06-21 Turku, Finland
Outside of the UK the Ben, Burnsall or Borrowdale don’t mean the same as they do here. Bannister is a legend (and ba-ba’s stair gag was very funny)