1609m wrote:
Tooo many marathons wrote:It's no fair to just use times. Please consider the time they ran.
My top five milers
1. Herb Elliott, Australia
2. Jim Ryun, USA
3. Peter Snell, New Zealand
4. John Bannister, Great Britain
5. Hicham Elguerrouj, Morocco
I'd only put 2 of them in top 5.
Id go with~
1. Coe
2. El Guerrouj
3. Morceli
4. Elliott
5. Ovett
The first 4 are undisputed imo, although there is obviously arguments for different order.
All top 4 broke world records at both 1500 & mile and were Olympic 1500 champs. They have to be the most important categories as any athlete from 1896 had the opportunity to achieve these. World Champs relatively new and certainly gives big advantage to modern era,
I put Coe 1 due to being the only man to have won 2 Olympic titles and broke the mile WR more times than anyone since the War.
ElGuerrouj at 2 due to the vast number of super fast times he set, even though I think he's the most likely of all the great milers to have doped.
Morceli is 3 for similar reasons to El Guerrouj. Not as many super fast times, but he knocked about 2 secs off both the 1500 and mile records.
Herb Elliott is at 4 due to unbeaten run and his Olympic WR run, although being unbeaten isn't quite so impressive having retired at about 23.
Ovett broke both world records twice, but failed to win an Olympic title. He did however win 2 World Cups either side of Moscow and had a 3 year & 45 race unbeaten win.
In the next group I'd put ~
Snell, who won Olympic 1500 and the Mile WR, but never broke the 1500 WR.
Lovelock, who managed all 3, but in an era when the number of nations competing was very limited.
Walker won the Olympic title and broke the Mile WR, but never held the 1500m WR.
Ryun - broke both world records but never won the Olympic gold, and was only ranked in the top 2 for 3 seasons.
Cram - also broke both WRs and also won Olympic silver. He did however win a World title and was at the top a lot longer than Ryun.
Below that you find the likes of Landy, Bayi, Keino, Hagg, Andersson, Lagat, Kiprop.
Alot of non continental-European athletes only ever ran 1500m at the Olympics, where they ran tactically for gold. So your statement is largely redundant. The mile was the main event up until circa 2000. Since then the 1500m has been the only event at elite level.
Walker's best mile times were superior to Bayi's 1500m, he just missed the 1500m WR on a very windy day by 0.2 in 1975, a time on a still night of 3:31ish. Walker over 1500m was like Cruz over 800m never officially holding the WR but holding a string of the next best times. But Coe & Ovett may well justify be ahead on the list.
Elliot was undefeated because he never met Snell over 1500m/mile they met over 800m and Snell won (and Snell was a nobody at that stage).
The gap between Coe & Ovett was never very much, but in Olympic terms 2 golds vs 1 bronze.
Hagg and Andersson are massively underrated and war stole their chances of Olympic glory. They took the mile from the Lovelock era to the Bannister era. Letsrun generally ignores them.