Salvitore Stitchmo wrote:
And it's not just training but it's also that we have seen a massive shift in the preferred physiological makeup of the 1500m runner/miler. For decades the consensus was you were an 800/1500m guy or a 5000/10000m guy. And this goes all the way back to your Peter Snell, Jim Ryuns and your Zatopek, Virens and of course with respect to the 1500, the most era which was Ovett, Coe and Cram. But that world class 800/1500 athlete is a rarity on the mens side - you have Wightman at 1.43/3.29 and just prior to him Tim C at 1.43/3.28 but again, they are now outliers. Because the best milers are all studs over 3000/5000m too. Jakob, Katir, Farah, Kerr, Nuguse, Nordas - George Mills just ran 12.58! For years we believed that 1500m excellence was more suited to athletes with the requisite anaerobic power of the 800m runner and we now realize it's better suited to athletes with the requisite anaerobic threshold of the 3/5000m runner. Nobody realized the principals that went into elite 5000m running would actually be better suited for the mile than those of the 800, but turns out they are.
So I would argue that not only have we seen radical changes in training for the 1500m/mile we have seen a radical shift in the modern 1500m athlete which has pertained to that too.
Very few 1500m guys are running competitive 5000m. There have always been a few guys like Auotia and the like but go count the 5k winners over the past 50 years and most are still 5k/10k guys. Most 1500m guys are 1500m specialists. Not fast enough for the 800( running 1:44-1:46) or strong enough for the 5000m(can’t run sub 12:50). There are few guys who are competive in both but not many. And in general those 800/5000m times are good but not as good as their 1500m.