People ask me why Britain was so good in those days? It was before the age of mass electronic use and sedentary ways. Also, you did not have the collective hysteria, at the time, about being scared to let your kids 'play outside' lest they be abducted (ridiculous, because stats show that most 'abductors' are more likely to be relatives or 'friends' of the family). Many athletes came from a background of football, when younger, and football is very effective transfer sport to running....it is interval training in disguise! Youngsters in the UK and Ireland grew up (in the 50s, 60s, 70s) grew up spending hours every day playing outside....something akin to the Kenyans running to and from school.....so you could develop a base that way. Look at Mottram and his brothers who all dabbled in different sports when young.....tremendous base for Craig...who played soccer, basketball and swimming in age group competitions.
Also, at the time, there was emulation. My club, for instance (Hercules Wimbledon) had several international runners. People like Dave Clarke (3.39/7.50/13.22/27.56, 2.13), Bob Holt (3.51/7.59/13.48/28.39/2.16) and many more in the club who were around 29 - 30 minutes for 10,000 and who could all race 10 miles road, week in week out in under 49 minutes. The clubs were more 'elitist' in the UK at that time, and what is wrong with that, as it is merely the pursuit of excellence.
Now, every Tom, Dick and Jane wants to run a marathon in the UK, and they are hailed in the workplace as 'wonderful athletes' even if they complete the course in 3 hours, 4 hours, 5 hours or slower! It has become ridiculous. Now, nothing wrong with jogging a marathon, but to be lauded for poor quality performances is bizarre and misguided. These people are not athletes....and telling people they are 'wonderful athletes' just for putting one foot in front of the other sends the message that poor quality is laudable.
I remember in Hercules, if you could not at least run the marathon in sub 2.30, you were not even considered a runner. Anything slower than 5.30 or 5.40 mile pace for the marathon was considered 'jogging' and/or recreational running. You would get no respect in the clubhouse (Lauriston cottage). Now if you run 3 hours or less, people are in awe! it makes no sense. Let's get real.
So we all tried to emulate Clarke, Holt and company and logged many miles following them on Wimbledon Common and Richmond Park.
Also, we should note that all our top class runners in the UK at the time (all the sub. 28 minute men for 10,000) had full time jobs - Black, Simmons (College Lecturer and Technician at Luton College), Ford (Tax man in Central London), Clarke (Geography and P.E. teacher), Foster (Secondary school teacher), and the list goes on.
They worked 8 hour days, and trained in the morning or lunch time as well as evening. Holt - only trained once a day and only ran around 60 miles a week.
We had guys like Barratt and Roberts who were 30 minutes 10,000 men, who only ran around 35 to 50 miles a week. But many of the runs were progressive, 'eyeballs out' runs on parkland or roads. We were tough then.
Now the culture has changed, and running is not a viable sport for most youngsters. There are plenty of fun 'joggers' around completing marathons. But distance times have fallen off.
I used to run 52 - 53 minutes in 10 mile road races in the UK in the 70s and 80s but would usually place around 30th to 50th, such was the depth at the time. Now with my times, I would win many 10 milers in the UK. When I ran 1.50.49 in the Finchley '20' I placed back in the 40s, whereas that time would have won the race this year......
The point of all this is that people still have the same potential, but it is a matter of lifestyle and lack of emulation goals which mean that standards in distance running have fallen drastically in the UK over the past two decades.
Ghost in Saudi,
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