Legendary Sports Achievements — Roger Bannister and the Four-Minute Mile Barrier

The Grandstand at the Roger Bannister running ...
Image via Wikipedia

Every sport has its great achievers, and every era ushers in athletes of such singular achievement they make once-thought-impossible feats seem suddenly possible.  How do they do it?  What drives them?   What makes a champion so different from other people, let alone other athletes?

Some athletes compete faster, higher, and more intensely than the rest of the pack, driving themselves to break records and accomplish the unthinkable. The roar of the crowd at major sports competitions says it all—great champions offer a level of inspiration that is utterly soul stirring.

What makes a champion?  It’s more than just physical training and agility – though those elements can’t be discounted.  Legendary, truly great athletes share an ability to focus mentally on a level most of us can scarcely imagine.

Roger Bannister became a sports legend in 1954 when he broke the then unimaginable four-minute mile speed record in a race in Oxford, England. The previous record had been held for nine years, and the achievement of running a mile in less than four minutes had been deemed impossible.  Yet Bannister did it.  How?

Bannister had been running his whole life and dedicated himself to a system of light training.  He often said it was easier for him to run than to walk, so he ran. And ran. And ran.  Before the race at Oxford he began training even harder with a new approach, a training system that combined a system of steady running with fast spurts.

Significantly, Bannister visualized himself breaking the four-minute barrier, and once the race was run he was confident he had achieved it.  It was Bannister’s combination of acute, dedicated training along with mental discipline and an overriding belief in his ability to achieve the impossible that lead to his legendary victory.

In his book, Four Minute Mile, Bannister wrote,  “No one can say, ‘You must not run faster than this, or jump higher than that.’ The human spirit is indomitable."

Roger Bannister’s incredible achievement, both athletically and mentally, still inspires athletes and thinkers worldwide.

When Great Athletes Fail

Mary Decker crashes to the ground after she an...
Image via Wikipedia

Great athletes achieve great things.  Except when they don’t.  The great ones make it all seem so utterly effortless, we sometimes fail to appreciate the true level of their achievement.  From our comfortable seats in the arena, we munch on popcorn and relax.  And then it happens — our souls are stirred by a peak performance by a great champion.  As their greatness entertains us, some of their magic flows onto us through a special athlete -to-normal-human transference of energy.  In our dreams, we all want to be like them… except when they fail.  Their failure diminishes us and makes us common folks again.  Why do some of the greatest athletes sometimes fail?

Steve Prefontaine brought incredible energy to the running movement in the early 70s with his breathtaking speed and endurance.  He’s considered one of the greatest American distance runners of all time, yet after setting long distance running records in events from the 2,000 to 10,000 meters, he failed to win a medal in the 1972 Olympics in Munich.  In the 5000-meter event, he was overcome in the last gasp of the race, the last 150 meters—narrowly losing out on a medal.  Yet even with this loss Prefontaine remains a legend in long-distance running.

Mary Decker, like Steve Prefontaine, is a world-class long-distance runner who started running in her teens in the early 70s.  She holds an unprecedented 17 world records and 36 National records.  Yet her hard charging career was often marred by illness and heartbreaking losses due to injury.  Coming in at the top of her game, she was expected to take the Gold medal in the 3000-meter event at the 1984 Summer Olympics, yet she lost in a heartbreaking-to-watch accident when she collided with runner Zola Budd.  Decker came back from this bitter loss, however, by setting more records in the 80s, including a new record for the women’s mile.

Both these legends prove that failure is all part of the game of winning, and is not necessarily an ending but just part of the process of achieving greatness.

Enhanced by Zemanta