Fun Facts About the Olympic Marathons in History

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It is track and field time at the Olympics, and that means it’s time for the men’s and women’s marathons! All of the running events are fun to watch if you are a runner, but the Olympic marathon is special. Since the women’s marathon is Sunday, Runners World has an awesome list of nine big moments in Olympic history. All of these will come in handy at your next quiz night, but my personal favorite is the story of Emil Zatopek:

As the 1952 helsinki olympics drew to a close, Czech-oslovakia’s Emil Zatopek, 29, had already won the 5000 meters and 10,000 meters, setting new Olympic records in both. He could have rested on his substantial laurels. Instead, he chose to enter an event he had never run before–the marathon. There he faced England’s tough-as-nails Jim Peters, who had recently lowered the world record from 2:25:39 to 2:20:43.

Hoping to shake his unexpected new foe, Peters started at a crazy fast pace, especially given the warm weather. Zatopek followed on his heels. Just before halfway, Zatopek turned to Peters and asked, in perfect, formal English: “Excuse me, but the pace–is it fast enough?” Not to be outdone, Peters answered, “No, too slow,” so Zatopek accelerated. Peters couldn’t keep up and eventually dropped out near the 20-mile mark.

By that time Zatopek was alone and well ahead of the field. Before a capacity crowd in the Olympic Stadium, the new marathoner broke the tape in 2:23:03–his third Olympic record in three races at the Helsinki Games. No one before or since has matched his triple-gold performance in the 5000 meters, 10,000 meters, and marathon.

So, there’s a good lesson in sportsmanship. Lie to your competitor to force them to run to exhaustion, and they might just sneak up and beat you instead. Also, the whole setup of the underdog asking the front-runner how to run the race, and the snarky answer followed by a backfire … doesn’t it sound like a subplot in one of the Police Academy movies?

Be sure to check out the full Runners World list for all of the stories. If nothing else, it might inspire you to head out for a few miles yourself!

 

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About the Author

Zek
Zek has been a gadget fiend for a long time, going back to their first PDA (a Palm M100). They quickly went from researching what PDA to buy to following tech news closely and keeping up with the latest and greatest stuff. They love writing about ebooks because they combine their two favorite activities; reading anything and everything, and talking about fun new tech toys. What could be better?

2 Comments on "Fun Facts About the Olympic Marathons in History"

  1. My favorite story is that of Dorando Pietri. But I will always have a soft spot in my heart for Lasse Viren, who in 1976 won the 5,000 and 10,000 meter races and then said (apparently), “What the heck, let’s do the Marathon, too!” the *day after* the 5K final. And he came in 5th. The 1976 Olympics is the first one I really remember (aside from Franz Klammer’s epic downhill win at the winter games that year–the textbook definition of balls-out), and I remember thinking, “Can you just jump into the Marathon like that? Don’t you need to fill out forms or something?” The guy must have had endorphins practically shooting out his ears by that point.

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