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Arthur Lydiard invented jogging. The method of building up physical fitness by gradually increasing stamina is a simple one, used by millions of men and women worldwide as part of their everyday health and fitness regime. It was used to train New Zealands greatest track athletes, and helped propel New Zealand to the top of world middle-distance running. |
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![]() Arthur Lydiard c.1965 Permission Garth Gilmour |
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Arthur Lydiard was born in 1917 in Auckland. He was
educated at Mt Albert Grammar School and later trained as a shoemaker.
Like many young New Zealand men, he was a keen schoolboy rugby player and
continued to play into his 20s. He also enjoyed swimming and believed he
was fit merely because he participated in physical activities. He never
trained in a formal or organised way.
But by the age of 27 his metabolism was naturally slowing and he could feel himself getting fat and lazy. A six-mile run with a friend who was a disciplined athlete proved to Lydiard that his fitness was on the wane. He described the feeling in the 1983 book Jogging with Lydiard:
He speculated as to how many other first time runners identified with this feeling. His interest had been ignited. He wanted to know how to improve his fitness. He wanted to be in shape for the rest of his life. In looking for answers Lydiard would change the way the world got fit.
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The success of this more mature athlete had attracted attention from younger runners around Auckland. The first was Lawrie King. He had been running with Lydiard for two years and usually struggling behind the older man. Kings victory in a provincial championship mile race where he led from the first lap and won by 80 metres set Lydiard on course to be an unwitting coach. King went on to be a national cross-country champion and six-mile record holder as well as a 1954 Empire Games representative. The group of runners, at first informal, included some of the greatest of all New Zealand track athletes: Barry Magee, Ray Puckett, Jeff Julian, Murray Halberg, John Davies, Bill Baillie and Peter Snell. This was not an official team
selected from the countrys top athletes; it was a group of promising
Aucklanders, members of the Owairaka Harriers and Lynndale club, who enjoyed running
together. |
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Lydiard became more than their mentor, he didnt so much push them, as force them to push themselves. The training runs he initiated were tough, they had to be. He saw the potential in his athletes, potential that perhaps wouldnt have been released by a softer coach. As Peter Snell describes in his book No Bugles No Drums:
Of course the exertion had a purpose.
Lydiard knew his runners well. In 1953 (only a year after they met) he
predicted Murray Halberg would be the greatest middle distance runner in
New Zealand. A year later he made similar comments about Peter Snell. In
1978, with the benefit of hindsight, athletics journalist and co-author of Run the Lydiard Way,
Garth Gilmour would say of Snell that he was "probably the most brilliant runner the world has ever seen,
John Walker and Filbert Bayi included". In the interim Lydiard's
predictions would be absolutely demonstrated on the international stage. |
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| Rome
1960 Five athletes competing at the 1960 Rome Olympics had been trained by Arthur Lydiard. This fact was recognised in New Zealand and he was well known to the general public, but he was not part of the official coaching staff and it was doubtful that he could travel to Rome with the team. In No Bugles No Drums Peter Snell blames the near-sightedness of the athletics administrators of the day who, he says, were out of touch with what the athletes needed:
The athletes and the country
knew how important it was to have Lydiard there, but the administrators
wouldnt budge. In the end a public appeal was launched, the money was
quickly raised, and Lydiard attended the 1960 Olympics as an "independently
travelling unofficial coach". |
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Arthur Lydiard and Peter Snell on the way to Rome 1960 |
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On
a hot September day in Rome, within the space of one hour, Peter Snell took Gold in the 800 metres
(a
new Olympic record) and Murray Halberg won Gold in the 5000 metres. There
have been many great moments in New Zealand sport, but that effort is
arguably New Zealands finest. The two athletes were
instantly stars on the global stage and Lydiard, unofficial though he
might have been, had
become the worlds most respected athletics coach. |
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In February 1999 a group of athletes who had been coached by Lydiard threw their weight behind a campaign to have him knighted. Lydiard had already been awarded an OBE in 1962 and was made a Member of the Order of New Zealand (an honour regarded as higher than Knighthood), in 1990. Dick Quax commented that Lydiard, besides training great athletes to perform at their best, had also taught the rest of the world better fitness and health practices.
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When Lydiard started speaking about the virtues of mild to vigorous exercise for ordinary health, doctors were still prescribing bed rest for recovering heart patients. Today exercise as part of recuperation is routine. The jogging phenomenon has swept the world, beyond fad and fashion, to become a lifestyle choice for millions of people. The information on Lydiard at the New Zealand Sports Hall of Fame conveys his importance to health, fitness and excellence:
In the Runners' World (magazine) Millennium issue Arthur was named one of the five influential figures of the century in running. With literally millions of trainers everyday pounding the pavements of the planet, Arthur Lydiard's influence on personal health and fitness reverberates all over the world. His influence on competitive athletics is just as indelible. In December 2004, after giving a lecture in Texas on athletics,
Lydiard put his feet up and was apparently watching television in his
hotel room when he had a heart attack. He died at the age of 87. |
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Permission
Athletics New Zealand |
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Sources
Web References: Books written by, or about, Arthur Lydiard:
For profile of Lydiard as a member of the New Zealand Sports Hall of
Fame:
Salute to Lydiard on 'Traingain' site: Lydiard, Arthur. and Gilmour, Garth. (1983) Jogging with Lydiard, Hodder and Stoughton, New Zealand Gilmour, Garth. (1978) Run the Lydiard Way, Hodder and Stoughton, New Zealand Tayler, Dick. and Spencer, Jolly. (1975) Gold Arent Easy, John McIndoe, New Zealand Gilmour, Garth. (1965) Run for your Life Jogging with Arthur Lydiard, Minerva Bookshop Limited, New Zealand Gilmour, Garth. (1965) No Bugles No Drums, Minerva Bookshop Limited, New Zealand Articles: Wischnia, Bob. (2000) "Spirits Who Led The Way", Runner's World, January Hinton, Marc. (1999) "Stars back call for Lydiards knighthood", Sunday Star Times, February 21 Warwick, Roger. (1996) "Great feats began from suburban home", The Evening Post, July 29 COPYRIGHT NZEDGE.COM IP HOLDINGS LIMITED
1998-2007. |
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