Herb Elliott

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Olympic medal record
Men's Athletics
Gold 1960 Rome 1500 metres

Herbert James ("Herb") Elliott (born on February 25, 1938) is a former Australian athlete, one of the world's greatest middle distance runners. He never lost a race over 1500 metres or the mile[1] and during his career he broke the four-minute mile on 17 occasions.

Elliott, a native of Perth, Western Australia, set a new world record for the mile on August 6, 1958 (3.54,5) at Morton Stadium in Dublin and broke the 1500 metres world record the same year.

At the 1958 Commonwealth Games in Cardiff, Wales, he won gold in the 880 yards and the mile. Two years later, at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, Elliott won the gold medal in the 1500 metres, setting a new world record as well (3.35,6).

Elliott credited his visionary and iconoclastic coach, Percy Cerutty, with inspiration to train harder and more naturally than anyone of his era. Cerutty was known to avoid the track, talk about role models outside athletics (like Da Vinci and Jesus), and bring his athletes to the unspoiled seaside beauty of Portsea training camp south of Melbourne, where Elliott would sprint up sand dunes until he dropped. "Faster," said Cerutty, "It's only pain."

Elliott retired from athletics in May 1961. He was once the CEO of Puma North America.

He was one of the bearers of the Olympic Torch at the opening ceremony of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, and entered the stadium for the final segment before the lighting of the Olympic Flame.

He attended Aquinas College in Perth Aquinas College, Perth. Aquinas college is renowned for its sport culture and it was this culture that helped Elliott achieve such heights in athletics.

Olympian and Old Aquinian, Herb Elliott was recently ranked in Western Australia's 100 most influential people.

There is a biography covering his career, The Golden Mile, Cassell, 1961.


Olympic champions in men's 1500 m

1896: Teddy Flack | 1900: Charles Bennett | 1904: Jim Lightbody | 1906: Jim Lightbody | 1908: Mel Sheppard | 1912: Arnold Jackson | 1920: Albert Hill | 1924: Paavo Nurmi | 1928: Harry Larva | 1932: Luigi Beccali | 1936: Jack Lovelock | 1948: Henry Eriksson | 1952: Josy Barthel | 1956: Ron Delany | 1960: Herb Elliott | 1964: Peter Snell | 1968: Kip Keino | 1972: Pekka Vasala | 1976: John Walker | 1980: Sebastian Coe | 1984: Sebastian Coe | 1988: Peter Rono | 1992: Fermín Cacho | 1996: Noureddine Morceli | 2000: Noah Ngeny | 2004: Hicham El Guerrouj

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