(When Runner’s World cut me loose as a columnist in 2004, I
wasn’t ready to stop magazine work. This year I post the continuing columns
from Marathon & Beyond. Much of
that material now appears in the book Miles to Go.)
2004. Five years ago Arthur Lydiard took
what he and we thought at the time was his “farewell tour” of the United
States. He’d been coming here from New Zealand for almost 40 years then, and he
still loved the attention that greeted him in the U.S. That acclaim kept him
going.
I wrote in
1999 that “Arthur Lydiard now eases off the stage. But his system remains as
sound as it was when he sprung it on the world in 1960.”
Three athletes
from his neighborhood in New Zealand, a country with Oregon’s population, won
medals at the 1960 Olympics. He later inspired the double-double of Finland’s
Lasse Viren, 5000 and 10,000 golds at both Munich and Montreal.
Most of
today’s runners hadn’t yet started when Arthur Lydiard was in his coaching
prime. Many weren’t yet born.
Some critics
now call Lydiard’s methods “outdated.” But there is no expiration date on
expertise, no statute of limitations on what works.
Rich
Englehart, a longtime Lydiard devotee, saw him in Boston five years ago. “It
was an interesting evening – and a bit sad, quite honestly,” said Rich that
year.
He saw his
chosen coach as an unsteady old man of 82 and most of the audience in their
masters years. “My pervasive feeling was that I was at a meeting of People
Whose Time Has Passed.
“Right outside
the auditorium one of the local clubs was running a group interval session on
the track. The conference organizers went out and invited them in for free. But
they all decided they’d rather stay out and do intervals than come in and
listen to some old guy tell them that maybe they should be doing something
else.”
Rich added,
“My experience isn’t going to change anyone’s mind. But it assures me that I
chose to follow the right leader – both when we were all much younger, and
recently when I signed up for his online coaching advice and improved by 1:45
in the track 5000.”
That 1999 U.S.
tour wasn’t Arthur Lydiard’s last. He encored this fall at age 87, bringing
along the baggage of four strokes and two knee replacements.
Rich Englehart
again met his mentor in Boston and then drove him to Washington, DC, with an
overnight stop en route. “This was one of the greatest experiences of my life,
spending two days alone with him,” says Rich.
The high point
of the tour, and not just in elevation, was Arthur’s talk in Boulder before a
crowd of 400, the largest of the tour. He shared the stage with Mark Wetmore,
the college coach whose methods most closely follow the Lydiard system.
Wetmore’s Colorado teams had won both NCAA Cross-Country titles the week
before.
“I owe everything
to Arthur,” said Wetmore. “I am just the delivery boy for his great message.”
Little more
than a week later the greatest running coach we’ve ever known was gone. After
speaking to a Texas audience, he returned to his hotel room and suffered a fatal
heart attack that evening.
Lydiard left
on a high note. Not in reclusive retirement in New Zealand but on the road,
still spreading his timeless message to anyone who would listen. The message
will outlive the man.
Later. Year after
year, the University of Colorado continues to field top distance runners, and
Mark Wetmore continues to credit Arthur Lydiard for pointing the way. Team
alumni include Kara and Adam Goucher, Jenny Simpson, Emma Coburn and Dathan
Ritzenhein.
(Photo: Arthur
Lydiard’s far-reaching influence on running training survives him.)
[Many books of mine, old
and recent, are now available in two different formats: in print and as ebooks
from Amazon.com. The titles: Going Far, Home Runs, Joe’s Team, Learning to
Walk, Long Run Solution, Long Slow Distance, Miles to Go, Pacesetters, Running
With Class, Run Right Now, Run Right Now Training Log, See How We Run, Starting
Lines, and This Runner’s World, plus Rich Englehart’s book about me, Slow Joe.]
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