Los Angeles Times

Distance runner became a coach

- news.obits@latimes.com

Laszlo Tabori, who in 1955 became the third man to break the four-minute barrier in the mile and later coached distance runners at USC, died Wednesday. He was 86.

The school said the Hungarian-born Tabori died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. No cause was given.

Tabori joined Roger Bannister and John Landy as the only men to break the fourminute barrier. He did so with a time of 3 minutes, 59 seconds, on May 28, 1955. That same year, Tabori held the 1,500-meter world record with a time of 3:40.8.

Tabori finished fourth in the 1,500 and sixth in the 5,000 at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne.

After the Games, he and his coach Mihaly Igloi defected to the U.S. and eventually settled in Los Angeles. Tabori would have been a medal contender at the 1960 Rome Olympics, but he could no longer run for Hungary and wasn’t yet a U.S. citizen. He retired from running two years later.

Tabori returned to the sport as a coach in 1967, employing methods he learned from Igloi. Tabori was a proponent of interval training and was the longtime coach of the San Fernando Valley Track Club.

Among his star pupils were Boston Marathon winner Jacqueline Hansen and Miki Gorman, winner of the New York City and Boston marathons.

Tabori worked with USC’s male distance runners and the school’s running club team.

Born July 6, 1931, in Kosice, Hungary, Tabori was inducted into the Hungarian Hall of Fame in Budapest in 1995 for his accomplish­ments as an athlete and Olympian.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ELITE COMPANY Laszlo Tabori breaks the four-minute barrier in the mile in London in 1955, the third person to do so.
Associated Press ELITE COMPANY Laszlo Tabori breaks the four-minute barrier in the mile in London in 1955, the third person to do so.

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