The Guardian (USA)

John Landy: Australian athletics legend and former Victorian governor dies at 91

- Australian Associated Press

Tributes have poured in for John Landy, the athletics icon and trailblaze­r who gave Australia one of its finest sporting moments.

Landy, who became only the second man in the world to break the fourminute barrier for the mile, has died at the age of 91 after a long battle with Parkinson’s.

He held the world records for the 1,500m and the mile, and won Olympic bronze in 1956 in the 1,500m, and Commonweal­th Games silver in 1954 Commonweal­th Games for the 1,600m.

The Athletics Australia president, Jan Swinhoe, said Landy’s contributi­on to Australian athletics was immeasurab­le and his loss would be deeply mourned by the athletics community and the wider Australian community.

“We are incredibly saddened to learn of John’s passing and our sincere condolence­s are with Lynne, Alison and Matt, as well as the many people within the athletics community who were touched by John’s talent and humility,” Swinhoe said.

“John knew what it took to excel at the highest level, and his determinat­ion to reach new heights has inspired generation­s of Australian distance runners.

“His athleticis­m was only matched by his sportsmans­hip and his service to others, and those qualities have allowed him to leave behind a powerful legacy.”

Outside of sport, the Athletics Australia Hall of Famer was also the 26th governor of Victoria from 2001 to 2006.

But he is most famously remembered for his performanc­e in the 1,500m final at the 1956 Australian Track and Field Championsh­ips.

Both his talent and sportsmans­hip came into play when, during the mile, a number of athletes fell in the third lap, with junior 1,500m world record-holder Ron Clarke among them.

Landy stopped to check if Clarke was uninjured, before deciding to chase down the leaders to win the event. It was a testament to his athletic prowess that he won the race in a time of 4:04.2.

The win is often considered one of the greatest moments in Australian sporting folklore and was voted the “Finest Sporting Moment of the Century” at the Sport Australia Hall of Fame gala in 1999.

The World Athletics president, Sebastian Coe, said Landy was one of the great pioneers of the golden age of middle-distance running in the 1950s.

“He lit the spark that led to the legendary chase for the four-minute mile between 1952 and 1954 and was one of main protagonis­ts in that quest,” said Coe, the two-time 1,500m Olympic gold-medal winner.

“Ultimately Roger Bannister got there first but was also the first to recognise that Landy’s excellence inspired him to reach that historic landmark.

“Landy followed up by breaking Bannister’s world record in Finland just six weeks later.

“Their race for the world record and their iconic meeting at the 1954 Vancouver Commonweal­th Games captured the imaginatio­n of the world and did more to globalise our sport than any other event of that era.”

The Australian Olympic Committee president, John Coates, said Landy personifie­d the values of the Olympic movement in every respect.

“If Australia needed a role model, it is John Landy. He was a pioneer and his rivalry with Roger Bannister, as the pair closed on the sub four-minute mark for the mile, captured not only Australia’s imaginatio­n, but that of the world.”

 ?? Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive ?? John Landy, with Ron Clarke behind, when Landy broke the four-minute mile at Melbourne's Olympic Park.
Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive John Landy, with Ron Clarke behind, when Landy broke the four-minute mile at Melbourne's Olympic Park.
 ?? ?? John Landy when appointed governor of Victoria in 2000. Photograph: Julian Smith/ AAP
John Landy when appointed governor of Victoria in 2000. Photograph: Julian Smith/ AAP

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