The Avondhu

John Hartnett 10k Race returns to Ballyhooly

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On Friday, May 20th at 7.15pm the John Hartnett 10k road race will make its long-awaited return after a 2-year break due to Covid. We have had huge interest in the race this year with numbers well up on previous years even at this early stage. Registrati­on cost is €20 and is available on Eventbrite. It will be chip times, spot prizes available, finishers medal for all who complete the race, refreshmen­ts will be available.

We would ask all, if not running to come out to support the runners and show your appreciati­on for one of Ballyhooly’s greatest sportspeop­le.

John Hartnett hailed from Gurteen, near Ballyhooly. At the age of 14, he joined Kildinan AC, and had his first success, at U16 level, when winning the Cork cross-country championsh­ip, at Bandon. When Kildinan disbanded, he joined the nearby Grange club, with whom he won the Cork and Munster U18 titles in 1968, along with finishing fourth at the Irish championsh­ip, at Mallow Racecourse.

The following year of 1969, two Irish championsh­ips, at both junior and intermedia­te level, came his way, culminatin­g in the brilliant fourth-place at Clydebank, where he led the Irish team to the silver medals, in a race won by future world record holder Dave Bedford.

But that winter - after an impressive start to the season in November, which saw him winning the opening race of the Cork senior league - he was plagued with injuries. With the All-Ireland junior championsh­ip fixed for Fermoy in February, the pressure on Hartnett to deliver before his home crowd was huge.

The hot favourite was Dan Murphy from Tralee, who had won five of his six previous races, the only defeat coming in the San Sebastian Internatio­nal, along with Eddie Leddy from Leitrim, and 16-yearold London exile Bill Curtin. However, Hartnett certainly answered his critics when leaving the field of 140 in his wake over the undulating four mile course.

Dublin’s Tom Gregan set a cracking pace, with Hartnett and Leddy right on his shoulder, and the trio were joined after a mile by Murphy, who had suffered a fall early on. When Hartnett applied the pressure, only Leddy could respond, and then the Grange man opened up a significan­t gap, which saw him home in a time of 21:04, 20 seconds to the good over Leddy, with Murphy third, another 15 seconds in arrears.

The 1970 Internatio­nal Cross-Country Championsh­ips were one of the last before the event was given official IAAF World Championsh­ip status in 1973. Winner of the senior race at Vichy was England’s Mike Tagg, who defeated three-time champion Gaston Roelants from Belgium, with another English runner, Trevor Wright in third. Best of the Irish was Sean O’Sullivan, in 35th, one place ahead of Pat Gilsenan.

Hartnett’s main opposition in the junior race came from Jack Lane of England, but the Ballyhooly man was well up to the task, and to the delight of the small Irish attendance, crossed the line with eight seconds to spare over Lane, with Eric De Beck of Belgium – who would win the senior race in 1974 – well back in third.

This time, the Irish team were well out of the medals, as Murphy, in 20th, and Leddy, in 23rd, combined with Hartnett to total 44 points for fifth, 10 behind Italy who took bronze.

Following that famous victory of 1970, Hartnett gained an athletics scholarshi­p to Villanova University. Two years later, he establishe­d an Irish 5,000m record of 13:43.0, and the same year competed for Ireland, at the Munich Olympics.

Under the guidance of legendary Villanova coach Jumbo Elliott, Hartnett went on to break Ronnie Delany’s Irish mile record, with a time of 3:54.7, in 1973, and the following year, on a memorable night at the Cork City Sports, on the old Mardyke grass track, ran the mile in 3:56.3.

On the indoor circuit in 1974, he was in brilliant form. On a Saturday night in January, at the Knights of Columbus Games in New York, he ran the fifth fastest time on record for two miles, when covering the 22 indoor laps in 8:26.6.

He finished almost eight seconds ahead of Grant McLaren from Canada (8:34.4), with another Irishman, Neil Cusack, third in 8:37.2. Cusack would go on, three months later, to win the Boston Marathon, in an Irish record of 2:13:39.

Hartnett’s dominance on the boards of North America continued the following month, at the Maple Leaf Indoor Games, in Toronto, where, before a packed attendance of over 16,000 fans, he ran the first sub-four-minute indoor mile witnessed in Canada.

His 3:59.6 was achieved ahead of a glittering field, which included the current and future Olympic 1,500m champions, Pekka Vasala of Finland, and John Walker from New Zealand.

He finished off the season by winning the NCAA indoor two-mile championsh­ip, in a meet record of 8:33.6, and added the IC4A title over the same distance, in a similar time of 8:33.2.

 ?? ?? John Hartnett (centre) leading the IC4A cross country race in France in 1971. Villanova team-mate Donal Walsh is pictured right.
John Hartnett (centre) leading the IC4A cross country race in France in 1971. Villanova team-mate Donal Walsh is pictured right.
 ?? ?? John Hartnett, Uniondale New York 1974.
John Hartnett, Uniondale New York 1974.

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