The race of their lives
In terms of pushing the boundaries of human possibility, Usain Bolt’s 100m world record of 9.58 seconds at the 2009 world championships has to be considered. No one came within touching distance of the Jamaican that night in Berlin as he took track’s most treasured mark to a place no one believed possible.
It’s more than a decade later and still no one else has gone below 9.69 seconds.
American Billy Mills delivered an epic finish in the 10,000m the last time the Olympics were in Tokyo, in 1964. Mills set an Olympic record of 28 minutes, 24.4 seconds, but it was the drama of his victory that made it unforgettable.
Mills led at the final bell ahead of world-record holder Ron Clarke of Australia. Mills suddenly got a shove from Clarke and Tunisia’s Mohammed Gammoudi, then elbowed his way between both of them. With back markers littering the track and Mills now well behind the other two, he suddenly unleashed a burst of pace that took him surging to victory.
Mills was the first and is still the only American to win gold in the 10,000 at the Olympics.
PURE GOLD: JOHNSON 200 WORLD RECORD IN ATLANTA
At the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, Michael Johnson had golden running shoes and one gold medal already in the 400 meters. But he produced the Games’ real golden moment in the 200.
He was an unbeatable mix of power and precision to win in 19.32 seconds, break the 200m world record for the second time in just over a month, do it at his home Olympics, and complete a 200-400 double. A quartercentury later, only Bolt and Yohan Blake have gone faster in the 200.
Another piece of 400m hurdles history, this time in the women’s race.
Everyone knew Dalilah Muhammad and Sydney McLaughlin were likely to produce a great contest at the 2019 world championships after their thrilling rivalry through the season. It turned out to be one of the greatest.
Muhammad had a solid lead into the final straight but McLaughlin refused to give in. With McLaughlin bearing down on her, Muhammad just won in a world record of 52.16 seconds. McLaughlin’s 52.23 was the third-fastest time
ever.
THE ‘MIRACLE
MILE’
Britain’s Roger Bannister broke through one of track’s most momentous barriers when he ran the first sub-four-minute mile on May 6, 1954.
Less than two months later, Australia’s John Landy bettered that time. They met in the mile race at that year’s Commonwealth Games in Vancouver.
Landy appeared much stronger and opened a big lead at one point. Bannister clawed his way back. Landy was still in front on the last turn, but his mistake of looking over his left shoulder for his opponent as Bannister overtook him on the right is part of legend. Bannister bolted and won a beautiful battle of two distance-running greats.