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0000017a-15d9-d736-a57f-17ff8ba20001The 2012 Summer Olympics, the Games of the XXX Olympiad, will take place in London, England, United Kingdom from July 27 - August 12.Athletes from over 200 countries are expected to compete in 36 different events.For full schedule and results, plus more information, visit the official London 2012 website.

The Mile Still Matters To Track & Field

From ryunrunning.com

Track and field has a numbers problem. As in, there are just too many of them. The 60, 26.2, 4-by-8, 2-oh-3, 5, 8, 10k…

Back in the 1950s, there was one number that mattered.

"I think there are only a handful of achievements like breaking 4 minutes for the first time, in any sport, that comes close to what Roger Bannister has done." 

That’s Ryan Lamppa of Running USA, an advocacy group for the sport. In 1954, doctors actually warned runners that breaking the four minute barrier could prove fatal. Bannister, of course, proved them wrong.

But since that achievement, something has died: the mile.

Lamppa, who’s personal best is 4:11, wants to return the distance to its former glory. He’s started the Bring Back the Mile campaign.

"As Americans, we think, speak, and relate in miles. Our signs are in miles, our odometers are in miles. It’s America’s distance."

That’s the problem. Only 5% of the world’s population--us, basically--use miles. Everyone else is metric. And because of that, in the 1970s, the sport’s governing body urged America to modernize its tracks.

A lap used to be 440-yards. Four of those and you’ve got a mile. New tracks measure 400 meters. Four laps totals 1600 meters, a nice round number that happens to be 31 feet too short. Lamppa calls it the ‘misfit mile.’

"I think I can say that there’s not an America boy that has dreamed of breaking 4 minutes for the 1600. But they have for the mile."

When the tracks changed, so did high school competitions. Forty-four states, including New Hampshire, decided the 1600 was close enough, and made it their official distance. Five adopted the 1500-meters, the so-called Metric Mile, which is run at the Olympics.

Only Massachusetts hung tough with the mile. Lamppa and Bring Back the Mile are petitioning high school athletic federations to follow their lead.

Focusing on high schools may not seem like the obvious place to revitalize a sport, but there was a time when a high school kid was the sport.

"...The Los Angeles Coliseum, where 10,000 track fans watched the start of the Compton Mile. Among the speedsters is 19 year old Jim Ryun, who set a US two mile record weeks before on this same track…"

A decade after Bannister, Jim Ryun of Kansas became the first high schooler ever to go sub-4. He’s the last American to hold the world record, a former congressmen, and today, an advocate for Bring Back the Mile.

"Track and field was one of those great events that to some people has a circus atmosphere. In other words, they have a hard time following it. So we need to make it as friendly as possible by making the events so they can understand."

Ryun notes that as the mile faded, other races took its place in the spotlight. Sprinters claim the title of ‘world’s fastest’ with a win in the 100-meter dash. And big city marathons now line up tens of thousands of participants at $200 a pop.

But Robert Johnson of letsrun.com says that as a track fan, the mile still is the race to beat.

"It’s got sort of all the best parts of all the races. The tactics of the 800, but the endurance of the longer distance stuff, but it doesn’t take 15 [minutes], 30 or two hours to play out. It all plays out in just under 4 minutes."  

If Bring Back the Mile’s efforts are successful, Americans will get to see more of those 4-minute duels, a few less of those misfit distances, and maybe more track and field on the airwaves.

Todd started as a news correspondent with NHPR in 2009. He spent nearly a decade in the non-profit world, working with international development agencies and anti-poverty groups. He holds a master’s degree in public administration from Columbia University. He can be reached at tbookman@nhpr.org.
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