The men’s 1500-m final was run on the last day of the 1974 Christchurch Commonwealth Games. Tanzanian Filbert Bayi, the runaway leader, set a new world record of 3 minutes 32.16 seconds. New Zealander John Walker came close to catching Bayi and also broke Jim Ryun’s world record.
Remarkably, the third, fourth (New Zealander Rod Dixon) and fifth placegetters ran the fourth, fifth and seventh fastest 1500-m times to that date. Five national records were broken.
Bayi and Walker continued their rivalry in 1975. On 17 May Bayi broke Ryun’s eight-year-old record for the mile, clocking 3:51.0. This record was short-lived, as Walker became history’s first sub-3:50 miler on 12 August, running 3:49.4 at Gothenburg, Sweden.
The much-anticipated clash between the two runners at the 1976 Montreal Olympics failed to eventuate. Tanzania joined other black African nations in boycotting the games in protest against the All Blacks’ tour of South Africa. Bayi’s participation in the games was already in doubt, as he was ill with malaria shortly before the Olympics began.
Image: Filbert Bayi and John Walker cross the line in the 1500 m (BBC)
Read more on NZHistory
John Walker1974 - key events – The 1970s
External links
- Filbert Bayi (Wikipedia)
- John Walker (Wikipedia)
- British Commonwealth Games (CGF)
- The ten greatest Commonwealth Games moments (The Observer)
- John Walker the 3.49.4 man (NZ On Screen)
How to cite this page
''The greatest middle distance race of all time'', URL: /page/%E2%80%98-greatest-middle-distance-race-all-time%E2%80%99, (Ministry for Culture and Heritage), updated 2-Feb-2015
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