"Around the last bend, I think the crowd was making so much noise he couldn't hear whether I was behind, or whether he'd dropped me, and he looked over his left shoulder, and I passed him on his right shoulder," Bannister said.īannister won the race in 3:58.8, with Landy second in 3:59. Landy set a fast pace, leading by as much as 15 yards before Bannister caught up as the bell rang for the final lap. ![]() That set the stage for the showdown between Bannister and Landy at the Empire Games, now called the Commonwealth Games, in Vancouver, British Columbia on Aug. The record lasted just 46 days, as Landy ran 3:57.9 in Turku, Finland, on June 21, 1954. Swedish runner Gundar Haegg's mile time of 4:01.4 had stood for nine years, but in 1954 Bannister, Australian rival John Landy and others were threatening to break it. Instead of retiring from the sport, he decided to chase the 4-minute mark. He might not have set the milestone but for the disappointment of finishing without a medal in the 1,500 meters, known as the metric mile, in the 1952 Olympics in Helsinki. "I'd like to see it as a metaphor not only for sport, but for life and seeking challenges." "It became a symbol of attempting a challenge in the physical world of something hitherto thought impossible," Bannister said as he approached the 50th anniversary of the feat. The enduring image of the lanky Oxford medical student - head tilted back, eyes closed and mouth agape as he strained across the finishing tape - captured the public's imagination, made him a global celebrity and lifted the spirits of Britons still suffering through postwar austerity. "It's amazing that more people have climbed Mount Everest than have broken the 4-minute mile," Bannister said in an interview with The Associated Press in 2012. Helped by two pacemakers, Bannister clocked 3 minutes, 59.4 seconds over four laps at Oxford's Iffley Road track on May 6, 1954, to break the 4-minute mile - a test of speed and endurance that stands as one of the defining sporting achievements of the 20th century. "He banked his treasure in the hearts of his friends." He was "surrounded by his family who were as loved by him, as he was loved by them," the family said in a statement announcing his death on Sunday. He was 88.īannister's family said in a statement that he died peacefully on Saturday in Oxford, the English city where the runner cracked the feat many had thought humanly impossible on a windy afternoon in 1954.īannister, who went on to pursue a long and distinguished medical career, had been slowed by Parkinson's disease in recent years. ![]() LONDON - Roger Bannister, the first runner to break the 4-minute barrier in the mile, has died. Roger Bannister, the first runner to break the 4-minute barrier in the mile, has died.
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