Date | 9 – 10 July 1912 |
---|---|
Status | Olympic |
Location | Stockholms Olympiastadion, Stockholm |
Participants | 45 from 14 countries |
As late as 1985, Cordner Nelson and Roberto Quercetani, two distinguished track & field historians, labeled this “the greatest race ever run,” noting, “The 1912 Olympic Games at Stockholm produced the greatest mile or 1500 meter race ever run from the standpoint of exciting competition between fast runners.” Much of what follows is based on their excellent summary.
There were five highly considered runners who started this event at Stockholm. One was the defending Olympic champion, Mel Sheppard. He was primarily a half-miler, and only the day before this event started, he lost narrowly in the 800 metre semi-final.
There were three other top Americans. John Paul Jones had won the 1911 and 1912 IC4A title at 880 yards and one mile. On 27 May 1911, Jones set a world amateur record in the mile with 4:15.4 in winning the IC4A at Cambridge. After the 1912 IC4A meet, he stopped training, not planning on competing at the Olympics, but he was convinced to resume training and travel to Stockholm.
Norm Taber of Brown University had done little prior to 1912. But on 1 June he finished in a dead-heat with Jones in the IC4A mile. And at the eastern Olympic Trial, one week later, he ran 1,500 metres in 3:56.4, bettering the world record, but he finished only second in the race.
Taber finished second in the eastern Olympic Trial because of a highly talented, diminutive runner named Abel Kiviat. Kiviat had first achieved prominence in 1909, winning the Canadian mile championship. In 1911 he won the AAU mile championship. On 26 May 1912, Kiviat ran in the New York Post Office Clerk’s Association Games at Celtic Park on Long Island, winning the mile narrowly over Mel Sheppard, but setting a new 1,500 metre world record of 3:59.2 in doing so. In a handicap race at the same track on 2 June, he bettered that mark off scratch, recording 3:56.8. The record would be short-lived, as on 8 June, at the eastern Olympic Trial, he defeated Taber with another world record of 3:55.8. His hot running and three world records in only a few weeks made him the Olympic favorite.
Despite the four great American runners, Britain had a top talent in Arnold Jackson, but one who had little background as a miler. A well-rounded athlete who attended Brasenose College, Oxford, in 1912 he won the Oxford University Athletic Club mile and won the mile against Cambridge in a good time of 4:21.6. Based on those performances, he was named to the British Olympic team for Stockholm.
There were seven heats in round one, with the top two finishers in each heat advancing to the final. The five favorites qualified easily, although Jackson and Jones had been drawn in the same heat. The final consisted of 14 runners - seven Americans, three Swedes, two Brits, and a lone Frenchman and German. The four top Americans would be well protected by their group of seven teammates.
The “greatest race ever run” began at 3:30 PM (1530) on Wednesday, 10 July 1912. The pace was set by the Frenchman, Henri Arnaud, who passed 400 metres in 1:05 and 800 metres in 2:08. Taber led at 1,000 metres in 2:39, but at 1,200 metres, Kiviat took the lead in 3:09, closely followed by his teammates, Taber and Jones. Jackson had been running last most of the race, but passed Sheppard on the backstretch and began moving up the field. On the final curve, Kiviat continued to lead, followed by Taber, Jackson, Jones, and Sheppard. Taber pulled even with Kiviat at the start of the straightaway. With 50 metres remaining, Jackson pulled even with Kiviat and Taber, with Jones close behind and Sweden’s Ernst Wide closing fast as well. It was only 10 metres from the tape that Jackson edged ahead to win by 1/10th second from Kiviat (silver medal) and Taber (bronze medal). Kiviat and Taber were so close that the finish camera was needed to determine the final medal placements, the only time this was used to determine a placement at the 1912 Olympics. Jones finished fourth with Wide in fifth.
Jackson described the race in his own words, “Perhaps it is impossible in an Olympic mile to notice who got the lead, when and where, and Kiviat seemed to me to have the lead inside most of the way and Mr P. J. Baker and I had to get along the best way we could and not very near the front either. There we rubbed along until the bell went for the last lap. We then moved up and dropped Sheppard and several others who no doubt were rather tired after the general bustle and their previous efforts. With three hundred and fifty yards to go Paul Jones and Kiviat were well placed but coming round the last bend I got in behind them and running wide caught them with about a hundred yards to go. Running neck and neck for fifty yards I passed them and got home by about two yards, as far as I am told. A perfect day and capital fellow competitors helped the Olympic record to go and I am very grateful and proud to have run with Mr Kiviat, Taber, and Jones and all the others. I believe that the result of the second and third places was not given out until the photograph had been developed and Mr Kiviat just beat Mr Taber on the post with Mr Jones right on to them. ‘U.S.A. right there all the time!’”
Arnold Nugent Strode Jackson (who later changed his name spelling to Arnold Nugent Strode Strode-Jackson) ran only a few more races in a very short, yet meteoric career. He won the Oxbridge mile race again in 1913 and 1914, and his career totalled no more than six top quality races. He joined the British army in World War I, serving with distinction, and becoming the youngest Brigadier-General in the British Army. He won the DSO and three bars, decorations so matched by only six other British officers. He was later a British delegate to the Paris Peace Conference in 1921, and was awarded the CBE for his works. He settled in the United States, eventually becoming an American citizen.
Top two finishers in each heat advanced to the final.
Pos | Nr | Athlete | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | Mel Sheppard | USA | 4:27.6 | |||
2 | – | Louis Madeira | USA | 4:27.9 | |||
3 | – | Albert Hare | GBR | 4:39.4 |
Pos | Nr | Athlete | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | Norm Taber | USA | 4:25.5 | |||
2 | – | Philip Baker | GBR | 4:26.0 | |||
3 | – | Georg Amberger | GER | 4:27.0 | |||
– | Teofil Savniky | HUN | – | ||||
– | Rūdolfs Vītols | RUS | – | ||||
– | Dmitry Nazarov | RUS | – |
Pos | Nr | Athlete | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | Abel Kiviat | USA | 4:04.4 | |||
2 | – | Henri Arnaud | FRA | 4:05.4 | |||
3 | – | Norman Patterson | USA | 4:05.5 | |||
4 | – | Jack Tait | CAN | – | |||
5 | – | Ferenc Forgács | HUN | – | |||
– | François Delloye | BEL | – | ||||
– | Ole Jacob Pedersen | NOR | – | ||||
– | Eddie Owen | GBR | – |
Pos | Nr | Athlete | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | Arnold Jackson | GBR | 4:10.8 | |||
2 | – | John Paul Jones | USA | 4:12.4 | |||
3 | – | John Victor | RSA | 4:12.7 | |||
4 | – | Lewis Anderson | USA | – | |||
5 | – | Oscar Larsen | NOR | – | |||
6 | – | Arnolds Indriksons | RUS | – | |||
7 | – | Alfrēds Ruks | RUS | – |
Pos | Nr | Athlete | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | John Zander | SWE | 4:05.5 | |||
2 | – | Evert Björn | SWE | 4:07.2 | |||
3 | – | Herbert Putnam | USA | 4:07.6 | |||
4 | – | Richard Yorke | GBR | – | |||
5 | – | Georg Mickler | GER | – | |||
– | Aleksandr Yelizarov | RUS | – | ||||
– | Nikolay Khorkov | RUS | – | ||||
– | Charles Ruffell | GBR | – |
Pos | Nr | Athlete | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | Erwin von Sigel | GER | 4:09.3 | |||
2 | – | Frederick Hedlund | USA | 4:10.8 | |||
3 | – | William Moore | GBR | 4:11.2 | |||
4 | – | Nils Frykberg | SWE | 4:11.2est | |||
– | Andrejs Krūkliņš | RUS | – | ||||
– | Fred Hulford | GBR | – | ||||
– | Guido Calvi | ITA | – |
Pos | Nr | Athlete | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | Ernst Wide | SWE | 4:06.0 | |||
2 | – | Walter McClure | USA | 4:07.3 | |||
3 | – | Billy Cottrill | GBR | – | |||
4 | – | Efraim Harju | FIN | – | |||
5 | – | Yevgeny Petrov | RUS | – | |||
– | Vahram Papazyan | TUR | – |
Pos | Nr | Athlete | NOC | Time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | – | Arnold Jackson | GBR | 3:56.8 | |||
2 | – | Abel Kiviat | USA | 3:56.9 | |||
3 | – | Norm Taber | USA | 3:56.9 | |||
4 | – | John Paul Jones | USA | 3:57.2 | |||
5 | – | Ernst Wide | SWE | 3:57.6 | |||
6 | – | Philip Baker | GBR | 4:01.0est | |||
7 | – | John Zander | SWE | 4:02.0est | |||
8 | – | Walter McClure | USA | – | |||
– | Mel Sheppard | USA | – | ||||
– | Henri Arnaud | FRA | – | ||||
– | Frederick Hedlund | USA | – | ||||
– | Erwin von Sigel | GER | – | ||||
– | Louis Madeira | USA | – | ||||
– | Evert Björn | SWE | – |
400 m | 1:05 | Henri Arnaud | |
800 m | 2:08 | Henri Arnaud | |
1000 m | 2:39 | Norm Taber | |
1200 m | 3:09 | Abel Kiviat |