Mile News


Magic of the Mile never fails to thrill

March 12, 2022

Something and everything about this imperial distance still brings a smile to Irish sport, particularly a sub-4

By Ian O'Riordan, The Irish Times

Depending on the length of drive up or down the mountain the low-fuel warning light on the 4-liter engine Jeep Wrangler can suddenly flicker on or off to indicate there was or is approximately two U.S. gallons left in the tank and good for another 80K or less, and the first thing that enters my head is what’s that in miles again?

These are confusing times for motorists everywhere, and who doesn’t crave for something more straightforward right now, like when the chief concern isn’t the cost of the journey but simply the allotted hours or minutes, or indeed pace for that matter.

There is still something to cheer about. According to the popular American website Bring Back the Mile, no running distance – and certainly no field event – has the history, the enduring appeal and special magic of the Mile, especially when it comes to running it in under 4 minutes. Like the 100 meters or perhaps the marathon, The Mile is also a running distance most people can still relate to, somehow even feel.

It’s only 170 years since the first registered world record for the Mile was clocked, when, in July 1852, England’s Charles Westhall ran two laps of the Copenhagen House grounds in London in 4 minutes, 28 seconds. Long before that, the Roman Mile came from the Latin mille passus, meaning one thousand paces, a Mile then being 1,000 Roman strides, a stride being two paces, which is about as confusing as things got.

It’s coming up on 70 years, next year, since Roger Bannister became the first man in history to run the Mile in under 4 minutes – 3:59.4 – considered then as scaling a sort of horizontal Mount Everest, the vertical one scaled for the first time just the year before, in 1953, by Edmund Hillary. Both also still come in with the same fuel and energy cost, naturally.

Despite the 1500m long being the standard championship running distance – just don’t call it the metric MMle, that hideous contradiction – there’s still something seminal about the Mile also. To quote Pat Butcher’s The Perfect Distance: “The Mile! Four laps of the track. Like a four-act play. Prologue, Exposition, Action, Dénouement. All inside 4 minutes. Aristotle could not have conceived a better dramatic formula. It is the ultimate in audience involvement in track & field athletics – neither too short, not too long.”

Something and everything about the Mile still brings a smile to Irish sport too, in part given our long history of success at the distance, both indoors and outdoors. Ronnie Delany and Eamonn Coghlan both set indoor Mile world records multiple times (three times each), and four Irish runners – Coghlan, Marcus O’Sullivan, Frank O’Mara and Ray Flynn – still hold the world record for running four-by-four miles in immediate succession, in 15:49.99 to be exact.

Still the records come home. When word came through on Thursday evening that Nicholas "Nick" Griggs had broken the European under-20 indoor record for the Mile, clocking a magnificent 3:56.40, less than three months after turning 17, even the purest of Mile aficionados were scrambling around the statistics and record books trying to put it in perspective.

In finishing a close second to Andrew Coscoran, who almost 10 years his senior took the win the 3:56:27, Griggs also helped complete the first and second sub-4 minute Mile times run at the Sport Ireland Arena in Abbotstown, although there’s a long history before that, 373 sub-4 minute Mile performances now run in Ireland going back to 1958, when deftly persuaded by Billy Morton, Delany agreed to line up against some of the best Milers of the time, including Murray Halberg from New Zealand, and a 20-year-old Australian named Herb Elliott.

On the evening of August 6th, having reportedly spent the previous night consuming his fair share of a black Irish beverage at a hotel on the Botanic Road, Elliott knocked more than 2½ seconds off the Mile world record with his 3:54.5, another Australian Merv Lincoln second in 3:55,9, Delany third in 3:57.5, the crowd assembled in Santry, estimated at 25,000, still a record attendance for an athletics meeting in this country.

Continue reading at: irishtimes.com

Tags: nick griggs (1) , my first sub-4 (59) , irish athletics (3) , bbtm news (207) , andrew coscoran (2)

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Return the Mile to prominence on the American & worldwide sports and cultural landscape by elevating and celebrating the Mile to create a movement.

ELEVATE
Bring Back the Mile as the premier event in the sport, and increase interest in and media coverage of the Mile for both those who love the distance as well as the general public.

CELEBRATE
Bring Back the Mile to celebrate the storied distance and to recognize the people who made and make the Mile great and to promote Mile events and the next generation of U.S. Milers.

NATIONAL MOVEMENT
Bring Back the Mile to create a national movement for the Mile as America’s Distance,
to inspire Americans to run the Mile as part of their fitness program and to replace the 1600 meters at High School State Track & Field Meets across the country.

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