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Arthur Lydiard / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Arthur Lydiard / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

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Arthur Lydiard / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

Arthur Leslie Lydiard, ONZ, OBE, (July 6, 1917 – December 11, 2004) was a New Zealand runner and athletics coach. He has been lauded as one of the outstanding athletics coaches of all time and is credited with popularizing the sport of running and making it commonplace across the sporting world. His training methods are based on a strong endurance base and periodisation. Lydiard competed in the Men's Marathon at the 1950 British Empire Games in Auckland, coming twelfth with a time of 2h:54m:51.6s.Lydiard presided over New Zealand's golden era in world track and field during the 1960s sending Murray Halberg, Peter Snell and Barry Magee to the podium at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome. Under Lydiard's tutelage Snell went on to double-gold at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Athletes subsequently coached by him or influenced by his coaching methods included such luminaries as Rod Dixon, John Walker, Dick Quax and Dick Tayler. He was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1962 and in 1990 was made an Additional Member of the Order of New Zealand. He also became a life member of Athletics New Zealand in 2003.Arthur Lydiard died December 11, 2004 of a suspected heart attack, in Texas, while on a lecture tour.


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Arthur Lydiard / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Arthur Lydiard / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

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Archive Photograhic Print is on GSM Stain 280 Paper. A2 equivalent

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Arthur Lydiard / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

Arthur Leslie Lydiard, ONZ, OBE, (6 July 1917 – 11 December 2004) was a New Zealand runner and athletics coach. He has been lauded as one of the outstanding athletics coaches of all time and is credited with popularizing the sport of running and making it commonplace across the sporting world. His training methods are based on a strong endurance base and periodisation.


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Bill Baillie / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Bill Baillie / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

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Bill Baillie / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

William ("Bill") David Baillie (born 28 May 1934 in Nelson, New Zealand) was a runner who represented New Zealand at the 1964 Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo where he placed 6th in the 5000m. He also competed at the 1954, 1958, 1962, 1966 Commonwealth Games. He is the current national record holder over 20000m and 1 hour.


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Jack Lovelock / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Jack Lovelock / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage


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Jack Lovelock / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

John ("Jack") Edward Lovelock (5 January 1910 – 28 December 1949) was a New Zealand athlete, and the 1936 Olympic champion in the 1500 metres. Born in the town of Crushington (near Reefton) as the son of English immigrants, Lovelock showed a talent for sports while at Timaru Boys' High School. He studied medicine at the University of Otago, while competing for the university team in the New Zealand 1-mile (1.6 km) championships. In 1931 he became a Rhodes Scholar at Exeter College, Oxford. He graduated as a medical practitioner.In 1932 - by then holder of the British Empire record for the mile - Lovelock competed in the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, and placed 7th in the final of the 1500 metres event.The following year, he set a world record of 4:07.6 in the mile when running at Princeton against its emerging champion Bill Bonthron. Later, in September, he represented New Zealand in the first World Student Games where he renewed his rivalry with the 1500m champion from Los Angeles in 1932, Luigi Beccali. Beccali edged Lovelock in the final and equalled the world record for the event. In 1934 Lovelock won the gold medal in the mile at the British Empire Games. He also lost some races, and believed that he could only make one supreme effort in a season.The highlight of Lovelock's career came in 1936, when he won the gold medal in the 1500 m at the Berlin Olympics, setting a world record in the final (3:47.8). Lovelock had plotted ever since his defeat at Los Angeles and developed a revolutionary tactic. The race is regarded as one of the finest 1500 m Olympic finals and included one of the finest fields assembled. The final was a culmination of the first great era of mile running from 1932-36 in which the world records for the 1500m and mile were broken several times. Apart from Lovelock and the American mile world record holder Glenn Cunningham who broke Lovelock's record a year later in 1934, also at Princeton, Bonthron, the 1932 Olympic Games 1500m champion at Los Angeles, Luigi Beccali and the emerging English champion Sydney Wooderson raced in Berlin. Bonthron, who held the world 1500m record, failed to make the US team, while Wooderson was found to have a fracture in his ankle and missed the final. The silver medalist in Los Angeles, John 'Jerry' Cornes also raced in Berlin along with the Swedish champion Erik Ny and the outstanding Canadian athlete Phil Edwards and another American Gene Venzke, who had been regarded as the favourite for the 1932 title until injury denied him a place in the US team. In the final, Lovelock beat Glenn Cunningham, who came in second, by making the unprecedented break from 300 m out. Lovelock had been regarded as a sprinter in the home straight but cleverly disguised his plan and caught his opponents napping with a brilliantly-timed move. Cunningham, who also broke the world record in the race, was considered by many to be the greatest American miler of all time. Beccali was third. Lovelock, who was the captain of the New Zealand Olympic team, despite having lived in Britain as a Rhodes Scholar since 1931, raced once more for the British Commonwealth after Berlin and his last race was back at Princeton en route to a Government-sponsored trip to New Zealand where he was beaten by another of the Olympic finalists Archie San Romani. Lovelock maintained his interest in athletics until at least the outbreak of the Second World War as a newspaper contributor


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Murray Halberg / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Murray Halberg / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

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Murray Halberg / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

Sir Murray Gordon Halberg, ONZ, MBE (born 7 July 1933 in Eketahuna) is a former New Zealand middle distance runner. A rugby player in his youth, Halberg suffered a severe injury during a game, leaving his left arm crippled. The next year, he took up running, seemingly being only more motivated by his handicap.In 1951, Murray met a man called Arthur Lydiard, who became his coach. Lydiard had been a famous long-distance runner, and he had very new ideas on the training of athletes.Three years later, Halberg broke through, winning his first national title on the senior level, and being allowed to compete in the 1954 British Empire and Commonwealth Games - placing fifth in the mile. In 1956, when the Olympics were held in Melbourne, Australia, he placed eleventh in the 1500 metres.In 1958, Halberg became New Zealand Sportsman of the Year. He won this award not only because he became the first sub four-minute miler from New Zealand, but also because of his gold medal in the three miles at the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games. For the 1960 Rome Olympics, Halberg focused more on the longer distances, entering in the 5000 and 10000 m. On the same day countryman Peter Snell was victorious in the 800 m, Halberg won the 5000 m gold. He later also placed fifth in the 10,000 m.The following year, Halberg set four new world records, all in events over imperial distances. After carrying the flag at the opening ceremonies, Halberg successfully defended his three mile title at the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games. He closed out his running career at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, finishing seventh in the 10,000 m. Sir Murray was made an MBE in 1961, and knighted in 1988. In the June 2008 Queen's Birthday Honours, Halberg was appointed to New Zealand's highest non titular honour, the Order of New Zealand. In 1963 he set up The Halberg Trust, which supports children with disabilities to be active in sport, creation and leisure. For many years the Halberg Trust has managed the New Zealand Sportsman of the Year Award which is now called the Westpac Halberg Awards.


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Norma Wilson / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Norma Wilson / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

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Norma Wilson / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

Norma Wilson (11 December 1909 – 10 July 2000) was a New Zealand athlete who represented New Zealand at the 1928 Summer Olympics at London. She was a sprinter, and reached third in the semifinal in the 100m race. She told the “stuffed shirt” officials when she returned that New Zealand needed a cinder track. She also refused to run in a Basin Reserve appearance unless she could wear shorts, and in no time, all the girls were wearing shorts. She married Ted Morgan a New Zealand boxer at the same Olympics in 1933, but later divorced him. She then married Rangi Marsh, a jockey and lived in Hastings


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Pat Boot / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Pat Boot / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

 

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Pat Boot / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

Vernon Patrick "Pat" Boot (22 October 1914 – 5 January 1947) was a New Zealand middle distance runner from Canterbury, who represented New Zealand at the 1936 Summer Olympics at Berlin and at the 1938 British Empire Games at Sydney. At the 1936 Summer Olympics he ran in the 800 metre event, finishing last in the semi-final. He had tendon problems (like Cecil Matthews, who also had a disappointing result at Berlin) from running on the decks of the Wanganella, and withdrew from the fourth heat of the 1500 meters.At the 1938 British Empire Games he won a gold in the 880 yards with a tremendous sprint 70 yards from the end, and a bronze in the mile.He was born at Kaikoura and educated at Ashburton High School, Timaru Boys' High School and Lincoln University, where he trained for a diploma in agriculture. In World War II he was commissioned in the New Zealand Army and served overseas in the Middle East. He was an instructor in agriculture at Gisborne when he died aged 32 when under anaesthesia for dental treatment


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Peter Snell / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Peter Snell / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

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Peter Snell / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

Sir Peter George Snell, KNZM, MBE (born 17 December 1938 in Opunake) is a former New Zealand athlete, now resident in Texas, United States. He had one of the shortest careers of world famous international sportsmen, yet achieved so much that he was voted New Zealand’s "Sports Champion of the (20th) Century". A protege of the great New Zealand athletics coach Arthur Lydiard, Snell is known for the three Olympic and two Commonwealth gold medals he won.


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Randolph Rose / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Randolph Rose / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

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Randolph Rose / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

Rose, Randolph Arthur John Scott (1901–1989) athlete, farmer
Randolph Arthur John Scott Rose was born at Wellington on Christmas Day 1901, the son of Henry Rose, a civil servant, and his wife, Grace Gillespie. His family had a strong tradition in athletics: in 1905 his second cousin Hector Burk defeated the Englishman Alfred Shrubb, then the world's greatest runner; and Hector's father, Billy Burk, had been the New Zealand one-mile and three-mile champion. Randolph was educated in Masterton and worked on his brother's Wairarapa farm from an early age.During his 10-year running career Rose won five Australasian championships, eight New Zealand titles, and held New Zealand records for the mile, two miles (twice), and three miles (twice). His mile record defied all comers for nearly 25 years. Rose's feats created an unprecedented public following for athletics in New Zealand and inspired future generations of runners, including his cousin James Barnes, national mile champion in 1933, and his nephew Bryan Rose, who was third in the world cross-country championship in 1967..


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Yvette Williams / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

Yvette Williams / Rudolf Boelee / Photo Collage

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Yvette Williams / Rudolf Boelee / Photo CollageMore Details

Yvette Winifred Williams, CNZM, MBE (later Yvette Corlett, born April 25, 1929) is a retired athlete from New Zealand, the first woman from her country to win an Olympic gold medal. She won her Olympic Gold medal in the Long Jump event in 1952 held at Helsinki. She was inducted into the New Zealand Hall of Fame in 1990. In 2000 she was voted Otago Sportsperson of the Century


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