Chris Robison

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Chris Robison leads from Craig Ross (Dundee Hawkhill Harriers) in the 1985 Edinburgh to Glasgow Relay

I first met Chris Robison at a BMC Conference and AGM which I was organising at Jordanhill College in 1985.   It was a good conference with exactly 100 people attending over the two days to hear Peter Coe, Jimmy Hedley, Frank Horwill, Malcolm Brown and Alex Naylor talking about various aspects of middle distance training.   Most Scottish clubs were there – and four-minute miler (well, 4:00.3, if you want to be picky) and English international cross-country runner Chris was there having just arrived in Scotland to take up his new posting.    Word took about five minutes to circulate and for a big chunk of the week-end Chris was pestered by folk giving good reasons why he should join their club.   He fended them off effortlessly.  Some were sceptical of his ‘Scottishness’ but the scepticism disappeared when this first-class athlete who could have continued racing for England chose to represent Scotland on track and country and turn out for his club in all the major, and many not-so-major, competitions.   Chris who was only 24 at the time of the conference with a nice symmetrical birth date of 16/3/61 would end the millennium with personal bests as indicated in the table below.

Distance Time Year
1500m 3:42.8 1982
Mile 4:00.3 1984
3000m 7:58.6 1986
5000m 13:55.7 1994
10000m 28:39.5 1986
Half Marathon 62:58 1991
Marathon 2:22:24 1991

To that you can add a Five Miles time of 23:26 at Portsmouth  in the North End 5 in 1982 as well as 24:01 at Bridge of Earn in 2000 at the age of 39.    The titles won since settling in Scotland include three national cross country championships (plus four seconds, a third and a fourth in possibly the closest ever first four finish in the history of the event, two 5000m championships on the outdoor track and a 3000m indoors plus a road racing 10K title in 1993!    He also ran in ten Edinburgh to Glasgow races turning in five fastest times and two second fastest times on his stage.   A very quiet and unassuming man, Chris deserved every one of them and all the success he has achieved in athletics.     He is also well-known for his chosen career in the Navy and training round the deck of HMS Glasgow at one point (9 laps to the mile – half the distance of a lap of the Kelvin Hall track!) which makes his profile the more fascinating.

Born and raised in Derbyshire, he took up the sport there and ran for the Derby and County AC.    Chris says: “My first recollection of any form of athletics was school PE and having to run a 1500m on a grass track along with the rest of the class.   I finished in second place in about 5:15 and thoroughly enjoyed it.   My taste for competition had been ignited at the age of 12.

Sport for me in those early years at school was a mix of rugby and cross country in the winter and limited athletics in the summer.   By the age of 15 it was clear that rugby was not going to be my most successful sport and with some minor successes in my own school at cross-country and sports day I decided to spend more time on running.   My PE teacher would assist my pace judgement by asking me to do laps of the track at a certain pace and he would blow the whistle at the time on which I was supposed to be passing every 100m.   Crude but effective and I still treasure these early memories of instilling pace discipline.  

It was not until 1976 at the age of 15 that I ventured anywhere near an athletics club.  Up until then I would do some steady running once or twice a week from home and whatever the PE teacher recommended at school when he had time to stand by the track while I tried to run laps at various speeds.  

The Montreal Olympics really lit a flame (excuse the pun) for me and I found myself following anything remotely linked to athletics.   I had started attending training on a semi-regular basis at Derby and County AC.   It was about two and a half miles to the track and I would jog down and back after school twice a week for the club session.   There was a strong group of teenage boys and I was just an average club athlete ‘hanging in’ on the regular sessions of 20 x 200 with the standard cross-track jog recovery, or maybe the 400m reps.   I recall these sessions being hard work both physically and mentally.   Having done very little structured training up until this point, this was far more intense  and coupled with the 5 mile round trip jog to and from the track I was running very tired.   Although I was middle of the pack both at training and in the club races I was incredibly motivated to stick at it and see if I could improve.   Additionally we had a superb camaraderie within the training group with at least 10 boys all about the same age all training together.   We would go to races together in a big minibus owned and driven by the coach and the social side of the club life was excellent.

Improvement for me was more gradual.   Early results show finishing 108th in my first English Schools Cross-Country and often not making the scoring team for Derby AC ‘Youths Teams’ when we ran in the Midlands Cross-Country Leagues.   I was exceptionally slight up until the age of 18 but I slowly matured and built up my endurance over time from having to run to and from training sessions.   I also lacked any kind of speed and naturally raced over the longer track distances – 3000m and 5000m.   My first indication of any sign of genuine ability occurred completely out of the blue at the English Schools cross-country championships in 1977.   Having finished sixth in the Derbyshire county trials, I went to the English Schools at Redditch with no real aspirations other than beating the 108th of two years previous.   With a mile to go I found myself in about 18th place with my coach screaming that if I was able to pick it up then there was an outside chance of an England vest!    Unbeknown to me, there was a home countries international event and the top eight were selected with two travelling reserves.   I finished eleventh.   It was a massive breakthrough.   To this day I do not know how I made that level of improvement and was able to run so well compared to my club peers.   I was a changed athlete and suddenly believed that I could be successful.

The 1977 track season saw significant improvements over 3000m and I ran 8:57 to qualify for the English Schools Track Championships.   That was another steep learning curve with warm-up areas, the need to sit in a holding area and many hundreds of spectators.   The highs of the cross-country season were a distant memory as I managed to prevent being lapped (in a 3000m!)   One of the officials questioned my qualification time and suggested that I should not have been running.   It was not what I needed to hear at that point as I was trying very hard to keep back the tears.   That race was a tipping point and I was determined that I would never repeat that experience.   It also stood me in good stead for later much bigger competitions and the pressure that comes with them.  

As a footnote, that same official who had criticised me was officiating in an event that I ran at four years later – the Dewhirst Games.   After running a pb of 8:05 and finishing third in a decent class field, he came up to me and congratulated me adding that he had watched my improving career with interest since his comments in 1977. 

My track times improved moderately across the board over the next few years and in the summer of 1979 I prepared to leave home and start a career in the Royal Navy with pb’s of just under two minutes for the 800m, 3:59 for the 1500m and 14:55 for the 5000m.   I still struggled to run sub 60 seconds for 400m at this point.

I joined the Navy in September 1979 and really did not know what to expect as far as the running career was concerned.   Fortunately I was to spend most of the first two years on land at the Naval College at Dartmouth in Devon.   For anyone that knows that part of the world, you cannot fail to become good at running up and down hills!   I spent three months at sea in early 1980 on the training ship during which time I had the pleasure of running the Gibraltar Rock Race (more of that later!) and learning to keep fit on a warship at sea (more of that later as well!!!)   What was significant about this time in my life was my maturing physique – maybe the fact that I was a late developer and also because I was regularly required to do physical gym work, parade ground, sailing dinghies and a range of other outward-bound type activities that until now had been alien to me.   I grew and I beefed up!

The outcome of this was returning from my spell at sea in Spring 1980 about a stone heavier than when I left home.   I made the decision to use this additional strength to try and develop some speed and do something about what was clearly a weakness in my running ability to date.   I ran hill reps, did speed work, drills on the 200 steps that went from the college down to the quayside and some basic gym work.   The outcome was significant and over the next 14 months I improved my 1500m time from 3:59 to 3:44.6.   More significantly I ran a 51.7 400m and I was beginning to win track races with a sprint finish.

As I look back on my career, this is probably one of the most significant decisions I had made, and what’s more it had not adversely affected my endurance capability – in fact quite the opposite.   During the same period I finished second in the 1981 Junior Inter-Counties just behind Dave Lewis, got third place in the Junior National behind John Doherty and gained my first senior Combined Services vest when finishing third in the annual match against English Cross-Country Union, British Police, British Polytechnics and British Universities.    Things were looking good.   I loved my running.   The Navy Training regime at the College was suiting me and I was gaining confidence across all the athletic disciplines.   Winning the 1981 Inter Services 1500m championships outsprinting both Steve Jones and Roger Hackney (both RAF) in Portsmouth in 1981 in front of the Admiral was a highlight.   I knew my career was going to put some serious restraints on how far I could go with the running but these early successes had allowed me to make a name for myself that may help in securing access to major events in the future.”

His first club run in Scotland was in a Spango Valley AAC B Team at the Kilbarchan relays in 1985 BUT ….  “if the truth be known, my first race in Scotland was in a home countries International cross-country at Cumbernauld in 1982 – running for (shhh!) England.   I finished third behind Paul Davies-Hale and John Theophilous (Wales).   Can’t remember who was in the Scottish team that day but it will be in my scrapbook somewhere!!  His first run in the Scottish Cross-Country Championship was not until 1987 when he was second to Nat Muir but by then he had run in two Edinburgh to Glasgow races for Spango Valley AAC (based in Greenock) – he had married a local girl whose brother was a runner so all the approaches from clubs as far away as Glasgow, and even further, were clearly to no avail.   His first E to G was in November 1985 when he was on the second leg and pulled the club from eighth to first in the fastest time (28:33) of the day; the team was fifth.   In  November 1986 he raced on the fourth stage where he moved from third to first in the second fastest time of the day to see the team finish the race in fourth place.  In the track rankings for 1986, he was placed second in the 2000m behind Nat Muir with his best time of 7:58.6, fourth in the 5000m with 14:00.85 and topped the ratings for the 10000m with a very good 28:39.35 with Nat Muir second  less half a second slower (28:39.65.)

The 1986-87 cross country season was a good one: Chris ran on the fourth stage for Spango Valley turning in the second fastest time on the stage a lifting them from third to first.   This was followed the E to G run with a win at Bellahouston Harriers Open CC Race on the 22nd in 33:03 to Eddie Stewart’s 33:10 which was good enough for him to be selected for, run in and win the quadrangular international cross-country race at Stirling University between the SCCU, Ireland, Scottish Universities and a Scottish banks team.   He defeated Terry Mitchell by 11 seconds.  On the 2nd January, in the New Year’s Day Road Race at Beith, Chris won by 32 seconds from Alistair Douglas and ahead of such Scottish stars as Hammy Cox, Alistair Currie and Gordon Crawford.  On 13th January at Portsmouth he was second in the Inter-Services Cross-Country Championship to Steve Jones (RAF) who ran 31:42 to Chris’s 31:48.  A week later he won the West District Cross-Country Championships at Kirkintilloch from fellow Spango Valley runner, Tommy Murray.   After a torrid battle over mud covered and hilly trail with the lead constantly changing hands, he prevailed by eight seconds.    In his preview of the National Cross-Country Championships that year, Doug Gillon (writing in ‘Scotland’s Runner’ said “then there is Chris Robison of Spango Valley, Derbyshire born, and a member of England’s team in the world championships two years ago, but who, since being posted to HMS Gannet at Prestwick, has opted to run for Scotland.   In the National his second place to Nat Muir was 22 seconds down but eleven ahead of Allister Hutton.   His place was assured for the World Championships where he improved on his previous year’s performance.   It was a significant race because the Championships, to be held in Warsaw, were to be the last in which Scotland would compete as an independent nation.   In future there would be only  great Britain team instead of the four home countries all running independently.

He started summer 1987 racing over a variety of distances.  On 6th March, he was sixth in the Kodak 10K Classic National Road Championship behind Nat Muir, Allister Hutton, Paul O’Callaghan from England, Tim Hutchings from Crawley and an Irish runner in a time of 29:38.   Three weeks later it was the fourth stage of the National Six Stage Relay at East Kilbride where he was not only fastest on the fourth leg but fastest long leg runner overall with a time of 30:48.   Nobody else was inside thirty one minutes..   A month later he turned out in the Adidas Challenge 5K Road Race in Pollock Park, Glasgow, and finished second to Peter Fleming in 14:30 to Fleming’s 14:14.   A week later in the Pearl Assurance Half Marathon he was second in 66:09 to Terry Greene from Ireland who won in 65:44.   Another week later and he raced in the Gallery Street Mile at Kirkintilloch on the day of the Luddon Half Marathon, and was fifth in 4:02.   Unfortunately he did not run in the SAAA Championships in June but he was fourth in the Runsport 10K in Stirling in 30:07 (Allister Hutton won in 29:09) and nine days later in the Inverness People’s 10K he was second (29:41) to Peter Fox (29:28).   The “Scotland’s Runner” magazine had held a road running championship over a series of races during the summer and in the September 1987 issue, there was a photo of a smiling Chris with the caption: “Chris Robison ….. hovering high above his rivals in the championship.”   The text read: “Chris Robison, the Royal Navy Lieutenant who navigates Sea King helicopters from Prestwick Airport, has moved into a commanding lead in the men’s championship table.   His improvement of 70 points from his seventh place last month was due to good runs in the Runsport 10K (fourth) and haf marathon (second) places at Stirling and third place in the City of Edinburgh 10 mile road race along Cramond Esplanade.”   The points table had Chris top with 143 points from Frank Harper (Pitreavie) on 105 and Alex Gilmour (Cambuslang on 100 points.    His win in the League was confirmed in the December issue where he had 221 points to Harper’s 138 and Alistair Douglas’s 134 with Gilmour slipping to fourth (119).   The report read:   “Robison who was stationed at the Royal Navy air station at Prestwick for over two years, is now back in his home town of Derby but, having married a Greenock girl whose brother Terry Wilkie is a member of the Spango Valley club, will return to Scotland for the big Scottish championships events.”

In season 1987-88, he started with an outstanding run in the Scottish National Four Stage Cross Country Relay Championship at Gala where he had second fastest time of 11:39 – just one second slower than Springburn’s Adrian Callan.   The Spango Valley team of Cameron Spence, Stephen Connaghan,  Chris Robison and Lawrie Spence finished third behind Cambuslang and Springburn.  He had another run on the second stage of the E to G and managed to turn in the fastest time on the stage yet again (29:10) in moving his team from fourteenth to sixth with the team finishing tenth.  He married Carol in September 1987 and left Scotland and was posted to various spots in England for six months.  There was the Royal Naval College in Greenwich in Autumn followed by three months in the careers office in Derby.   He reckons this set him up for his best winter period.   First in the Inter-Services (always a very tough race) followed by fifth in the English National and second in the Scottish behind Neil Tennant from Luton in 38:47 to Tennant’s 38:14 with a man who would be both rival and team mate, Tommy Murray, third in 38:50.   After fifth in the first ever trial for a GB team in the World Championships, he was automatically selected for the team in the World Cross Country Championships which were held in Auckland, New Zealand that year and improved yet again to finish just outside the first 100 runners.     This meant that in four years he had run for England (85), Scotland (86 and 87) and Great Britain (88) in the same championships.   He ran his first marathon off the back of the cross-country season in London and ran what he says felt like an easy 2:24:42.   He was mentally pretty near exhaustion after the winter season having done too much racing, travelling, etc.   It was he says pretty clear to him that he was never going to be a marathon runner – but it would have been nice to se what he could have done, all the same!

In April 1988, he joined a new air squadron and went to sea on the carrier HMS Illustrious for most of the next 12 months – right up to summer 1989   He pops up again in the records in the Scottish Championships, 1989, in the 10000m where he was fifth in 29:42:00 in a very tough race.   Result: 1.   Kevin Forster   29:03.8; 2.   Mike Carroll   29:22.5;   3.   K McCluskey (Copeland)   29:30.5;   4.   D MacFadyen (Greenock Glenpark)   29:33.4;   5.   C Robison   29:42.00;   6.   Alan Robson   29:42.7.     He went on to race a lot, and race well, in August.   On 9th August in the Shettleston Harriers Open Meeting  he was second to Bobby Quinn (8:15.1) in the 3000m with 8:19.1.   Nine days later in the British Airways 10K in Glasgow he was second again – this time to Nat Muir with 30:22.3 to Nat’s 30:22.2 with Allister Hutton third in 30:27.   Two days later, 20th August, he was second for the third time, this time in the Barnsley 6 mile road race where John Nuttall won with Chris second in 30:51 and clearly unhappy Nat Muir third in 31:27.

Chris missed most of the 1989 – 90 winter season for the reasons given and did not run in either the E to G or the National.   He ran in the Inter County Championships at Corby on 27th January and finished third in 40:19 running for Cornwall, presumably he had been posted to a Naval base there, but the next Scot to finish was Bobby Quinn in sixth in 40:26.   This was enough to get him into the World Cross-Country Championship trials to be held in Bellahouston Park.   On a course described as “heavy but not impossible” he finished fourth (33:04) behind Adrian Passey (England: 32:46), D MacNeilly (Ireland: 32:59) and Paul Taylor (England:: 33:04).   “Scotland’s Chris Robison (IBM Spango Valley) was pipped for third place by England’s Paul Taylor but comfortably secured his position in the UK team for the World Championships in Aix-Les-Bains.   The event was held on 25th March and Chris after missing so much time over the previous year and a half finished 90th which was to be his best placing ever in the event.

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Chris after qualifying for the World CC Champs, 1990

(Photo from ‘Scotland’s Runner’ by Peter Devlin.)

On 26th May, 1990, he was second to Robert Quinn in the West District Championship 5000m in what was to be his season’s best time of 14:11.91 behind Quinn’s 14:09.91.   In the SAAA Championships at Crownpoint Road in Glasgow he was fifth in a very competitive 10000 metres, which was won by England’s Olympic 5000m and 10000m runner Eamonn Martin in 28:40.78, in 30:22.61.     These times had him placed sixth and seventh respectively in the end-of-season rankings.   He finished the summer season with a win in record time (29:52) in the Bill Elder Memorial 10K road race at Greenock ahead of Hammy Cox (30:50).

His next winter (1990 – 1991) started in great style.   The traditional start to the winter season is the McAndrew Relay at Scotstoun and that year the talking point was the appearance of Steve Ovett.   Steve had retired from international athletics and come to Scotland to stay in the Borders.   He had joined Annan AC, as had Steve Binns after him and together with locals Rob Carey and Mike Carroll they made a formidable striking force.   It was an exciting race, as indeed it always is, with Steve Ovett turning in the fastest time of 14:49, six seconds ahead of Chris who was second quickest.    In the E to G in November, 1990 he was back on the second stage and turned in the fastest time of the day moving his club up from fourteenth to sixth – a wonderful run on this stage of endurance running giants.

In the Edinburgh to Glasgow Relay in November 1991   he had fastest time on the second stage when taking Spango Valley from fourteenth place up to fourth – they finished the race six stages later in seventh position.   The National Championships in 1992 were won by Tommy Murray with Chris second in 34:17, just 19 seconds adrift with Bobby Quinn a mere two seconds behind that.    This three-way rivalry was a feature of Scottish athletics for a period about ten years with all three having their successes – eg all won the National Cross-Country Championships, all three won track championships, all three ran for Scotland on the country, road, track and hills, all three had outstanding runs in the various relays and road championships and Scotland was fortunate to have them competing as often as they did.  Chris again qualified for the IAAF Cross Country Championship which was held in Boston in 1992 and in the race itself, he finished 115th.    Chris’s best track time in 1992 was a quick 5000m in 14:47.9 in September which ranked him twenty first in Scotland and on the road he was first in the SAF 10K Championships at Alexandria on 27th June in 30:01 which was the fastest time in the country that year and his best half marathon was on 14th March at Hastings where he was ninth in 66:54.

1992 – 93 was a disappointing run for Chris in the E to G when his 30:13, slowest run he had ever done so far, was only good enough to keep sixteenth place for his team.   In the National in 1993 he did not run. With 8:24.2 in the Kelvin Hall on 10th March.    He was however more active during the summer of 1993 where he was sixth the 5000m rankings with 14:13.63 run at Ayr on the 16th of May to win the West District race from Alan Puckrin (14:15.45) and then ran 14:14.13 at Grangemouth to win the National title from John Sherban (14:15.8) and Bobby Quinn (14:16.4).    He won a 3000m race at Gourock earlier in May in 8:19 from Alan Puckrin (8:20.1).   He also ran a 29:31.70  10000m at Crystal Palace on 12th June when finishing eleventh and 29:58.1 for the same distance at Crown Point when defeating David Cameron (Shettleston, 30:43.7) for the same distance.   The Scottish Athletics Yearbook pointed out that his 10000m time “… was almost a minute outside his best, set seven years ago.”   If the hint was that he was past his best, well – how wrong can you be?

He started season 1993 – 94 (Commonwealth Games coming in 1994 added a bit extra to the whole training and racing year!)  with another cracking run on the second stage of the Edinburgh to Glasgow Relay when he was second fastest taking Spango Valley from eleventh to sixth.   He finished the winter in great style by winning this 10K time of 29:35 when winning in Edinburgh on 1st October.    There was also a fast 10 miles in Gosport on 24th September.   1994 started with a 3000m indoors at the Kelvin Hall  where he won the championship from Graeme Croll (8:10.32) and Tommy Murray (8:18.10).  And in the National Cross-Country Championship at Irvine he won in 32:45 from Tommy Murray (33:06) and Graeme Croll (steeplechase champion from East Kilbride, 33:13).

On the roads he was fifth in the 10K at Alexandria in 29:46 but on the track Chris had a very good season.   He won both West District and National 5000m titles.   The former was won in 14:09.98 from John MacKay (Shettleston) in 14:34.02, and the latter was in 14:08.52 from B Clas (USA, 14:09.62).   In the rankings he was second with 13:55.7 at Grangemouth in August, fourth with 14:08.52 and fifth with 14:09.98.   In the 10000m he travelled to the AAA’s championship at Sheffield on 11th June to record 28:51.12 when finishing sixth.   This ranked him number one in Scotland.   The Yearbook had this to say: “…Chris Robison took advantage of a fast race in the AAA’s to be the only Scot to better 29 minutes this season, but his run was still over 12 seconds outside his eight year old best for the distance.”

Then there were the two international fixtures.   First in the Scotland v Wales v South of England v Midlands Counties v North of England indoors at Birmingham on 26th February when he won the 3000m in 8:05.94; and then on 21st May in Turkey in the Scotland v Israel v Wales v Turkey match he was third in the 5000m in 14:50.37 in a race won by Turkish runner in 14:08.23.

Then there was the big one!  He had gained selection for the Commonwealth Games:  This year the Games were in Vancouver in August where he took part in the 10000m.   In a Commonwealth race including many of the major African countries that dominate endurance running at the time, Chris ran well but was tenth in 29:50.23.    On a night not suited to endurance running, he stuck to his task and seeing several athletes drop out – including team-mate John Sherban – did not seem to affect him at all.

In to season 1994-95 he ran in the E to G in what was to be his slowest ever second stage and the only time when he ever dropped a place.   It had been a good year but a long one with a lot of racing and travelling as well, of course, as his day job.   In the relay he ran 32:52 and dropped from thirteenth to fourteenth.   The Spango Valley team was not at its strongest but he turned out and raced for them.   By the National in Perth in February 1995 he had recaptured some of his old verve and finished second in 41:29 to Anglo Keith Anderson who won in 41:08 with Graeme Croll, third again, only two seconds behind Chris. On the track in summer 1995 he was ranked second in Scotland in the 5000m with his best time of 13:59.45 at Wishaw on 13th May when winning the West District championship.   The Yearbook commented, “Chris Robison was again second ranked in the event, narrowly bettering 14:00 in an exciting West event where in a whirlwind final lap, he just got the better of a rejuvenated Bobby Quinn.”   Quinn’s time was 14:00.91 and Adrian Callan in third recorded 14:05.58.   When it came to the SAF Championships however, it was a different story with Chris finishing third (14:29.33) behind Dermot Donnelly (14:16.40) and Adrian Callan (gaining revenge with 14:18.82).    Chris also turned in times of 14:10.0 at Pitreavie on 28th May, 14:14 at Coatbridge on 23rd April and 14:29.33 at Meadowbank on 24th June.   In the 10000m track, he went to Loughborough on 11th June for the GB World Championships trial and finished third in 29:03.69 with Bobby Quinn running 29:16.23.   These were season’s bests for both men and made them numbers one and two in Scotland.   There was also some road running and he was rated number four with his 10 K time run in Edinburgh on 1st October of 29:35 and in the 10 miles there was a good 49:59 at Gosport on 24th September.

In January 1996, he was fourth in the National behind Bobby Quinn, Tommy Murray and Alaistair Russell.  The big feature for  1996  however was that there was a new club on the block.   There were three Greenock clubs in membership of the governing body in Scotland:   Greenock Glenpark Harriers, Greenock Wellpark Harriers and Spango Valley AAC – the Women’s club of Greenock Rankine Park had long since folded.   Numbers were declining and meetings were held with a view to the clubs amalgamating to make one strong club.   Glenpark felt that they could not go along with what was proposed but nevertheless Inverclyde AAC emerged from the union of Wellpark and Spango Valley along with some members of Glenpark who thought they liked what was on offer. Chris was one of the prime movers in the amalgamation being very keen to promote a strong club in the town that provided all athletes with a chance to compete in all disciplines, but especially on the track.  Chris was keen to further develop his club career by joining Shettleston who at the time were regularly competing in team events throughout the UK.    For a short time therefore, Chris ran with the local Inverclyde colours on the track but in country or road races where there was no representation, he competed for Shettleston Harriers and both parties gained from the connection.   Chris accordingly appears in the rankings for 1996 under the banners of both clubs.   In the track standings, he ran a good 14:15.8 at Portsmouth on 2nd July to finish first and at Crown Point Road on 29th June he did 14:16.5.   The latter time was when he finished second to Phil Mowbray (14:16.42) in the SAF Championships.   These were in the Inverclyde colours.

Then running as a member of Shettleston Harriers he was ranked as follows for road events in 1996:

Distance Ranking Time Venue Date
5000m 2nd 14:22 Solihull 6 October
4 Miles 2nd 19:20 Holy Island 30 July
10,000m 1st 29:10 Solihull 6 October
15,000m 1st 46:06 Majorca 26 September
10 Miles 2nd 48:51 Leyland 18 August
Half Marathon 3rd 65:10 Majorca 29 September

 

Into the 1996 – 97 winter season and Chris tackled road, cross-country and indoor track.   Indoors he won the Scottish 3000m championship in 8:26.04 on 19th January.   His first run for Shettleston was in the Ekiden Relay at Greenock in September 1996 when they won the title for the second successive year.   In October he travelled with them to the BAF 10K Championship at Solihull in Birmingham where he finished third in 29:20 leading the club not only to the team title but also representing the West District to the Inter-District title.   In November he ran in the Allan Scally Relay team that finished second to Racing Club.   In the Edinburgh to Glasgow he ran on the second stage bringing the club from second to first but they slipped back to second and he picked up a silver medal.   Missing the West District Championships he was fourth in the Inter-District at Cumbernauld in December and in February he won the Grangemouth Round the Houses 10K.   On 16th February, 1997 in the National Cross Country Championships he won his second title – this time he defeated John Downes (who many claimed should not have been allowed to race) in a time of 37:19.    His next race was the UK Cross-Country Championship at Luton where he finished second.

On the track in summer 1997, he was ranked in the 1500m for the first time in many years with 3:50.69, run in Spain on 21st June – the ranked him fifteenth in Scotland; his indoor 3000m time had him top of the rankings. and he raced to 14:07.1 at Hexham on 8th October when he placed third in a time of 14:07.1    The statisticians in their Yearbook said, “With Chris Robison waiting until October to record his best time in the Northumberland Multi-Terrain Challenge against Kenyan opposition ….”    He topped the 10000m lists again with 28:47.26.2 which gained him fifth place in a race in Sheffield on 29th June.   On the roads, again in Shettleston colours, he was second quickest in the Mile with 4:17.3 set in Seaton on 8th October, and his 10K time of 29:26, run in Norham on 5th October had him in fourth place.

Although he missed the McAndrew, West District and Scally Relays in 1997, November saw him win his second Edinburgh to Glasgow medal when the Shettleston team which he was representing on the eighth stage finished second with Chris having second fastest time on the eight stage.   The National in 1998 had probably the closest finish of any – certainly of any that I have seen or read about – 4 runners covered by four seconds!    Bobby Quinn won in 35:35, Keith Anderson was second in 35:36. Chris Robison was third in 35:37 and Glen Stewart was fourth in 35:38!    Needless to say he was first Shettleston man to finish.   He was not finished with either the 1998 cross-country season or the IAAF Championships yet!   He again qualified for the GB team in the world championships and earned his trip to Marrakech, after being fifth n the trial at Cardiff, where he finished eighty seventh – his best placing in six races at the championships spread over13 years!     He was actually getting faster again on the track:  finishing second at Grangemouth on 17th May, he ran 3:55.9 for the 1500m.   In the 5000m he was third in the West District at Scotstoun on 10th May in 14:21.21  (he also raced to 14:22 at Hexham on 29th May).   The West District result was: 1.   Glen Stewart 14:03.34; 2.   Bobby Quinn   14:19.3 and third Chris in 14:21.21.   On the roads he was ranked in three events :in the 5K he was top with 14:42 run at Dewsbury on 8th February; in the four miles, he was second with a time of 19:31 run at Ford on 25th May and in the 10K he was again top of the heap with 29:16, recorded at Dewsbury on 8th February (all run in Shettleston colours.)

In 1998 Inverclyde was in road and cross-country action and Chris turned out in the Edinburgh to Glasgow for the last time: in the black and white stripes of his local club, he ran the fastest time of the day on the tough second stage – exactly thirty minutes – and brought the club from fourteenth to seventh.      Basil Heatley of Coventry Godiva Harriers once wrote a reply to a letter in ‘Athletics Weekly’ which had said that good runners in teams which were down the field could never run as fast as they were able because the incentive wasn’t there; Heatley’s reply was that in such a situation the really good athlete really works to get his team back into the race and that’s incentive enough.   Chris, like many other class athletes, lived that philosophy.   In eight races for his local club in Scotland’s premier road race, he had a total gain of 39 places!   His biggest collection was in 1991 when he moved from 14th to fourth with the fastest time of the day.    To me that says as much about the man as most of his more glamorous races.   He did not run in the National in 1999, nor did he in 2000.

There was very little recorded in the way of track running in 1999 or 2000.   Not ranked on the track in either year, his road rankings were as follows:

1999:    1 Mile   first   4:21  6th August   Dunfermline.   2 Miles   third   9:21   Dunfermline   3rd September;     10K   29:47     Dewsbury     7th February.

2000:    5 Miles   third   24:31   22nd April   Balmoral;   10K   sixth     30:18   Alexandria   25th June;   half marathon   68:06   Glasgow   20/8.

There was however another athletics challenge that took up his time in 1999.    Not content with winning international vests on the track and on the road as well as over the country, Chris took up hill running.    (It seems to be a Scottish thing, calling mountains hills.    There is the story of the Scotsman camping out in South Africa hearing a voice outside his tent saying “Would you look at these hills?”   Since the hills in question were the Drakensbergs, he knew the speaker had to be a Scot.)    The first the public heard of it was from an article by Doug Gillon in the ‘Herald’ of 31st May, 1999.   “Athletics Scotland internationals dominated the English team trial races on Latrigg and Skiddaw at Keswick yesterday for the uphill-only mountain running European Trophy in five weeks time in Austria.   Great Britain selection for the Grand Prix Series was also at stake.   Bobby Quinn (Kilbarchan AAC) beat all the opposition over the 6.5 mile 3000 feet climb race agreeing to a dead-heat at the end with Richard Findlow (Bradford) having led for most of the way.   Fellow Scottish cross-country champion Chris Robison (Inverclyde AAC), still a novice at hill running, held off fast finishing Alan Bowers (Cumberland) for third.”   Two weeks later they finished first and second in the Glas Tuileachean Hill Race at Glenshee, which had been designated as the Scottish hill trial,  with Bobby first in 35:52 and Chris second in 36:19.   They both went to run for Scotland in the World Mountain Running Trophy race that year  at Mount Kinabalu Park in Borneo in September where he was second Scot to finish (seventeenth in 58:47) behind Bobby Quinn (ninth in 57:13) with Colin Donnelly (26th) and Tommy Murray (28th) being the next two Scots to complete the course.   The interest continued into 2000 when he ran in the European Mountain Running Trophy where, with Bobby Quinn and Neil Wilkinson he was a member of teh team which finished second.   The European Mountain Running Championship at that point had four teams from Britain taking part but when it was re-organised in 2002, it re-organised the four Home Countries out in favour of a single GB team.   He also travelled to Bergen in Germany in 2000 to compete in the World Mountain Running Championships where he was first Scot to finish when he crossed the line in twenty fifth in 52:29

But the winter season of 2000 – 01 would spring one of Chris’s biggest surprises yet!   On 26th February 2001 Doug Gillon wrote an article in ‘The Herald’ under the headline “Robison proves to be ageless wonder: As 40 looms, Scotland’s endurance coach shows the way to be a winner.”    What was it all about?    Read on : “Chris Robison became the oldest man ever to win the Scottish cross-country title at Irvine last Saturday, just 20 days before his fortieth birthday.   Robison’s third title at such an age, and bronze for his 39 year old Inverclyde club-mate Tommy Murray, tells much about the current health of the sport, yet despite his advancing years, the future lies in Robison’s hands.   The former Royal Navy helicopter navigator is Scotland’s full-time endurance coach, charged with seeking out talent an rescuing the sport from decline.   “I think it helps that I can lead by example,” said Robison, “This will help give me credibility.”   Robison has won an international vest in every year for the past 20 representing Scotland and Great Britain in world cross-country championships and on road and track, and hills as well as the country.

“He was in the 1994 Commonwealth Games team but Saturday’s run over 12,000 metres of the Beach Park at the Fila National Championships surely represents his finest hour.   He had to call on every ounce of experience and concentration to despatch younger opposition which had seemed insuperable, notably Glen Stewart, only Scot to have won a place in Britain’s world championship team for Belfast next month.   Second in the British 4000m trial race earlier this month, Stewart had failed to recover fully from a cold.   By pushing hard from the gun, Robison forced him to dig deep early.   Within a mile he was sweating ominously, and he abandoned after two of the three laps.   Robison almost paid for having pushed the needle into the red, but held on to win in 38:49 from the fast-closing Andy Caine (38:58) with Murray another six seconds back.   “That was tough – especially the final mile,” said Robison, “I only really started training hard at Christmas because I was struggling with my work-load.”   Robison needs no lessons in time-management however.   Even on duty, he maintained fitness during NATO exercises in the North Atlantic by running round the deck of a destroyer.”

That’s Doug’s way of saying that Chris won the Scottish cross-country title when he was nearly 40!   It really was a remarkable feat at a time when he was already looking at his career options after the racing at the top had to stop.    o-ordination, well-drilled teams

In the course of 17 years in the Royal Navy, Chris reached the rank of Lieutenant Commander but his future is totally committed to sport.    He was appointed Scottish Athletics National Endurance Coach towards the end of 2000 and in 2002 took on the additional responsibilities of  Performance Director.   In 2002 he was Lead Coach at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester.   In 2004 he was appointed Policy Director for the Scottish Sports Association – a post he held for approximately five and a half years before leaving in February 2010 to take up a post as Lead Manager with sportscotland.  His job with SSA was to lead on policy matters and ensure that the voice of the various governing bodies is heard and that the needs of these bodies are met.   While there he sat as a member of the Parliamentary Cross-Party Group on Sport at the Scottish Parliament where he “developed excellent working relationships with many MSP’s.   He is a respected source of information and advice for Parliamentary researchers and leading journalists.”    The quote is from www.zoominfo.com which has a fairly detailed account of Chris’s activities and posts after he had stopped the high level competing although he is still very active in sport himself.   He also was a member of the SCVO (Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations) and was for a time on secondment with the Scottish Government Sports Division where he led a review of the National Strategy for Sport – Reaching Higher.   The list of groups, committees, working parties and statutory bodies – virtually all sport-related – on which and for which he has worked is long but the commitment to the Scottish cause made in 1985 is being honoured handsomely to our benefit.

What did his time in the Royal Navy contribute to his success?   Well if we go back to Doug Gillon’s article about Ageless Robison he is quoted as saying “the service taught that if you want something badly enough, get organised, and plan thoroughly, you can probably achieve it.   It has everything to do with lifestyle philosophy and motivation.   For every hour in the air you need two planning, just as for every moment you spend racing you spend much more preparing to compete.   Flying helicopters, saving lives, is about co-ordination, well-drilled teams and planning.”

We have emphasised how full his life is at present – he is no stranger to a ten hour day, he finds time to cycle, run and take part in many physical activities – we haven’t mentioned his coaching career yet.   Currently working with John Newsom of Central AAC, will it become a regular part of his routine?    The old saying that, “if you want a job done, ask a busy man” might have been coined with someone just like Chris in mind!

Chris and John Newsom: he must be a real coach – he’s got two stopwatches!

But whatever the reporters, pundits and athletics historians say, the people who get really up close and see what a runner is like are the other runners who faced them on the starting line and raced them for the finish.    One of Chris’s rivals,Bobby Quinn, had this to say about him: “I had many memorable races with Chris.   Throughout the 1990’s, over the country, the National title or first Scot in the UK trial always seemed to come down to a joust between Chris, Tommy Murray and myself – these were great days and for each of us you knew at the start of the season if you could get the better of the other two, you would be top of the pile.   Other athletes would run well before Christmas or in relays, but when it got to the business end of the season, it would be all about getting the better of Chris and Tommy.   Chris had periodisation and peaking down to a fine art, he was the master of this.   You always knew Chris was a really dangerous opponent if he was aiming for something, whether it be winning the National or making the team for the World Cross.   He had tremendous strength and determination but also had a wicked finishing kick which made him very difficult to beat if he was on song.   He was a great team-mate (and friend) as well as a rival – one of my earliest memories of being part of a Scottish team with Chris was when we won the prestigious team race at the Gateshead International Cross Country Race in 1985 (with Nat Muir and Lawrie Spence).   His National victory in 1997 (in Perth) was superb and his victory in 2001 (just short of his fortieth birthday) was inspirational but I think his best performances were usually at the British Championships (again demonstrating the art of peaking) where he would regularly be first Scot and usually end up in the UK team.

I’ve had some great tussles with Chris (and Tommy) on the track, road and country, and even on the Mountains – and over the last few years when I have still been doing some races, it has not been quite the same, I miss the challenge from my old Renfrewshire rivals.”

A sincere tribute from one of his toughest rivals – a compliment that Chris thoroughly deserves, and a fitting place to end the profile.

 

Robert Quinn

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Robert in the 3000m at the 1991 Small Nations Championships

Robert Quinn is and always has been a remarkable athlete.   Known to be high quality and with a bright future he was the victim of what can only be called a horrific accident that would have ended many a career in sport, he continued to improve and has won Scottish International honours on the track, on the road, over the country and as a hill runner.   I dissent from the view sometimes expressed that he came back ‘better than ever’: nobody comes back from such an incident better as an athlete.   It may have made him tougher as a person or more determined as an opponent, but no one knows just how good he could have become.   Nevertheless he has had a career that would have been the envy of many an athlete.   So, even although he is still running and racing at a high level, it is appropriate to look at his successful career in some detail.   Finally the fact that he joined Kilbarchan AAC in 1981 and is still running in 2011 – 40 years later – means that not all races, etc, can be covered here.   It would require a book of its own to do that but there will be enough to tell the reader about the quality of athlete we have here, how his career progressed and all aspects will be included.

To start with I will quote from an article in ‘Scotland’s Runner’ of August 1989 by James Allen.

“He (Robert) was all of 15 or 16 years old when his interests in sport stretched beyond the usual kick-abouts.   ‘I played a bit of football but I was always pretty mediocre.  I liked most sports but I always won the cross-country races we had round the school playing fields.   I suppose I realised that I maybe could do something in running when I won a five mile sponsored run that my uncle’s football team had organised.  M y dad found out about our local athletic club, Kilbarchan, and took me down there.   The first training run I did down there was a nightmare.   I was last on every rep.   But the training soon paid off.   I joined the club in October 1981 and by March 1982 I was eighth in the British Schools Cross-Country Championships and eleventh in the National Cross Country.’   Quinn lost no time in proving his initial successes were no flash in the pan; in 1983 he started the year in style by winning the Youths National, relegating burgeoning talents Stevie Marshall and David McShane to the silver and bronze positions.   ‘That race still goes down as one of my best ever victories, because it was completely unexpected’, he recalls.   From now on winning would be expected of Robert Quinn, and he was about to start a period of complete domination of his age-groups.

In season 1983 – 1984 he won the Midland District Championship and was the first winner of the Mackenzie Medal; Colin Shields:  ‘Robert Quinn (Kilbarchan) won the inaugural Junior championship race receiving the Mackenzie Medal for his victory.   This trophy consisted of one of the gold National championship team medals won by George MacKenzie in the pre-First World War period, donated by the MacKenzie family and mounted on a plaque to be presented to the West District Junior champion.’   1983 also saw him run in his first ever Edinburgh to Glasgow eight man relay race.   He ran on the first stage and finished a very good fourth.   He then won the National of 1984 prompting this observation from Colin Shields in his history of the SCCU,  ‘Whatever the Weather’:    ‘The previous year’s Youth Champion, Robert Quinn, won the Junior title at his first attempt, the first runner since Nat Muir in 1975 to achieve this – with his Kilbarchan club-mate Alan Puckrin finishing runner-up 50 yards behind.’   Robert went on to Glasgow University in 1984 and his friendship with Puckrin developed.    ‘Alan was a big influence on me.   He was older but made the same age group because of the date of his birthday.   I suppose we were pretty inseparable in races too.   I won the Renfrewshire, West District and National Championships and Alan was second in them all.’   Quinn’s ‘marvels over the mud’ as Allen put it,  won him a coveted place in the Scottish junior team for the 1984 world cross-country championships in New York.   Despite feeling slightly intimidated by the company he finished a superb twentieth.   The rest of ’84 was taken over with Quinn’s first serious track season, when he set a pb of 14:24 for 5000m and won junior track vests at Scottish and British level.  (Allen reports that he also discovered he had a talent for downing a pint of beer in three seconds flat!  This has been confirmed by a couple of his University friends).   However one of the highlights over the country in 1984 was leading the Glasgow University team to victory in the British Universities Championship.   This was the University’s first win in the event since 1939 and was most unexpected – especially by the English Universities, although with runners such as Quinn (fourth), Alastair Douglas, Andy Girling, and Plug Wilson, the Hares and Hounds were too good to ignore.

At the start of season 1984 – 1985, saw a continuation of the previous year’s great form.   He won every single age-group race he competed in at junior level, won every domestic cross-country title for which he was eligible, including the National , beat Paul Roden, the English junior champion, established himself in the senior Scottish team.   In November ’84 he had run a superb fourth stage of the E – G and returned the fastest time on the stage while moving his club up from tenth to third.  As a result of his fine running in the National he went to the World cross-country again, this time as a senior man.   ‘I was the youngest competitor in the senior race.   I was a bit out of my depth.   It’s an unbelievably fast start.   Basically you sprint flat out for 400 metres until your legs are full of lactic acid and you still have 7.5 miles to go.’     In the summer Robert would place second in the Scottish 5000m final in 14:03 losing out to George Braidwood by only two seconds.   I was really pleased to hack all that time off my pb and it was great to get second place because four of us went into the last lap together.’   Quinn’s great summer continued when he represented Scotland at senior level in their match against Norway, Ireland, Israel and Wales before heading into the winter 1985-1986 season.

‘Everything was going to plan: now I was only 15 seconds away from a qualifying time for the 1986 Commonwealth Games.   I was confident that a good solid winter would see me knock that bit off my best 5000m time,’ he says.   He had the solid winter he was after, with the highlight perhaps being ninth in the World Student Cross-Country Championships.   The winner was Australian marathon maestro Steve Moneghetti.   Robert was still in the lead pack with a mile to go and only two falls prevented him finishing higher.   The winter work over, Quinn was looking forward to honing himself into shape for his assault on the Commonwealth Games.   Surely he would do it.

 

May 8th, 1986, will always be a black day in the training diary of Robert Quinn.   What began innocently enough as a training run with friends would end disastrously and send shockwaves through Scottish athletics.   It was an ordinary enough day – there was a twenty first birthday party for one of the girls that night and they were intending to be there.   As usual they went out for a run – Robert, Alastair Douglas and Ross Welch.   Then it happened.    At first we heard he had been knocked down, then we heard that he had been struck in the passing by a motor-cycle but the story that Robert told to James Allen was as follows: ‘We were running in single file along a country road when this motor-cyclist came over the brow of the hill, lost control of his bike and ran into the side of me.   I tried to pick myself up but couldn’t.   It was then I looked down and my foot appeared to be almost dangling off.   I didn’t black out and at that point I wasn’t in a great deal of pain, due, I think, to being in severe shock.’   Everyone was in severe shock as well: the girls were waiting for the boys to turn up for the party and when they weren’t on time, they were getting really mad at them.   When they finally turned up, very, very late, they were chalk white.  It being before mobile phones, etc, they had had no prior warning of the accident.   Meanwhile for Bobby, the initial impact of the accident had been replaced with a sickening pain, two pins in his leg to hold it together and the devastating thought that he might never run again.   He is fulsome in his praise of the hospital’s work at the time.   He is quoted by Allen as saying: ‘They asked me what level I ran at and promised to do their very best to fix me.   It was a terrible time, being terrified about never being able to run again.’

His friends all rallied round and he actually ‘ran’ in the 10K at Inverness on crutches in a remarkable time of 75 minutes.   He describes it as the hardest race of his life.  Before the event he had taken a felt tipped pen, crossed out the word FUN in Fun RUN and substituted SERIOUS!    Just to document the event, three pictures of the race are below (courtesy of his friend Doug McDonald).   The first is of him crossing the line, the second is a measure of how much effort was actually called for and the last is the man himself with some friends afterwards.

RQ Inv 86 1inv 10k 86

 When the plaster came off, the bones weren’t right so there was another lengthy operation and another full length plaster from foot to hip.   He says, ‘the second plaster came off in January 1987 and my leg was like a twig.   It was obvious that it would be a slow build up.   I was getting three hours a day physiotherapy with Lena Wighton at the Western Infirmary and that really helped my leg get back to something like normal.   Then I started doing water running with a wet vest to try and regain a bit of fitness.’   He managed to get himself back running but he had a pronounced limp and his performances were not the same – how could they be so soon?   But even worse than that he was getting a lot of pain in the leg.   ‘I was told that it wouldn’t hurt but I was always getting pain in runs and was constantly taking anti-inflammatory tablets.   I just couldn’t keep going like that so when Jimmy Graham, an orthopaedic surgeon, told me about an operation where part of my hip could be taken and grafted on to the gap in my fibula, I jumped at the chance.   I was told there was only a 50% chance of it working but I knew I had to take the risk.   If there was any chance of me getting back to my form I wanted to take it.’    James Allen goes on “In a bizarre weekend when he was due to have his operation, Quinn checked in to hospital to have his leg painted with a black arrow so they would get the correct leg in the operating theatre – and then promptly checked out again to do some racing.   He managed to get himself a weekend pass to indulge in what has been known since as the ‘shortest track season in history’.   On the Saturday he took on Tommy Murray over 1500m in the Renfrewshire Championships and beat him and then finished second to Willie Robertson over 5000m in a Scottish League race on the Sunday!   ‘I was pretty sad after those two races while I was in hospital waiting for the operation, but I knew it was something I had to do, a gamble I had to take.’   Being in plaster once again caused severe muscle wastage for Robert and once again the laborious, not to mention lonely, job of building it up again commenced.   He was doing four sessions a week in the pool just as he would previously have done them on the track.   His first run consisted of a 10 minute hop, but gradually, bit by bit, he was getting there and this time the pain was fading away.    It should be noted that Bobby gave a lot of credit to Rona, his fiancée, his friend Alastair Douglas and his coach Derek Parker who provided the support and practical help to get him back.

Quinn couldn’t have picked a better (or maybe worse)  race to re-enter the world of athletics.   The Edinburgh to Glasgow Road Relay was the event.   Robert ran the first stage for his team and was fifth at the changeover, a mere 20 seconds down on the stage ‘winner’, his friend Ian Archibald who was running for East Kilbride.   (For some reason James Allen has Robert racing the third stage and having second fastest time although the archive gives the result as shown here: check it out at www.salroadrunningandcrosscountrymedalists.co.uk on the Edinburgh to Glasgow results page in the Archive.)   He was back in business.

By December 1987, he was winning the SCCU Inter District Cross Country at St Andrew’s in 30:25 for the 6 Miles ahead of David Donnet’s 30:40.   On the 26th December he took part in the Kilbarchan club 11 Mile Road Race and finished first equal with Robert Hawkins and Jim Fairley in 59:22 – maybe the finish was staged but the time indicates that it was no easy-peasy festive run!   At the end of January it was the Seven Miles Kirkintilloch Olympians Road Race that he tackled and he finished second in 36:57 which was only two seconds behind winner Alan Robson.   He missed the National in 1988 just as he had missed the other championships (County and West Districts) that winter but he was clearly on the mend.

The following winter (1988-89) he ran a very good third leg of the Edinburgh to Glasgow in November when he moved his club from nineteenth to eleventh on the difficult switchback going.   On 4th December in the SCCU v Northern Ireland v Scottish Universities v Civil Service, he was seventh in 29:57 ahead of Peter McColgan who was also timed at 29:57.   A week later and it was a trip to Irvine for the Harriers v Cyclists race and he was second to Alastair Douglas with no times being given.   At the end of January he competed in the CAU Inter-Counties Cross-Country at Derby where he was nineteenth in 39:18.   In February the National Cross Country Championship was held at Hawick in quite dreadful conditions: in a television interview after the race Steve Ovett commented that at one point he thought he had made a mistake when he found a bit of firm ground!    Bobby was fifth – one place behind Ovett.   I say fifth but if you take out Ovett and Paul Evans, whose Scottish credentials were a bit flaky, Bobby was third Scot.   Close but no medal!   He also competed in the World Championships Trials at Gateshead where he was thirty seventh.   Less than two years after the accident he was now running at a very high standard on road and over the country and in all weathers – a quite remarkable recovery but there was better to come.

Robert started the summer of 1989 with a fourth place in the Clydesdale Harriers Dunky Wright road race in 26:09 behind Adrian Callan (26:01), Nat Muir (26:03) and Allister Hutton (26:05).    A really high class group of athletes.      That was on the 11thMarch and on the 23rd he ran in the SCCU National Six-Stage Relay at East Kilbride.   He had the fifth fastest time on the long stage with athletes such as Gary Grindlay, Tommy Murray, Charlie Haskett and Peter Fox recording slower times.   Two of these were behind him again on 6th May when he won the Adidas Torsion 5K in Glasgow in 22:51 – Peter Fox was second in 22:54 and Tommy Murray third in 23:00.   Three days later there was another victory at the 10K in Lennoxtown when he set a new record of 29:54.   His first track run of the season was on May 17th when he raced in the Scot Unis v Scottish Juniors v Track League over 3000m and finished second in 8:17.9 behind Adrian Callan’s 8:11.0.   Ten days later he raced in the 5000m at the West District Championships and won comfortably in 14:23.5 from Tommy Murray’s 14:34.5.   On the 18th June he ran in the League for his club and won the 5000m in 14:28.2.    He did not run in the SAAA Championships but did represent Scotland in the Small Nations International in the 5000m where he was third in 14:03.8 which equalled his personal best.   He ran in a good 3000m at Shettleston Harriers Open Meeting on 9th August against Chris Robison, George Braidwood, Graham Crawford, and Billy Coyle and won in 8:15.1.   In the final Scottish League fixture at Crown Point in Glasgow he won the 5000m in 14:48.58.   On the 27th August he ran in the Inter-District he at Grangemouth he won the 5000m in 14:08.6 and on September 17th racing in the Munich v Edinburgh/Scottish Select, he won the 5000m in 14:47.88.    His best 5000m time of the summer (13:57.8) had him placed fourth in the annual rankings.

Missing the McAndrew Relays on 7th October Robert was second fastest in the Renfrewshire Relay with Tommy Murray being the man in front.    On 28th October at the National Relays he was sixth fastest and at the start of November finished sixth in the Glasgow University Road Race in 22:47.   The very next day he went to Gateshead for the Preston Open Cross Country race where he was eleventh and third Scot.   In the Edinburgh to Glasgow he was given the honour of running the second stage – the one where tradition has all the big guns out – and he pulled Kilbarchan up from nineteenth to twelfth!   Then he confirmed this form when at the start of December he won the International and Inter-District fixture at Cumbernauld in 33:29.    Into the New Year and on 27th January 1990, Robert Quinn was sixth in the CAU Inter-Counties at Corby in 40:26.   He then went indoors for the Scotland v Belgium v Ireland v Norway in the Kelvin Hall where he was second in the 3000m in 8:17.3.   In the National Championships at Irvine on 24th February, he was third behind Peter McColgan and Anglo-Scot Neil Tennant.   His time of 43:26 was 28 seconds behind the winner’s 42:58.   Nobody disputes Tennant’s Scottish eligibility or the fact that McColgan was living and competing regularly in Scotland but Bobby could arguably be regarded as the top Scot on this occasion.

On the track he won the West District 5000m at Ayr in 14:09.91 which placed him seventh in the rankings at the end of the year.   He did not follow up with a run in the Scottish Championships in 1990    Before that there was a victory in the Saltcoats ‘Round the Houses’ race in a new record for the course of 19:33 with his good friend Alastair Douglas only one second behind.   Kilbarchan had dropped to Division Three of the Track League that year and like all good club men Bobby did his bit -on 5th August at Coatbridge he won the 1500m in 3:57.1 and the 5000m in 15:51.5.   On the eighth he ran in the 5000m at Shettleston’s Open Graded Meeting where he was fourth in 14:12.6 and then on 6th September he won the Calderglen 10 Mile Road Race at East Kilbride in 49:50 and Alastair Douglas was again second in 50:43.

 

The first race he tackled in the 1990 – 1991 season was  the George Cummings Relay at Kilbarchan where he was second fastest over the course in 11:15 which was four seconds slower than Steve Ovett recorded but was eight seconds quicker than Nat Muir.   Robert then went to the McAndrew Relays at Scotstoun and was seventh fastest with 15:17 just two seconds better than Nat Muir recorded.   In the West District Relay at Twechar, Ovett and Binns (both Annan) had equal fastest time of 10:16 and Robert and Tommy Murray had equal third fastest time of 10:23 with Nat Muir fifth with 10:29!    Three races, three times quicker than Nat Muir!   On 28th October in the National Relays though, Muir struck back: Ovett had fastest time of 11:20, Muir and McColgan had 11:23 and Robert was timed at 11:25 for fourth.

Placed third in the Glasgow University race in 22:39, three seconds behind winner McColgan and two behind second placed Geoff Wightman, he went into the Edinburgh to Glasgow where he was running the longest stage, Stage Six, where there was again fearsome opposition at a point in the race where the gaps have really started to open up, he picked up one place from eleventh to tenth.   He travelled down to Gateshead again on 23rd November for the Safeway Cross Country and finished second on the 6900m course in 20:42 behind the crack Kenyan, Benson Masya (20:04).    December 1990 was the month for representative appearances with the International Cross-Country at Cumbernauld on the 15th resulting in a win for Robert with County Durham on the 29th where he was second Scot when he finished eighteenth in the 8000m race.   He started January 1991 with a representative match as well: the Celtic Countries International at Limerick in Ireland where in a real international field (first was a Kenyan, second runner came from the USA and the third placer was also Kenyan) Robert in thirteenth place was first Scot.   He had missed the West District Championships as well as the Nigel Barge and Jack Crawford Road Races and then travelled to the CAU Inter-Counties event at Leicester where was twelfth and second Scot behind Chris Robison.   In February he travelled to Elgin to compete as a guest in a Northern League cross-country race which he won in 30:53.   He didn’t run in the National in 1991 and his next race was the Clydesdale Harriers Dunky Wright race on 9th March which he won from a sparkling field in 26:04.   Allister Hutton was second (26:10), Tommy Hearle third (26:13) and Nat Muir fourth (26:19.   Later in the month he ran in the Six-Stage Relays at East Kilbride where he was fifth fastest on the long leg.

It is straightforward enough listing times and events but the flavour and intensity of the racing at this time is not always conveyed by them.   In the race just quoted, Hutton was always a formidable opponent and he liked the Dunky Wright as part of his preparation for the London Marathon each year; Tommy Hearle was doing some of the best running of his career and Nat Muir is, like Hutton, a legend!   Bearing this in mind, I will quote Colin Shields’s report on his next race, just to give a flavour of the typical race.   The race was the Renfrewshire 10 miles championship road race on 13th April 1991.   “A good field of over 80 athletes took part in the Renfrewshire 10 mile road race.   Within a mile of the start, the field had already began to string out.    John Duffy (Spango Valley), Gerry Gaffney (Wellpark Harriers), Tommy Murray (Glenpark Harriers), Robert Quinn and Adam Eyre-Walker (Ed U) – had pulled away and were all working hard as they reached the hilly part of the course.   Duncan McFadyen (Wellpark) and Cammy Spence (Spango Valley) were only slightly behind and remained close enough to provide a threat to the leaders.   With the hills past, the leading five had gone further away and the race was now on.   The first move came after the Gantock Hotel as Duffy moved to the front and Eyre-Walker dropped off the back.   Murray was next to apply the pressure in an attempt to break the pack: this time Gaffney dropped off the pace.   The decisive move occurred with two miles remaining.   Robert Quinn who had been at the back of the front group burst through and immediately he was 50 metres up on Duffy and Murray.   Quinn put in another sustained burst and his gap increased to 250 metres at the finish which he crossed in 50:43.   Behind him Duffy outsprinted Murray for second place.   Gaffney was fourth.   A sprint finish in which McFadyen was stronger just edged out Spence.”    Hard running at the front with first one and then the other trying to break clear and competition all down the field.   It was even harder when the field included Muir, Hutton, Murray, Douglas and Quinn.

On May 14th in the West District Track Championships at Ayr Robert won the 5000m from clubmate Hearle in 14:12.67.   In the SAAA 10000m at Crown Point on July 5th he was third in 29:46.34 behind two Englishman with the winner (D Swanston) running 29:41.5:   Behind Robert were Chris Robison, Tommy Murray and Tommy Hearle.   Ten days later he won the Saltcoats race in a new record of 19:17 before going back on to the track at the Shettleston Harriers Open Graded meetings: on 21st August,  in the first one, he was fourth in the 3000m in 8:11.6 and in the second on 27th August he won the 5000m in 14:06.4.

 

The new season of 1991 – 1992 began in October and Robert had fourth fastest time in the West District Relays on the 19th.   In the Glasgow Un race on 9th November he was second to England’s Paul Dugdale in 22:23 – Dugdale’s time of 22:19 was a course record.   On the 17th of November in the Edinburgh to Glasgow he ran on the second stage and moved his club from twelfth to third.   When it came to the National in 1992, he finished third in 34:19 behind Tommy Murray (33:58) and Chris Robison, second in 34:17.   In the summer of 1992, Robert Quinn was unable to train on a track from May because of injury and was restricted to substituting sessions wearing a flotation jacket in a swimming pool.  The only race recorded in the Yearbook for 1992 was on 30th May when he won the West District 5000m in 14:21.66 which ranked him eighth for the season.  He was ready for action properly when the relays came along in October that year.

Tommy Murray was in superb form at that time and others such as Chris Robison were top class runners who would not give in to anybody, but at the 1992 West Relays Quinn had the fastest time of the day with 12:27 to Murray’s 12:33 to give Kilbarchan victory over Cambuslang, for whom Murray was running at that point.   Murray wasn’t happy – he had fallen and reckoned that but for the fall he would have had fastest time and Cambuslang would have won.  Came the National Relays on October 24th and Murray it was who had fastest time: 13:00 to Quinn’s 13:10.    Robert had run an excellent race pulling in both of the Reebok Racing Club teams and getting his club in to second place behind Cambuslang with the second quickest run of the afternoon.      Missing the Allan Scally Relays, he next raced in the Glasgow University Road Race and finished second in 22:38 behind the record setting Paul Dugdale’s 22:35.   Came the Edinburgh to Glasgow and he ran the fastest time on the second stage with an amazing run which moved Kilbarchan from eleventh to third.   In the annual International Cross-Country Race at Cumbernauld in December he won in 32:37.   Then there was the representative match in Mallusk in Ireland on 4th January where he was eleventh and second Scot before heading in to the West Districts Championships at Kirkintilloch.   Again he was second (36:41) to Tommy Murray (36:18) who was a full 23 seconds in front.   Murray really was in terrific form at this point and emphasised the point when he won the National on 27th February 1993 in 42:12 from Robert in second with a time of 43:08.

However 1992 was also the year of what Robert considers to be his best ever cross-country performance on the international stage.   Robert won the British students cross-country by quite a long way and as a result captained the UK team in the World Student Cross-Country Championships in Dijon in France.   At this event Robert won the individual bronze medal and led the British team to the bronze medals.   He himself was only seconds behind winner Sean Creighton who had been sixth in that summer’s Olympic steeplechase.   The excellent GB Athletics website is a statistician’s dream and has major UK medallists at cross-country on it at the following link: http://www.gbrathletics.com/bm/xc.htm

 

Robert’s running in the 1990’s would turn out to be some of the best he would do and he started to show some of this in the summer of 1993.   He had three races at 5000m ranked in the Yearbook: 14:12.8 at Wrexham on 8th August in the International against Wales, Northern Ireland, the North of England and the Midlands of England, 14:13.64 at Loughborough on 4th July and 14:16.40 at Grangemouth on 10th July when finishing second to Chris Robison in the SAAA Championships.   There were also two ranked races over 10000m.   On July 24th at Linwood he won the Scottish 10000m championship in 30:07.59 from Tommy Murray (30:12.32) and then in Loughborough on 15th August he ran 29:37.4 for a personal best.   The Yearbook remarked, “Robert Quinn won his first Scottish track title in an engrossingly ‘cat and mouse’ race defeating Tommy Murray at Linwood.   He later improved his personal best with a run over 30 seconds faster in England.”

The first representative  match of the season came on 19th December at La Mandria in Italy where he was ninth and second Scot in the Five Nations international.   In the Edinburgh – Glasgow on 14th November 1993 he ran on the second stage and moved from sixth to second with the second quickest time of the day – behind Alan Puckrin who was racing for Glenpark Harriers.   Robert did not run in the National Cross-Country Championships in 1994 or 1995.    In summer 1994 he only appeared in the one ranking list and that was the 3000m where on 13th July he won in 8:14.24 which placed him number nine in the country for that summer.   On the road he ran 30:12 for the 10K in Alexandria in June which placed him third for the season behind Chris Robison (29:46) and Peter Fleming (29:52).

At the UK Cross-Country Championships in 1995 Tommy Murray was fourth and Bobby fifth and they both made the team for the World Cross-Country Championships held in Durham.

He was ranked in no fewer than four track and one road event in summer 1995.   His time of 4:13.1 for the Mile in Dundee ranked him ninth in Scotland and in the 3000m he was seventh thanks to an 8:16.1 at Grangemouth.   There were however four 5000m times recorded and a championship medal for second place in the West District Championships with 14:00.91 behind Chris Robison’s 13:59.4.   This time put him in third place in the rankings with the other time being 14:12.6 at Narbonne in France on 29th July, 14:16.6 at Coatbridge on 23rd April and 14:23.3 at Birmingham on 15th July.   He was also ranked number three in the 10000 where there were two good times recorded: 29:55.2 when finishing third in the Scottish Championships but he went even quicker for a pb of 29:14.23 at Loughborough in a fast World Championships Trial on 11th June.   On the road he was ranked sixth for his 10K time of 29:47 set at Grangemouth on 19th February.

 

The cross-country season 1995-96 was when he lifted his first cross-country championship and introduced a five year spell where he was first four times and third once.  These five years will be dealt with together with the intervening summer seasons being treated separately.    On 13th January 1996 at Luton in the CAU Inter-Counties Championship, he finished an excellent seventh to be first Scot in the event.   The next race was the big one.   In the National he was ten seconds clear of Tommy Murray who was followed home by Alastair Russell, Chris Robison, Glen Stewart, Keith Anderson and David Ross: no easy victory then.   On 3rd March at Ashington it was the BAF Championships and Robert finished ninth.    The Yearbook  says: “Robert Quinn missed out on a world place, being named as a non-travelling reserve after finishing strongly in a race in which the course was found to be short.   Quinn finished ahead of tenth placed Rob Denmark who was selected.”   The implication being what every Scot felt at the time, he wuz robbed!   And it would be hard to differ from the sentiment that Robert should have been in the GB team for the World Championships.    He was unfortunate that his career came after Scotland was dropped from the World Championships for he would surely have been challenging for most runs in the race, he then did what was asked of him for the UK team but was passed over in favour of the Englishman who was behind him.   Nevertheless, it was a wonderful end to the season

In season 1996-97 he ran in the Margate International on 10th November where he was again first Scot finishing eleventh in 24:04.   In the Edinburgh to Glasgow later in the month he ran the second stage and ran very well to bring his club from fourth to second.   On 14th December it was back to Cumbernauld for the Inter District Championships where he was second to Phil Mowbray (eight seconds down) and in that year he was also seventeenth in the World Mountain Trophy in Austria.   He started 1997 with 19th place in the Coca-Cola International in Belfast and on 16th February at Perth he was third behind Chris Robison and John Downes, an Irishman running for Salford in England.    There was a lot of discussion about the permission for Downes to run and most that I spoke to were against it, but he did run and finished second.

Season 1997-98 Edinburgh – Glasgow he ran the third stage and pulled his club from seventh to third.   The next big one was the Inter-District at Cumbernauld on 13th Dec where he was third behind Phil Mowbray and Pat O’Keefe.   That was the lead-in to the National where he won his second title in three years in a very close race with three others of the very best men getting clear and the finishing order was : 1.   R Quinn   35:35; 2.   Keith Anderson   35:36; 3.   Chris Robison   35:37; 4.   Glen Stewart   35:38.

He started 1999 with another Scottish Championship win when he was victorious in the SAF 4K Cross-Country Championship at Pollok Park in Glasgow.   His time was 13:10, well ahead of John Tonner’s 13:33.   On the 23rd January he returned to the familiar turf in Belfast for the Coca-Cola International in which he was first Scot (13th) in 25:33 with Chris Robison twentieth in 26:00 and Glen Stewart thirty fourth in 27:04.   The National Championships came up on 6th February and were at Cupar in Fife.   Robert won again in  38:08 from David Cavers of Teviotdale Harriers on 38:26.

Season 1999-2000 saw Robert miss the Renfrewshire Relays but turn out on the anchor leg of the team for the National Relays where they were second.  the Edinburgh to Glasgow on 14th November was one where Robert’s run was quite superb: he brought his team from ninth to fourth on the second stage and running the fastest time of the day in the process.    On 21st November he was out again in the Margate International fixture and this time he was fifteenth in 27:42.   On 18th December he was fifth in the Inter-District Championships at Cumbernauld.   On 8th January 2000 he raced in the Fila International in Belfast where he finished eleventh and was first Scot ahead of Phil Mowbray.   On 12th February he ran in the Reebok CAU Inter-Counties. in Nottingham over 12K and was again first Scot when he was twelfth in 38:01.   Thus prepared he went to the National Championships looking for three in a row.   No pressure on him, then.   But again, Robert was The Man.   He won in 41:16 from old rival Tommy Murray (now running for Inverclyde AC) by seven seconds with Glen Stewart next in 41:51.

First in 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000 with a third in 1997: a quite remarkable record: and if we add in the SAF 4K Championship in 1999 that makes it five national Cross-Country Championships in five years!

 

Let’s go back a bit and trace Robert’s progress on the track over the five years when he was performing so well over the country.   In summer 1996 he started with second in the SAF Road Race 10K Championships in a time of 29:31 behind Glen Stewart’s 29:28.   On the track he was ranked fourth in the 5000m with 14:16.8 which he set when winning the West District Championship and he had two more times in the Scottish top twenty – 14:19.3 in Dublin in June and 14:19.68 at Crown Point also in June.   When we say he was third Scot the following quote from the Yearbook “Three Scots bettered 14:00 albeit Paul Wilson, being a newly discovered Scot who does most of his racing in South Africa and USA, …..” That was the last we ever heard of Mr Wilson so Robert should be properly ranked number two for the year.   In the 10000m he was ranked number one and also had the number two time for the year.   He ran 29:48.47 in Birmingham on 14th June and 29:49.77 when winning the SAF Championships from Neil Wilkinson of Salford.   The Yearbook again: “Once again the National proved to be the most important race of the season providing 7 of the top 8 fastest times recorded in Scotland.   Robert Quinn who recorded the season’s fastest time at the AAA won the National reversing the positions from 1995.”   On the roads he was ranked in both the 5000m and the 10000.    In the former he was seventh with a time of 14:46 at Barrhead on 26th May and in the latter he was fourth with 29:31 which was run at Motherwell on 6th April.

In 1997 he had four times in the top Scottish rankings with the best (14:14.8 at Crown Point in June) being number six in the country.   the others were 14:26.11 when he won the West Districts; 14:23.0 at Greenock on 15th June and 14:28.3 at Meadowbank on 18th May.   On the road he was ranked at number one in the five miles with 23:22 at Chelfield on 2nd February and in the 10K he was sixth with 29:44 at Helensburgh on 22nd May.   In 1998 he was ranked in no fewer than three events.   In the 1500m he was twelfth with 3:53.1 at Scotstoun in June and in the 5000m he had three times.   The quickest was 14:19.3 when he was second in the West District, then there was 14:26.8 at Crown Point in June and then he was timed at 14:42.88 at the Scottish Championships where he finished third.   In the 10000m he had the top four times in the country.   He won the SAF 10000 at Meadowbank in June but there were two faster times – 29:20.72 at Lisbon in April and 29:25.55 at Bedford in July.   His fourth time was 29:43.88 at Prague in June and the Yearbook had this to say: “Robert Quinn recorded the top time of the year in the early season European 10000m Challenge at Lisbon and was just 5 seconds slower at the AAA Championships three months later.   We had to rely on the National Championships race at Meadowbank which Quinn won by 10 seconds for the next four ranked runners.”    On the roads he was Number One for the 5 Miles distance with 24:00 at Balmoral on 11th April.

He only was ranked in one event – the 5000m – in summer 1999.   He was second in the SAF 5000m Championships in 14:21.7 to Anglo-Scot Christian Nicolson of Team Solent (Southampton) who did 14:20.4.    His best time of 14:09.4 at Loughborough in May had him fourth in Scotland and he also had 14:23.0 at Crown Point in Glasgow on 16th May.   On the road he was number 14 in the 10000m rankings.    ore will be said of his hill racing ability separately but in 1999 he was eighth in the European Mountain Running Championships and ninth in the World Trophy.   In 2000 he was not ranked at all on the track but was number four in the country over 5K on the road where he ran 14:27 at Clydebank on 18 March.   He was ranked at number twelve at 3000m in 2001 with his best time of 8:31.12 but I would like to have a closer look at the list for a moment.   I have mentioned Paul Wilson above – I do not know any Scot who ever met him or saw him in action.   To claim him as Scottish was maybe pushing things a bit.   It was however a time when more Anglos and foreign based athletes were sending in times or coming up for races bringing their qualifications with them.   In this 3000m ranking list there were no fewer than six Anglos ahead of Robert: Christian Nicolson (from Southampton), Jon McCallum (from Croydon), Andrew Caine (from the North of England and whose father ran for England), Kevin Nash (Belgrave), Neil Wilkinson (from Salford) and Simon Plummer.   With no offence to any of them, most of whom ran well for Scotland, it is a straight historical fact that there were more of them at that time than ever before!

His cross-country career had a slight hiccup in 2001 when he missed almost every one of his usual races – no Reebok CAU for instance, no Cumbernauld Inter-District or International – and he did not run in the National Championships which was a pity after his three-in-a-row.   Season 2001-02 would be better.   Before Christmas in the biggest race in the first half of the season,  he ran the second stage  of the Edinburgh to Glasgow and brought Kilbarchan up from eighth to seventh with his usual good run.   In February 2002 he was eighth in the Reebok CAU Inter-Counties at Nottingham in 37:53 to be leading Scot.   Two weeks later, 23rd February, he ran in the Fila SAF National Championship where he was a very good second to Glen Stewart’s 39:23.   This was maybe a significant result: Glen was to run in both the 5000m and 10000m at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester later in the year and he was the main man in Scottish endurance running for the next couple of years.   He could not repeat his father’s victory in 1970 – the Africans were in greater numbers, more experienced and better prepared than most but he did have the satisfaction of being first Briton home in the 10000m.    In 2003 Robert was again only ranked in the 5000m on the track: he won the West District title with 14:53.17 but his best performance of 14:45.60 at Meadowbank on 11th May placed him twelfth in the country.   On the road he was ninth in the 5K with 14:58 recorded in Clydebank on 22nd March.   His cross country running in early 2005 was good: on 10th January he won the West District Championship in 35:25 ahead of Jamie Reid on 35:28 and on 1st February in Glasgow he was second to Andrew Lemoncello in the SAF 4K Cross-Country Championships.   However the National, while featuring a good run by Robert had some ominous portents.   The first five placings were: 1.   Glen Stewart (34:52); 2. Phil Mowbray (34:57), 3. Andrew Lemoncello (35:02); Martin Graham (35:06; 5. R Quinn (35:09).  Tthe ominous feature was that they were all home-grown Scots and all were very young.   Mowbray less than the others but he could still give Robert eight years.   Robert was the only one of the former elite still there: the top ten did not feature Tommy Murray or Chris Robison at all.

 

Distance Time Year
1500m 3:53.62 1990
3000m 8:08.51 1991
5000m 14:00.91 1995
10000m 29:14.23 1995
2 Miles 9:32 2010
Road    
5K 14:15 2003
10K 29:44 1997
Half Marathon 66:50 1996

 

Robert became a veteran (M40) in 2005 so it is appropriate to look at his personal best times and they are in the table above.   The 2 Miles time is slow but then it has seldom been raced over the last twenty years or more.   However, although his career seemed to be winding down at this point that was far from the truth: he more cross-country to do, he had more track to do and he had a newish career as an international hill-runner.   There will be a look at that aspect of his running as well as a look at his running as a veteran competing against younger men and as a veteran athlete.   The truth is that he never ever really made a separate career as a vet: he entered all the same races but maybe slightly fewer than before with good results (eg two tenth places in the Senior Men’s National) and it was only later that he entered vets events and when he did he usually won (eg in 2011 as an M45 he won the race, took also the M45 award and that gave him eleven National titles since his first in 1982!)

As an over 40 he has so far only run three times in the National and then with distinction: in 2008 he was tenth, in 2009 he was again tenth and in 2011 he was sixteenth.   The last was particularly praiseworthy: it was a National with lots of young men in the first 100 in distinction to previous years dominated by older, more experienced (and maybe a bit slower) runners, they were virtually all home Scots and Bobby was the only M40 in the first 30 and in fact he was coming up for his 46th birthday.   Always in a good position he ran very well indeed.    In Veteran’s athletics he first appears in the cross-country championships in 2008 after the new M35 category had been devised.   As an M40 he won the championship comfortably from David Millar and Steven Wylie  who were both M35’s.   In 2009 he won again from Steven Wylie who was still M35).   Robert missed 2010 which would have given him three-in-a-row here as well had he won it but he was back in 2011 when he was overall champion again – as an M45 he won with room to spare from Kerry Liam Wilson and Steven Wylie who were both M40’s!   Ran three, won three – so far!    At British level he was also a star and, says Colin Youngson, a hero to all Scottish vests from W35 to M70 when he was first in the M35/M40/M45 in the British and Irish Masters Cross Country International (5 countries including Ireland) at Stormont, Belfast on 16th November 2007.   On 15th November 2008, Bobby (M40) was second to England’s Tim Hartley but well clear of Welsh International steeplechaser (based in USA) Justin Chaston.  It was run that year on a very hilly and muddy course in Singleton Park, Swansea.   Bobby himself rated this as a better run than his gold the previous year.   In 2010 he won the Scottish vets 5000m on the track at Pitreavie on a day when the wind was very strong:   Bobby was not the only runner who likened turning into the home straight on each lap like “running into a brick wall.”

With all the success he has had why did he add in hill and mountain running?   He reckons that he was always a good climber and being light with a good strength to weight ratio so he was suited to it in a way that many cross-country runners are not.   It was also a good way to re-invigorate his running career and extend international running well into his thirties.   Spending summers racing over the most beautiful mountains in Europe and beyond he describes as ‘great’ – and who would disagree?      His record is fantastic.   Look at the international results in the table below.   For full details you can go to the World Mountain Running Association Website at www.wmra.ch    The World Championships tend to be held in September. the Europeans in July and the Commonwealths have only been held once – in September 2009.   So far though he doesn’t seem to have put ‘veteran’ and ‘hill running’ together to get the Masters World Mountain  Running Championships together,.

 

Year Event Place Venue
1994 World Mountain Trophy 8th Germany
1995 World Mountain Trophy 7th Edinburgh
1996 World Mountain Trophy 17th Austria
1997 European Mountain Running Trophy 23rd Austria
1998 World Mountain Trophy 3rd France
1999 World Mountain Trophy

European Mountain Running Trophy

9th

8th

Borneo

Austria

2000 European Mountain Running Trophy 6th Poland
2001 European Mountain Running Trophy 16th Slovenia
2002 World Mountain Trophy 39th Austria
2009 Commonwealth Mountain Running Championships 10th Keswick

There is also a Grand Prix for Mountain Running – see the link above – which involves races all over the Continent including major championships.   Robert actually won one of the major Grand Prix events in 1999 at Lenzerhide.   His overall world ranking in 1999 was third, in 2000 fifth, and in 2001he was ninth.   The rankings can be found using this link:   

http://www.wmra.ch/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=570&Itemid=39

*****

So that’s Robert’s career as an athlete up to the start of 2011:    11 National Cross Country titles between Under 17 and Over 45, a 4k Cross Country Championships and many victories on the track.  At the age of 44, he is the current Scottish 10000m champion!   One of his claims to fame is that he is the first person to gain full senior  UK representative honours across all major surfaces –

Track: European 10000 Challenge, Lisbon, 1996

Road: World Ekiden Road Relays, Copenhagen 1997

Cross-Country: World Championships, 1995

Mountains: see the Table

GB and Scottish International vests on the track, over the country, on the hills and on the roads.   There could/should have been another  GB cross-country vest in 1996 (see above) but for bad luck and selectorial vagaries!   A talented athlete, a superb worker, a ferocious competitor and a real and practising lover of our sport.   Long may he continue to bring us pleasure!

Robert was profiled again in the December 2018 Scottish Veteran Harriers Club Newsletter. Here is the information about his Veteran/Masters career.

As a Masters athlete, Robert has also enjoyed many successes, despite periods of inevitable injury. His M40, M45 and M50 Scottish Masters XC wins have been mentioned earlier in this article. Kilbarchan won team bronze in 2008 and silver in 2009. In 2007, he was first Masters finisher in the Gateshead UK XC Challenge. On the track, he was first in a gale-torn 2010 Scottish Masters 5000m at Pitreavie (a title he regained in 2013); and, also in 2013, won the Scottish Masters indoor 3000m at the Emirates Stadium, Glasgow.

Robert’s three races for Scotland in the splendid annual British and Irish Masters XC International have been outstanding. In 2007 at Stormont, Belfast, he won the M40 title and at the presentation was cheered deafeningly as the hero of his entire team (female or male, aged 35 to 70 plus). In 2008 at the very muddy and hilly Singleton Park, Swansea, he may have been second to England’s Tim Hartley, but considers this run to have been even better than Belfast. At Derry in 2017, despite being hampered by limited training due to injury niggles, he narrowly missed a medal, battling to fourth M50.

In the Scottish National senior cross-country Robert finished first Master three times, in 2008, 2009 and 2011, with his best position tenth.

In UK Masters rankings, Robert has been first M40 in 3000m, 5000m, 10,000m and Parkrun; and first M45 in Parkrun.

In 2018 he has taken a break from running, hopefully freshening his legs for future age-groups! Naturally, he remains very fit. This summer, as well as completing bike tours of Arran, Mull of Kintyre, round Loch Fyne, Bute and Rothesay, Robert cycled up major Pyrenean climbs like Luz Ardiden and the Tourmalet. In fact, before the road was closed on 27th July, he ‘nipped’ up the Tourmalet again to take photos of the Tour de France racers who were not far behind.

Brian McAusland finished his profile with the following. “A talented athlete, a superb worker, a ferocious competitor and a real and practising lover of our sport.” All his many friends, including SVHC runners, wish this intelligent, friendly, admirable man a speedy return to running.

Christine Price

Christina Price, Stirling., 1985

Christine winning the road mile at Stirling, 1985

Many Scottish runners had parents, siblings and children who also enjoyed the sport. The most successful surname must be Stewart: Lachie and his son Glen from Glasgow; the unrelated Peter and his siblings Ian and Mary from Birmingham – all five GB International athletes. Aberdeen has Mel Edwards and his son Myles. But the battle for top running family has been most intense in the Dundee area. Liz McColgan and her daughter Eilish; Doug Gunstone, his wife Palm, his sister Penny and his son Neil. But the Hasketts take some beating. Christine Haskett represented Scotland in the ICCU or IAAF World Cross Country Championships no less than 14 times; her brother Charlie ran the IAAF event six times; and now his son Mark is showing that he may have the talent to emulate the achievements of his father and his aunt.

Christine Haskett was born on the 30th of November 1952. Her father Charles, known as Chick, had been involved in athletics before and during the Second World War, particularly with Dundee Hawkhill Harriers, a club that trained in and around Caird Park, which had its own running track. When interviewed in early 1987 by Doug Gillon for ‘Scotland’s Runner’ magazine, Chris recalled her first race in 1968. “It was for the Hawks against Dundee University on a very bumpy grass track. I ran about 2.20 for 880 yards.” Harry Bennett (who went on to tutor Liz Lynch / McColgan), became Chris’s coach. She was second in the Scottish Intermediate 880 yards that year.

Her progress was extremely rapid. In the 1969 Scottish Under-17 CC she finished second but a long way behind Rose Murphy of Bathgate Harriers. However that summer she reduced her 800m personal best to 2.15.1. Although Sandra Sutherland of ESH topped the Intermediate yearlist with 2.14.2 (defeating Haskett for the first time in the WAAA Championships), Christine “the slimly built Dundee girl showed brilliant form in Scotland, annexing four major titles” – the East District, East v West, Scottish Schools and SWAAA championships.

Christine (on the right) with the triumphant Hawkhill Women’s national winning team

1970 was a fantastic year for Christine Haskett. In the Scottish Senior CC, at the tender age of seventeen, she was a very close second, sharing the winning time of Margaret MacSherry (Cambridge Harriers). Jim Logan reported: “They quickly moved away from the field – MacSherry leading with Haskett about ten yards behind. With a mile left, Christine made her challenge, but MacSherry resisted and they passed and re-passed until at 200 yards MacSherry made what appeared to be the decisive move. Christine guttily came again and the two girls fought all the way to the line, both clocking 26.00 but with MacSherry a whisker in front.” These two athletes were to be close rivals for several years.

The SATS Yearbook reports: “The 1500 metres was completely dominated in 1970 from a Scottish point of view by two runners, Margaret MacSherry and Christine Haskett, who between them re-wrote the Scottish records: Margaret the National, lowering the time to 4.22.4; and Christine the Native, which she reduced in stages from 4.42.3 to 4.40.9, 4.30.8 and 4.23.8. Her time in the CG final was a new UK age-best and she was chosen to compete for GB in the European Junior Championships in Paris (where she won a silver medal) and in the match v West Germany at Leicester (finishing third).” Before the Games, Christine won the 1500m in the East District Championship and the East v West, before coming second, just half a second behind Margaret, in the SWAAA event, which sealed her selection for the Games.

In the Eleventh British Commonwealth Games in Meadowbank Stadium, Edinburgh, on the 25th of July, Chris, who was still only seventeen, set a very good new 1500m personal best (4.23.8) in 8th place, just one place behind Margaret MacSherry (4.23.6). The winner was England’s Rita Ridley in 4.18.8.   Chris finished the season with a win over 800m (2.14.3) back home at Caird Park.

She reminisced in 1987 that she was lucky, because her time in the Scottish was point eight of a second over the qualifying time, but the selectors did choose her for the Games. At 17 she was not the youngest – sprinter Helen Golden and long jumper Moira Walls were both her junior – but she was the lightest. She knows that because she was selected as the athlete to stand at the top of the ladder  which Dave Wilson, Ricky Taylor, Dave Kidner and others carried round the Meadowbank Stadium in that marvellously spontaneous closing ceremony.

In the 1971 Scottish Senior CC, Chris Haskett took revenge on Margaret MacSherry, “scoring a runaway win on her home course at Dundee. She won the three and three-quarter mile race by over a minute.” The first six were chosen for the International CC in San Sebastian, where Christine finished an excellent sixth. During the track season she improved her 800m time to 2.09.5; and won the East v West, followed by gold in the SWAAA 1500m. Her season’s bests were a list-topping 4.25.4 for 1500m at Crystal Palace; and a Scottish National Record of 4.49.4 for one mile.

The 1972 Scottish Senior CC featured a close battle between Chris Haskett and the newly-married Margaret Coomber. This time it was Margaret who regained her title by 12 seconds – her final victory over Chris in this championship. The track season produced the following times for Chris Haskett: 800m 2.08.1; 1500m 4.25.5; 3000m 9.40.4 (a Scottish National record). She won the Scottish WAAA 1500m title plus the East v West race and was ranked top in the Scottish yearlist. However she suffered from lack of top-class competition at international level.

Chris Haskett regained her Scottish CC title in 1973 with a clear win over Margaret Coomber. However Mary Stewart dominated the track season, and Chris’s best mark was 4.25.6 for 1500m. Her lack of form meant that she was not selected for the Commonwealth Games at Christchurch, where Mary Stewart finished fourth in the 1500m in a new Scottish National record of 4.14.7.

Although Chris lost her Scottish CC title in 1974 when finishing second to Moira O’Boyle, she enjoyed her best track season since 1970. At the SWAAA Championships at Meadowbank on 22nd June, Chris secured a rare double: 1500m in 4.24.4 and 3000m in 9.36.0 – both crushing victories. She produced new personal bests with 4.18.8 and 9.32.0 (a Scottish National record). Chris had the top eight 3000m performances in the Scottish yearlist.

Christine with the Scottish Women’s Team in Monza in 1974

1975 continued this success. Chris Haskett not only regained her Scottish CC title (the first of three in succession) but also repeated her double success in the SWAAA championships with gold medals for 1500m (4.21.6 – a Scottish Native record) and 3000m. Earlier she had set a 3000m Scottish Native record of 9.24.6 at Meadowbank. Then in the WAAA championships at Crystal Palace on the 18th of July she won a valiant silver medal behind Ireland’s Mary Purcell in a Scottish National record of 9.18.4. Consequently, she was selected to run 3000m for Great Britain v France at Dieppe.

Once more, she had the top eight performances in the Scottish 3000m year list.

1974 and 1975 proved to be the peak years for Christine Haskett, although she continued to be successful until 1993! She won the Scottish 3000m title in 1976 and also retained her Scottish CC championship in 1976 (defeating Moira O’Boyle) and 1977 (in front of Margaret Coomber).

In addition, Chris competed indoors for about 3 years, winning the National indoor 3000m championships at Cosford in February 1975 in 9m 40.2 seconds. She competed for Great Britain indoors at 1500m in 1975 v Belgium at Cosford finishing 4th; and also ran 3000m for GB against Canada in Montreal in March 1976. 

By 1979 she was married and running as Christine Price. Next year she switched clubs to Bolton United Harriers. 1981 produced a good 3000m time of 9.31.1. Then in 1982 she won the Scottish CC title for the sixth time, twenty seconds ahead of a certain Elizabeth Lynch of her old club Dundee Hawkhill Harriers. That summer Christine’s 3000m best was 9.24.39, although she continued to race only south of the border.

Chris moved back to Dundee and by 1986 was competing for DHH once again. In both 1986 and 1987 she was second in the Scottish CC championships and in the latter year, along with her brother Charlie Haskett, Christine Price was part of the final Scottish team which was permitted to take part in the World CC Championships. As Colin Shields reported: “This was at the Sluzewiec Racecourse in Warsaw, Poland, in dreadful conditions on a slippery muddy surface in sub zero weather. Amongst the Scots, only Liz Lynch (who won a silver medal) ran really well.” However Christine Price could take justifiable pride in her record fourteenth appearance for Scotland in this competition (or its International CC precursor).

On the track, the creation of 10,000m races for women offered Chris Haskett-Price a further chance of a Commonwealth Games place, sixteen years after her first. In 1985 she won two gold medals in the SWAAA Championship: 5000m in 16.35.7; and 10,000m in 35.10.42. In 1986, after retaining her Scottish 10,000m title in 35.02.33, she was selected for the 1986 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh. In Meadowbank Stadium, on the 28th o f July, Chris ran well to finish tenth in a personal best of 33.59.90. It was a great day for the Scots, since Liz Lynch won the gold medal.

Even well after their peaks, many runners continue competing or at least trying to keep fit. Christine Haskett-Price always wore the Scottish vest with distinction and in November 1993 she took part in the Home Countries (5 Nations) International Veterans Cross Country Championship over a dry course in an estate outside Cardiff.

Chris was competitive all the way and eventually finished second overall, just 13 seconds down on the W35 victor for England, Margaret Eldridge. However Chris was ten seconds clear in the battle for W40 honours and became one of the very few individual winners for Scotland in this annual and most prestigious event in British Veteran Athletics.

In 2020, Christine reflected as follows: “I would consider that my best achievements have been: the silver medal I got competing for GB in the European Junior 1500m championships in 1970; representing GB on the track both indoors and outdoors; competing for Scotland in two Commonwealth Games; representing Scotland on the track, cross country and road; and helping my clubs (Dundee Hawkhill Harriers, Bolton United Harriers and Stretford AC) in many races.

My best memories of competing and training are the many friendships I made.  Also thinking back to the times I’ve stood on the start line shivering in the cold and driving sleet waiting for the gun to go off!!   I was also very fortunate, due to athletics, to travel to parts of the world that I would not have otherwise seen.

I think athletics now is so different compared to when I was running.  It is now a professional sport and, if you are good enough, you can make a living from it.  However, because of the money that can be earned it also brings the temptation to ‘win at all costs ‘ which I’m sure applies to only a very small minority.  For me, the greatest prize for was being able to represent my country.

I probably stopped running about 1993 or thereabouts and kept reasonably fit by swimming and walking.  Nowadays I go out walking most days and spend a lot of time gardening!”

Christine ran for Scotland: on the track, 14 times (including the 1970 and 1986 Commonwealth Games); on the road, three times; and on cross-country 21 times. She represented her country considerably more often than any other female runner; and she and her brother Charlie (two Junior and ten Senior XC vests plus one track international and three on the road), undoubtedly hold the Scottish Siblings (middle and long distance) record too! 

Christine Haskett-Price enjoyed a long and distinguished career, winning many championships and enthralling spectators with her grace and fighting spirit. Dundee and Scotland should be very proud of her.

Susan Partridge

Susan P

Susan Partridge is one of the country’s best endurance runners having had success on the track and over the country but it is on the roads that she has really made her mark.   This profile by Colin Youngson has been written at a time when she is still running and will require up-dating in a few years time.   For now, here is Colin’s profile of this talented athlete.

Susan Partridge was born on the fourth of January 1980. On the 27th of August 2011 she represented Great Britain in the World Championship marathon in Daegu, Korea. Her international career has been impressive. She has run in: the World and also the European cross-country championships (helping Britain to team gold in the latter); the 2006 Commonwealth marathon; the 2010 European Marathon; and has top-thirty places from the World Road Running and World Half-Marathon Championships. Only the Olympics to go!

Susan’s father, Alan, was a tough, successful and well-respected runner in the 1970s and early 1980s, representing Jordanhill College and East Kilbride AAC. He showed early promise by finishing a close second to GB International steeplechaser Alistair Blamire in the 1971 Scottish Universities CC Championship, in front of future Olympic 1500m finalist Frank Clement. Alan’s personal bests included: 3000 metres steeplechase 9.29.4; 5000 metres 14.25.4; and 10,000 metres 30.39.7. Perhaps his finest Performance was eighth in the extremely competitive 1977 Scottish National cross-country championships. He finished fourth in the Scottish Marathon Championship in 1974; and in the 1982 London Marathon recorded a good time of 2.22.30.

Nowadays Susan’s parents live in Appin, near Oban, and when Susan (a Glasgow University engineering graduate who runs for Leeds City AC) visits, she enjoys training with her two-year-old German short-haired pointer called Piper, on an old railway line and along the forest trails of Barcaldine. Alan often accompanies them on his bike.

Susan Partridge started running properly when she was fifteen. In an interview for runbritain in 2010, she said “I used to look after a horse from my local stables during the winter months and one day decided that I should try to keep fit by running to the stables and back. My Dad was a runner and although he was always careful not to put any pressure on me, he was able to give me advice on how to train and would come out running with me”. Susan realised early on that she had natural talent for longer events, which at the time were 800m or 1500m.   She made an early impact on the Scottish cross-country scene, winning the National under-17 title in both 1996 and 1997. In 1998 she was 12th (second Junior) in the Scottish Senior CC championships.   As an under-23 in 2002, running for Victoria Park City of Glasgow AC, she had progressed to 5000m in 16.32.31 (winning a silver medal in the Scottish Championships); and had also run the Great North Run half marathon in 76.11.

In 2003, Susan won the Scottish Athletics Federation Cross-Country title and then became Scottish Champion at 5000m, as well as improving her 10,000m PB to 34.26.18. 2004 was the year that she concentrated on road running. After making her marathon debut with 2.41.44 at London, she produced an excellent half-marathon time of 73.22 (second in a race in Spain). Then she returned to the track to finish seventh in the AAA Championships 5000m in a new PB of 16.24.73.

In the 2005 London Marathon, Susan Partridge progressed to 2.37.50. In October, she ran for GB in the IAAF World Half Marathon Championships in Edmonton, Canada, finishing 25th in 73.49, only a few seconds slower than her personal best of 73.10, which was set when she won the Bath Half Marathon in March.

2006 was Commonwealth Games year and Susan’s preparations included a PB 10k (33.19) and a good half-marathon (73.14) in Spain, before finishing a solid tenth (2.39.54) in Melbourne, Australia on the 19th of March. Then in July she improved her best ten mile time to 57.23. In September’s Great Scottish Run Glasgow Half Marathon another impressive PB was achieved: 72.40.   After a series of 10k races in 2007, Susan Partridge cut a few seconds off her 10 mile best (57.14), and finished the year well with 6th in the Great North Run Half Marathon (72.33 – PB) and another sixth in the Dublin Marathon (2.38.33).

In 2008, Susan started well by reclaiming the Scottish CC title in Falkirk. However London produced a slower time (2.41.40). A new venture was winning the Puma Garburn trail race in Stavely (which she went on to win three years in succession). The rest of the season was comparatively unsuccessful. Susan says: “In 2008-2009 I had a time when I felt sick after all my runs, even relatively easy ones. It was difficult as despite doing some tests there didn’t appear to be anything wrong with me and we never really got to the bottom of it. After a while I took a couple of months off and tried to enjoy life. I lacked motivation and for a while questioned whether I wanted to get back to running competitively.” Eventually “something just clicked” and she targeted trying to make the GB team for the 2009 world half marathon championships in Birmingham. Despite narrowly missing out on selection, she “felt my old self both physically and mentally and did manage to win the EDF Energy Birmingham Half Marathon in a time that wasn’t far off my PB (72.50). Everyone goes through rough times and in hindsight they usually help to show you how much running means to you and how much you care.”

In early 2010, Susan Partridge ran many miles and a series of good sessions. She got a part-time job doing research into joint replacement at Leeds University and “I think that helped to give me a routine. I had previously been self-employed and although I probably had more time to train, my time management left a lot to be desired. I definitely prefer routine.”    All this led to a breakthrough in the London Marathon, where she finished 17th (second Briton) in a PB of 2.35.57 (which also won her a gold medal in the Scottish Marathon Championship!) and was selected for the GB team for the European Championships at the end of July. After a couple of weeks rest, she got back into 90 to 100 miles per week training. In the heat and humidity of Barcelona she finished in 2.39.07 and Michelle Ross-Cope (14th), Susan (16th) and Holly Rush (20th) were the three scorers for the six-women GB team which won European Cup bronze medals.

The website runbritain.com reported “These girls have a lot in common: they are exceedingly talented and totally driven in their pursuit of marathon success. They also have superb back-up teams that include faithful training partners to accompany them on training runs through rain and shine!” These training partners are their dogs.

The article says “Piper’s favourite thing is going for a long run. Susan had tried to do speed work involving repetitions over shorter distances with recovery in between but he doesn’t understand why you would want to run back and forward and just gives up and starts sniffing around…….. Piper usually accompanies Susan’s husband, Martin, to watch at races and gets very excited when he sees Susan run past.”  She explained “Pointers never stop running so he’s the perfect training partner. He’s been great for me over the last year as he motivates me to get out of bed in the morning. I’m not a morning person and it would be easy to roll over for another half-hour when the alarm goes at 6.30 a.m. but I know Piper has to go out so I’ve barely missed a morning run since we got him. He’s great company and a handsome boy too. I’m proud of him.”

2010 was Susan’s most successful year on the roads: she recorded six wins over distances from 10k to 20 miles.

2011 has started really well. In January, Susan Partridge became first Yorkshire and Humberside CC champion and secondly won the Northern CC title. In mid-March she won the Spenborough 20 mile race and a week later finished fourth in the well-known Reading Half Marathon (73.47). April’s London Marathon produced a new PB (2.34.13), 25th place (3rd British woman) and selection for the World Marathon Championships in Korea at the end of August.

A satisfying training race took place at the end of June, when Susan won the Dunfermline Half Marathon in 76.26 on a testing course. This incorporated the Home Countries International Road Race Series, and Scotland defeated England for the first time in the history of the event. In addition, Susan Partridge became SAF Half Marathon Champion.

Doug Gillon reported recently that, in preparation for Korea, Susan has spent time in an acclimatisation chamber at Leeds University (90 minutes on a treadmill in 33 degree heat and 70% humidity). “Dr Mark Heatherington, a human performance scientist at Leeds, is helping her with a plan for taking on just the right amount of fluid.” “Her respected coach for the last fourteen years, John Montgomery, is commendably open-minded, encouraging other influences, and two months before the London Marathon she spent a month at moderate altitude in Boulder, USA, this year with the former marathon world-record-holder Steve Jones.”

Susan sent back two blog entries about this experience to runbritain.com. She was inspired by Steve’s insistence that a good runner should learn to ‘run from the gut’, as hard as possible, and realise that sometimes, in a race, you just have to go for it when it feels right and not be scared of what might go wrong. She did disagree to some extent with Steve, and still believes that in a training schedule there should be room for some easier running and steady 13 mile sessions at marathon pace. However Susan did try Steve’s morning speed sessions: 8×3 minutes with 2 minutes rest; 5×5 minutes with 2 minutes rest; 10x 90 second hills with a jog back down. Other morning sessions included one hour 45 minutes steady; or one hour ten minutes easy; or one hour 15 minutes including 25 minutes tempo. Three afternoons a week added a 30 or 45 minute easy run. Sunday, of course, is the long run – 2 hours 30 minutes at an easy pace, picking up speed a couple of miles from home. Monday: only one hour easy. Total – about 95 miles per week. Susan enjoyed the contrast in weather from February in Leeds. “If you get up at 7 a.m. in Boulder and walk out the door you’re met with beautiful sunshine, cool fresh mountain air, frolicking wildlife and quite frankly it makes you glad to be alive.”    Early morning speed sessions in British ice, rain and traffic fumes might not be sensible.

After two weeks acclimatisation in Korea, Susan Partridge took part in the IAAF World Championship Marathon in Daegu. In stifling conditions, she ran a calm, sensible race and came through strongly to finish a meritorious 24th (1st GB, 6th European), in 3.25.57) from the 54 starters.    In an interview afterwards, she assessed this performance. “I am only 31, which for a  marathon runner is quite young, so having this experience of major championships now, and being able to perform well both in qualifying and in this race is great. I’m really pleased – less than two minutes off my PB in those conditions. I got in a group quite early on with three Americans and the pace was perfect for me. I felt quite strong – I was telling myself just wait, just wait, don’t get carried away, but over the last few miles I was picking people off all the time. I felt so strong and it encourages you to keep it strong right through to the end. Overall I feel encouraged. I was in the mix there with some good athletes and it makes me think I’ve been able to go away and up the mileage and improve my sessions and I’m still improving. If I can do that again, I don’t know how close I can get to the Olympic team but it’s still worth making a bid for it. My strength is my consistency –  I seem to be able to qualify then turn it around and produce a good championship run as well, which is a quality in itself and, in marathon running, confidence is vital.”

Unfortunately, Susan was not selected for the London Olympic marathon, after recording 2.37.45 in London 2012. Subsequently she worked on her speed, recording personal bests of 4.36.23 for 1500m and 9.19.18 for 3000m. She was selected as one of the three-women team that represented GB & NI in the World Half Marathon Championships in Kavarna, Bulgaria, where she finished 22nd. A week later Susan won the Cardiff Half Marathon in 71.10, another PB.

Her hard work over the winter included several brisk cross-country outings, including a win in the Yorkshire championships and an excellent 70.31 in the prestigious Bath Half Marathon in March 2013. Then came April and London again. The Scotsman reported: “Susan Partridge maintained her brilliant form this year by remaining in touch with the leading pack in pursuit of a strong African contingent. When eventual winner Priscah Jeptoo pulled away, the Scot maintained a steady pace to cross the line 9th in 2.30.46, a time three minutes quicker than her previous best and good enough for fifth in the Scottish all-time rankings, earning a trip to Moscow in August for the World Championships marathon. After being the top British woman and inside the qualifying standard, the only question was whether Partridge (who also secured the 2014 Commonwealth Games standard) wanted to go to Moscow, and she certainly did.”

The afternoon of the tenth of August was a very humid afternoon in the Russian capital, when 72 athletes started the Women’s World Championship Marathon. Susan, who by now had a full-time job as a researcher in joint replacement at the University of Leeds, set off very carefully, well down the field. After reaching the finish in the Luzhniki Stadium, Olympic Park, she said, “It was all about places today. I was way back at the start and for a minute wondered if I’d been a little bit cautious, but once I got my rhythm going I started to come back and pick people off.” Live television coverage made clear how well Susan was moving up throughout the entire race. Eventually she crossed the line in 2.36.24 to secure a fine tenth place (third European). In the history of the event, Great Britain previously had only four top-ten finishers: Paula Radcliffe (1st in 2005); Joyce Smith (9th in 1983); Mara Yamauchi (9th in 2007); and Sally Ellis (10th in 1991).

Susan recovered well from this career-defining performance, and another highlight came on 6th October, when she ran right away from a good lead pack to win the Great Scottish Half Marathon in Glasgow. Her time (70.40) was only nine seconds slower than her fastest. Once again the whole event was televised and Susan’s powerful, determined running seemed to augur well for her hopes in the 2014 Commonwealth Games marathon in the same city.

Susan Partridge should be very proud of what she has achieved, due to talent, resilience and consistent hard training. One inspiration has been Paula Radcliffe, who kept on increasing her mileage until she reached her peak. Susan has experienced a fantastic range of British and International racing highlights. She clearly loves running and should be considered an excellent role model for all aspiring Scottish distance athletes.

Moira O’Boyle

Moira O’Boyle’s Dad, Cyril, was a club mate of mine at Clydesdale Harriers for many years and we must have covered hundreds of miles, maybe thousands, together, so I have known Moira for a long time.   They were a superb family to know and be friends with.    Her Mum Noreen became a runner eventually – and a good one – and her sister Pat was always in evidence but couldn’t be a runner because of asthma.    I remember at the 1986 Commonwealth Games when Moira was coming on to the track to start the Marathon and I was standing waiting for the Scottish contingent to come out.  She came over to me and asked if I could make sure her Dad got a cup of tea because ‘he’s had nothing all morning.’   In the mid 1990’s I was at Cumbernauld for the International Cross Country races and as I was crossing the infield to shout encouragement (or something) to one of my runners, this voice behind me said, ‘You don’t recognise me, do you?’   I did recognise her immediately: thinner than of yore but she had been ill and she was with the Irish team in some official category and we had a good old blether until she had to go and see how the Irish runners were doing.    So if she’s Irish, why is she here?   She’s here because she was more Scottish than some who might be included!   Brought up in Clydebank, trained at Whitecrook in Clydebank and Scotstoun in Glasgow; winner of Scottish titles on the track and over the country, Scottish Internationalist until the whole family moved back to Ireland in the late 70’s    Let’s look at her career in a bit of detail.

Moira was born on 20th August 1956 and the first trace of her in the Scottish Women’s Cross Country Championships is in 1970 when she was sixth in the Girls Race in a time of exactly ten minutes.   Two years later she was second in the Intermediate age group to Mary Stewart – sister of Ian and Peter Stewart.   The next year was very good one for Moira and the ‘Athletics Weekly’ report on the Scottish Championships in Edinburgh in 1973 runs as follows: “Mary Stewart did not appear to defend her Intermediate title, thus robbing the meeting of its expected highlight – the clash of Mary and the bang-in-form Moira O’Boyle.   In the absence of her most formidable rival, Moira beat another Anglo-Scot Sheila Barrass by over a minute.”   The actual times were 15:48 and 16:53.   In 1974 Moira was competing in the Seniors Championship at Milngavie, the AW report read: “Fulfilling all expectations, Moira O’Boyle continued her already distinguished career by winning the Scottish Senior Cross Country title in 22:04.   Although this is Moira’s first year as a senior, she made her mark in this section at the first attempt.   On this form Moira might well be a surprise medallist in the International Championships at Monza, in Italy, in March.”    The official times were 22:04 and 22:26 for Christine Haskett in second.  This year also marked the first run in the event of her mother Noreen who finished nineteenth. Among her successes in 1974 was a win in the prestigious GB Universities Cross Country Championships.    Moira did not run in 1975 because of “adverse effects of smallpox vaccinations for Morocco.”   The championships in 1976 were held in Livingston she was over a minute behind Chris Haskett (21:03 to 22:06).   Noreen was twenty fourth this time.   Moira had a rather good run at Louvain in France when she ran for the British team in the World Students Championships to finish second leading the GB team to victory.

The Scottish team in Monza, 1974.   Moira is second from the right

She was also considerably good on the track.   In 1969 as a Junior the longest distance which she was allowed to run was 800 metres and she was ranked eighth with a time of 2:54.7.   Two years later, in 1971 she was running as an Intermediate and won the West District Intermediate 1500 metres in 5:07.9, was second in the East v West Match in 4:57.7  and was second in the Scottish intermediate 1500 behind Mary Stewart in 4:47.2.    In her own age group she was ranked fourteenth in the 800 with 2:28 and second in the 1500 with the 4:47.2 time behind Mary Stewart’s 4:35.5.     In 1972 she was West District and SWAAA 1500 metres champions with a best of 4:44.1, third in the Scottish Senior 3000 metres and a season’s best of 10:21.6.   In 1973 Moira won the West District 1500 metres and 3000 metres titles and was second in the Scottish 3000 metres with season’s bests of 4:54.4 and 10:05.8.    The following year she won the West 3000 metres title and had a best for the year of 9:58.2. which ranked her second in Scotland and then in the East v West match she won both the 1500 and 3000 metres in 4:52.2 and 10:30.4 – she was just 19 at the time.    In 1975 she had a best for the 3000 metres of 9:57.8.   The family moved back to Ireland in the late 1970’s and Moira moved up to the marathon in 1982 – a step up that he father never made.   Cyril was an Irish champion and International class athlete who created quite a stir when he arrived in Scotland but although a very talented road runner he never took the final step to the ultimate road runner’s distance.   Moira did and, I believe found her real metier.

Colin Youngson ran for Victoria Park AAC for a year or two while teaching at Kelvinside Academy and he has some interesting and informative memories of Moira – and the rest of the family.  What follows is an extract from his memories of this time: there is some duplication of what has been written above but not too much and there is a different emphasis.

Ronnie Kane had been in a brilliant Victoria Park team that won the Edinburgh to Glasgow Road Relay on many occasions in the 1950’s.   He was now Captain of Victoria Park AAC and decided on the routes for the fast pack/slow pack club training sessions around the streets in Tuesday and Thursday evenings.   Ronnie also coached the ‘Ladies Section’ which had only been formed three years earlier (ie 1968).   They were very quickly successful and their undoubted star was then only 15 years old: Moira O’Boyle.

Her parents were also good runners.   Cyril O’Boyle, a loquacious, droll Irishman who ran for Clydesdale Harriers and his charming wife Noreen.   The club mag bemoaned the fact that despite doing all her training with Victoria Park, Noreen continued to race with Clydesdale which prevented Victoria Park Seniors from winning even more team titles!   The intermediate age group was for young women aged 15 – 17.   In early winter 1971 my newspaper cuttings indicate that Moira O’Boyle occasionally lost a race – shock, horror!   She had won a silver Thistle Award for that year’s track season (1500 in 4:47.2) but finished second in the first league cross-country race.   However by early November she was beating the  1971 Intermediate Scottish 1500m and cross country champion, Eileen Radka from Bathgate; and in the Scottish Women’s Western District Cross-Country Championships at Pollok Estate in early December 1971 Moira won the Intermediate two miles by fully 400 yards “an astonishing margin in a race of this length”.   Her team won of course.   Her mother Noreen was ninth in the Senior race.

In early January 1972 Moira won her age-group in the East v West cross-country race at Fauldhouse.   Then at the end of that month, VP Intermediate girls won the SWCCU Road Relay.    Although Moira finished second to the outstanding Anglo-Scot Mary Stewart from Birchfield Harriers in the Scottish Championships at Pitreavie, the VP team won and Moira bounced back to achieve fifth place in the English Cross-Country Championships at the end of February and to win the Scottish Schools Cross Country title.   That summer Moira’s progress was clear.   First she won the Intermediate 1500m title in the West Championships, the East v West, and then the SWAAA Championships.   Her pb improved to 4:44.1.   Then at the age of only 16 she won a bronze medal in the SWAAA 3000 metres senior championships at Meadowbank Stadium, Edinburgh, behind Ann Barrass from Aldershot and Wanda Sosinka (ESH).   Moira’s time was 10:21.6 (when the National Record was only 9:40!) and the yearbook commented “she looks an outstanding prospect.”  

Moira O’Boyle’s success continued.   She was VP Ladies Captain for 1972-73.   The next cutting I have indicates that she continued to ‘murder’ the opposition over the country.   On December 2nd, 1972, she retained her West District title.   Then she was congratulated on her “fine performance at Watford on 16th December representing Scotland in the Inter-League Match.”  However a major highlight came on 10th February 1973 in Edinburgh when Moira O’Boyle won the SWCCU Intermediate CC Championship by more than a minute.  In the summer she did not improve her 1500 m best but did win the Wesy and the East v West events.   Moira’s 3000 metres time improved to 10:05.8 and she on the West and West v East races.   She improved to a silver medal in the SWAAA Senior 3000 metres, behind Ann Barrass again.

Almost exactly a year later on 9th February 1974, at Milngavie, Moira achieved her most amazing feat so far when she won the Scottish Women’s Senior Cross-Country Championship and led VPAAC to victory in the team race.   The report is as follows: “Fulfilling all expectations, Moira O’Boyle, Victoria Park, continued her already distinguished career by winning the title in 22:04.   Although this is Moira’s first year as a Senior, she (like Jim Brown a week later) made her mark in this section at the first attempt.   On this form, Moira might well be a medallist at the International Championships at Monza, Italy in March.   Second in the Senior race was Dundonian Christine Haskett, now with Stretford AC, and third was the highly rated Ann Barrass of Aldershot.   The fourth counter in the winning VP team was one Noreen O’Boyle who must have been immensely proud.”   That summer, although 17 year old Moira did not improve her 1500 metres time (an error?)   she broke the 10 minute barrier with 9:58.2 as well as winning the West and West v East again.   The yearbook suggested that she was to be regarded as “mainly a cross-country specialist.”    Nothing wrong with that!

What a start to a running career!   My own memories of Moira at this time are twofold.   A newspaper photograph of her zooming away to yet another overwhelming victory reminds me of her face in a racing grimace: this was a young woman who always tried as hard as possible, despite the lack of opposition.   In private she did not smile a great deal, but was mature and serious at 16, her eyes intense as she talked fluently about training and her ambitions in the sport.   I do not know details about her training but she was rumoured to be piling up the miles, as well as working on speed endurance.   She was an unusual person, attractive and unsettling in her relentless enthusiasm.

Moira O’Boyle deserved utterly every single athletic success she achieved.”

The miles that Colin reports her as piling up and the speed endurance and cross-country successes all made for a first class marathon and road running career.   Starting with 3:05 in 1982 in the Foyle Festival Marathon in Derry – not a great time but a fair enough time for a woman in 1982.  Moira went on to win the Northern Ireland championship three times, win the Dublin Marathon, compete in two Commonwealth Games and set Northern Irish records for both half-marathon and marathon.   Her first attempt at the marathon is noted above but her second attempt over the same course brought her home in 2:47:38 and there were comments in the press about her being a sub 2:40 runner.  For example from the Marathon and Distance Runner: “Then more drama as 1982 Ladies’s winner Moira O’Boyle of Clydebank (but with Irish connections) came charging through with a 2:47:58 to destroy her 1982 time by nearly 18 minutes and set a new Northern Ireland Women’s All-Comers Record.   26 year old O’Boyle’s run puts her on the fringe of top class and she certainly looks like a lady ready for a sub 2:40.”   (This is a direct quote, including the ‘Ladies’s!)   The ‘Derry Journal’ in December 1983 reported on her win in the Foyle Women’s only 5K as follows:  “In October 1983 women in their hundreds took to the streets of Derry to take part in the first ever Foyle Female 5K for the Foyle Hospice.    The event was won by Moita O’Boyle, daughter of the legendary Donegal athlete Cyril O’Boyle.’

In 1984 she won the Belfast Marathon in 2:53:54 and with it her first Northern Ireland championship title.   The following year she repeated the feat with a time of 2:45:40 and then in 1986 she picked up her third consecutive title with the fastest time yet – 2:43:26.   This qualified her for the Commonwealth Games to be held in Edinburgh and there she finished eighth in 2:42:29.    Every race faster than the one before and by this time she had become Moira O’Neill having married the Irish marathon internationalist John O’Neill .   Her first, and as far as I can find out, her only run under 2:40 came in Dublin in 1987 where she won in 2:37:06 .  Wikipedia reports that in 1989 she finished two minutes ahead of Liz Bullen but I can find no other record of this particular race.   Just over 3,000 runners finished that year. Liz Bullen who finished second, is the twin sister of John Treacy,    I can find no record of her running another marathon in 1989 but in 1990 she ran in the Commonwealth Games in Auckland New Zealand and finished twelfth in 2:48:52.

With her Dad Cyril.

Moira died from cancer on 29th August 2012, just a week after her 56th birthday.   There is some information at http://insidetrak.blogspot.co.uk/  She still had the second fastest marathon time ever by a Northern Ireland athlete.

Vikki McPherson

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Winning the Scottish Cross-Country Championship, 1992

Having been involved in athletics, particularly endurance running, since 1957 I have found that others involved in the sport are almost universally friendly, genuine and helpful.   I had watched Vikki in training and racing for several years and admired her abilities when I invited her to help organise the women’s events in the major BMC Grand Prix meeting at Scotstoun at the turn of the century.   She was happy to come to the committee meetings when she could, gave valuable advice and was a real asset to a male dominated committee.   One of the most genuine and approachable international athletes that you could come across, she has suffered from a surprising lack of recognition domestically.   It may be the price of being a talented runner at the same time as Liz McColgan and Yvonne Murray in Scotland, and Paula Radford and Liz Yelling in Britain.   Of her talent, there is no doubt and Colin Youngson has written this profile of her athletics career.

Vikki McPherson (born 1st of June 1971) achieved a great deal in her running career during the 1990s.   She was a Scottish and British Universities champion, a Scottish title winner, and ran internationally for both Scotland and Great Britain, on track as well as cross country.   In addition she won medals in World Universities competitions and in the World Cross Country Championship.   Between 1989 and 1993 Vikki studied accountancy, and enjoyed playing a full part in the athletic and social life of her club, Glasgow University Hares & Hounds. She was a natural choice to be Treasurer and, of course, won a Blue. Previously, she had been a member of Troon Tortoises; and went on to compete for City of Glasgow AC.

Fellow Harey Alastair Douglas writes “Vikki trained very hard under the guidance of Bill Parker.   She was both organised and disciplined in her approach to training and was also happy to advise and encourage other runners.   She was extremely friendly and popular within the sport.”   This is obvious if the history of GUH&H is consulted. It makes clear not only that Vikki improved constantly as an athlete, but also that she competed in all the usual student races, including the Isle of Man Easter Running Festival, and was a lively, mischievous young woman who loved a party.   There is frequent reference to the singing of certain student songs and the writing of satirical performance poetry.   Vikki’s team-mates in a very successful outfit included Hayley Haining, Joanna Cliffe, Suzie Donaldson, Jan Roxburgh, Katrina Paton and Michelle Jeffrey.

Vikki’s potential was immediately obvious.   As a ‘fresher’ she was fourth in the West District Junior CC, third in Scottish Universities, 18th in BUSF and 6th in the Scottish Senior National.   In addition, while in front on the first stage of the famous Hyde Park Relays, she led the entire field off course!   The next season brought a real challenge for Vikki, with the arrival at GU of the immensely talented (but somewhat injury-prone) Hayley Haining, who had been second in the 1990 National CC. Hayley proceeded to finish a little way in front of Vikki in several races but their rivalry led to improved performances for both.   Vikki (still only 19) was victorious in the West District Senior CC.   At an International 3000m road race, held in Turkey on 5th December 1990. Hayley was second and Vikki fourth.   In early 1991, Vikki McPherson won the Scottish Universities CC title in Bellahouston Park, and GUH&H won the team.   At  BUSF in Sunderland, Vikki was a close second.  Then at Beach Park, Irvine, when the Scottish Women’s Cross Country Championships were held, Hayley Haining won, Vikki finished third and GUH&H won the national team title.   Over the Easter vacation, according to the GU history  “Vikki, Joanna and Michelle escaped death on a number of occasions, while running along the West Highland Way in three days.   The wild animals they encountered were fortunately held at bay by an essential item of Vikki’s equipment – her hairdryer!”

In November 1991, at the Safeway International CC Meeting at the infamous Riverside Bowl in Gateshead, Vikki finished sixth in a 5000m race.   Then in December, Vikki McPherson managed to defeat Hayley Haining in the Lita Allen Race in Kirkcaldy, by the narrow margin of four seconds.   Then in February 1992 at Keele University, Vikki McPherson had a tremendous run to win the British Universities CC title.   She followed that with an outstanding third place in the UK Championship and World CC Trial, held in Basingstoke.   After that, at Callender Park, Falkirk, Vikki became Scottish Women’s CC Champion.  Writing in The Herald, Doug Gillon noted “The twenty-year-old Glasgow student Vikki McPherson confirmed to a Scottish crowd yesterday that she has graduated from tortoise to hare.   The former Troon Tortoise has blossomed under the coaching of Bill Parker since moving to Glasgow to study accountancy.” 

At the 1992 World Cross Country Championships in Boston, USA, Vikki McPherson had a fine run for GB in freezing conditions over a snow-covered course and finished 62nd.   Then in the World Students CC Championships in Dijon, France, Vikki captained the British Women’s team to victory and secured an individual silver medal.   (In 1994 she was also part of the winning team in this event when it took place in Limerick.)   In May, Vikki won the Strathclyde Women’s Kelvin 10k race in 33.05, 38 seconds in front of fellow International athlete Sandra Branney.

Vikki 2

During her final year at Glasgow University, Vikki appeared less frequently for the students.   However in December she won a Women’s Inter-District CC race in Irvine; and went on to represent Scotland in an International CC Race in Durham, along with Hayley Haining and Joanna Cliffe (the West District and Scottish Universities CC winner).   This may well have been the contest that Alastair Douglas referred to when he wrote “one year in the televised Durham International Cross Country, the Hares & Hounds beat Kenya in the team race!”    In 1993, Vikki McPherson retained her Scottish CC title at Callender Park, Falkirk, and after being third once again in the UKChampionship trial race, once again gained selection for the British team competing in the World Cross Country Championships in Amorebieta, Spain, where she improved her finishing position to 38th.

That summer, Vikki McPherson ran an excellent race when she finished fourth in the 1993 World Student Games 10,000m at Buffalo, USA, recording a lifetime best of 32.32.42 (which at the time was second only to Liz McColgan in the all-time Scottish ranking list).   In addition she ran the 10,000m for Great Britain in the IAAF World Athletics Championships in Stuttgart.

After leaving university, Vikki continued her successful athletics career, although she began to suffer from injury.   She was fifth in the World CC trials and represented GB once more. Running for Scotland in the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria, Canada, Yvonne Murray won the 10,000m, with Vikki finishing fifth in 33.02.74.

In 1995, Vikki McPherson regained her Scottish Women’s Cross Country title in February; and in May won the Women’s Home Countries International 10,000m road race in Kelvingrove Park.

After several injuries, Vikki started to make a comeback by running for Britain in a 3000m at Gateshead in September 1997.    The following year – 1998 – was very successful. In the UK Championships and World CC Trial, she won the silver medal, sharing the winning time with Liz Talbot (Yelling). Then in the World Championships in Marrakesh, Paula Radcliffe, Hayley Haining, Vikki McPherson and Liz Yelling won team bronze.   Vikki improved her 3000m best to 9.21.2 and ran a very good 10,000m (32.38.42) in Lisbon in April 1998.   Then she set a 5000m PB of 15.56.04. She became Scotland’s Commonwealth Games Team Captain and when the 10,000m took place in the steamy heat of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Vikki finished a meritorious fourth.

 

Alastair Douglas concludes “Vikki was also outstanding on the roads. She won the Women’s 10k in Glasgow, finished third (and first Scot) in the Great Scottish Run, and sixth in the Great North Run Half Marathon, in the fast time of 71 minutes.   One of the disappointments of her career was missing out on an Olympic place. (Barcelona came just too soon for her and she was injured for Atlanta).   I think she would have eventually moved up to the marathon where, I have no doubt, she would have run for GB in more major events and would have run significantly under 2.30.   However injuries took their toll and she was never able to make that transition.   Nevertheless she had an outstanding career, although it was fairly short, and maybe did not get the recognition she deserved by being at her best around the era of Yvonne Murray and Liz McColgan.”

Since retiring from distance running, Vikki McPherson has made sport her profession, working with UK Sport, UK Athletics and becoming GB Badminton Performance Director

John McLaren

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John McLaren (Z3) taking over from Ronnie Kane in the Edinburgh to Glasgow.

John McLaren was a well-liked and much respected runner in the 1950’s for Victoria Park AAC  winning national titles over the country and many team medals of gold, silver and bronze as part of the excellent VPAAC team.    Well known for his war-cry of “Guid auld Scotland” as he crossed the finishing line in first place, for the fact that his disability did not seem to impede his athletic progress, for an excruciating sense of humour, he was a popular runner who was credit to his country

We can start this profile by reproducing the one written by James Christie, also of Victoria Park, in the June 1956 issue of ‘The Scots Runner’.

“!If you are a Scotsman and you are just a little interested in sport, then if you hear the name McLaren you know that means just one thing – “Guts”.   John McLaren is the greatest potential Scotland has ever possessed over the country.   His successes in that type of running last winter were nothing short of great in an unhandicapped runner of his age, but in his case with he disability which he has completely conquered it is really incredible.

First, let it be understood that this article is not going to be about a lad with a disability who over comes it to do well, no, this is about a great runner who simply runs because he wishes to, who with or without any afflictin could have risen to the stature he has attained today.   You see, that is the great thing about John, he has no chip on his shoulder to overcome, perhaps that’s why he is what he is.

John McLaren was born on 20th April, 1934, at Fauldhouse, West Lothian.   It was at the age of two that he was struck down by “Polio”, that being the case he does not remember how his illness affected him at the time, except that, as time wore on he could not attempt some of the things his more fortunate compatriots could, eg climbing a great deal and vigorous ball games.

However as the years passed and John in June of 1950 took his first step in actually attempting to take part in any sport.  He joined Shotts Miners WAC,   Little did he or Scottish athletics realize then what a place he was going to take within such a short space of time in this sport.   Hs first efforts in his new venture were nothing spectacular, races at his club and handicap 1 mile races in open entry meetings.   The first time I ever saw him competing was at the Edinburgh Police Sports in 1953.   That day he took part in the 1 mile, coming round the last bend in second place he produced a “terrific” finish to win.   At that time I thought he looked a good runner and might do well over longer distances.   However after I seen him run in the Junior Scottish Cross-Country Championships in 1954, I was convinced that in him we had a nucleus from which to build a young cross-country team which could win the European cross-country championship for Scotland.

In the track season of that year, 1954, he had many victories in handicap 1 mile races and 2 mile team races, culminating in a 3rd place in the Scottish 3 Miles Track Championships of that year to Ian Binnie the reigning champion and record-holder over the distance.   With the coming of the cross-country season he intensified his training with the intention of retaining his Scottish Junior Title and also having a crack at the Junior British event.  Both his intentions were successful and in annexing both Scottish and British Cross-Country titles he created such an impression on the Scottish Cross-Country Union that they selected him to run in the Senior Scottish Cross-Country team at San Sebastian, Spain, in the European Cross-Country Championship of 1955.   It was in this race that John suffered a very bad tendon injury which caused him to curtail his track appearances greatly last summer, however he did manage to win the Lanarkshire 2 mile championship.   Resting for most of last summer, he thought that by the time another winter season would be on him his heel would have been completely cured, but in this he was unfortunate and he had to start another tough season not quite as fit as he would have liked.  

We all know now, how in spite of his injury he took fifth place in the Scottish Cross-Country Championships thereby qualifying for a place in the team to compete in the European Cross-Country event.   How he finished the first Scotsman home in 12th place, beating some of the most accomplished distance runners in Europe in doing so.

This track season of 1956 John has only competed once, in the 3 mile championship of his new club Victoria Park AAC.   He won that event but at the end told me of how much his heel troubled him especially that afternoon on the rough Scotstoun track.   It was this that made him decide to withdraw from further track competition this year and rest up for next cross-country season.

Undoubtedly he will be missed this summer, but if he returns a fitter and stronger athlete next winter, then it will have been worth the long wait.   To quote John: “When you have a small trivial injury, you always think you can run it off, but if you continue then it only becomes worse, whereas if you drop everything completely for a spell, when you return, your running will still be there, have no fear.”   “I should have laid off completely last year and my injury would have been gone for good, instead I kept trying to do something all the time with the result I still have the roots of the trouble there.”

At 22 years of age and a wealth of experience behind him John should know what he is talking about.   In the past five and a half years he has won 60 to 65 prizes between Championship and handicap events.   He has been “Capped” twice for Scotland and he has won both Scottish and British titles.   His enforced rest can do nothing but good, so on his return Scottish athletic fans will be expecting bigger and better things from the cheery lad from Fauldhouse.  

Now more about John himself.   He is about 5 feet 7 inches in height and weighs around the 9 stone mark.   Dark haired and slim, with the wiry toughness of most great country runers he keeps to no special dieting, eating what he pleases in moderation.   The job he holds with the Glenboig Union Clay Co. Ltd, Fauldhouse, as a despatch clerk is advantageous to his training.    Having to walk 5 miles to and from his work and walking amongst wagons labelling means that even in a normal day he puts in a lot of ground work in strengthening his legs before he starts training in the evening.

When in training for cross-country or track, he always puts in 6 days a week.   For the country after a warm-up of 1 or 2 miles he may do 4 x 2 mile runs or 9 x 1 mile runs or yet again 8 x 1 mile fullout, with rests between of course.

As far as the track is concerned, he can vary it much more.   Usual warm-up, then 15 x 440 yards, 8 x 880 yards, 4 x three quarters of a mile or 2 to 3 miles as he feels.

His ambitions?

To run 3 miles in under 14 minutes and 6 miles in under 29 minutes, on the track.   Over the country to win both Senior Scottish and British Cross-Country titles and finish in the first three in the European event.  Advice for youngsters in the game?   “The most important thing is enjoying your running, when you train put everything you have into it but don’t let athletics run your life.”

How has athletics affected his life?   To John it has given an air of confidence and also helped immensely to overcome his disability.   In fact as he puts it, “Sometimes I forget I even have one.”   It is in statements from him, like the one above, which make you realise that here is not only a very great athlete but also a very great man. 

Jimmy might have been a wee bit effusive, maybe a bit over the top with his last sentence, but Emmet Farrell was no less enthusiastic when he wrote this in ‘The Scots Athlete’ of February 1954.   “McLaren, Sensation of the Season.   J McLaren of Shotts Welfare who may be (Adrian) Jackson’s most serious rival is to my mind the sensation of the Scottish cross-country season.   By finishing a good second to Harry Fenion in the recent Midland test he showed that hi second to Bannon in the Lanarkshire Championship was no fluke.   For a runner muscularly handicapped in one arm his negotiation of fences and obstacles at Lenzie in the atrocious weather conditions prevalent was little short of uncanny.”

In the Midland Championships McLaren had been 14 second behind Fenion but 23 ahead of Tommy Tracey, 46 in front of Joe McGhee and 51 in front of Ronnie Kane.   It was indeed and augury for the National Junior where McLaren won from Jackson by only 4 seconds with Andy Brown of Motherwell third a further 15 seconds behind.   Eddie Bannon won the Senior race from Tracey, Fenion and Ronnie Kane but Emmet Farrell had no doubt about who was the man f the afternoon at Hamilton.   “McLaren’s Victory Performance of the Day.   Surely the race of the day was the Junior Championship over 6 miles.   The race between McLaren of Shotts and Jackson of Edinburgh was a classic.   With incredible grit and courage McLaren fought off his renowned adversary to win with little to spare.   This race was an exhilarating spectacle and while McLaren deserved the spoils of victory – great credit is due Jackson who move up to the front from about tenth place.   AH Brown of Motherwell YMCA also had a grand race and actually assumed the lead with 2 miles to go”.  

A year later McLaren went one better in the Midland Championships, again held in January at Woodilee in Lenzie when he won from Eddie Bannon by 22 seconds with Henson of Victoria Park third a further 17 seconds away.   In February, in his preview of the National,  Emmet Farrell was fairly confident that a repeat performance was on the cards when he said, “Classy McLaren should retain the Junior title.   John McLaren of Shotts Welfare showed by his brilliant win in the Midland 6 miles over National champion Eddie Bannon and other class runners that he has fully recovered from his foot injury, and I look forward to him retaining his junior title despite the presence of such brilliant junior contenders as Adrian Jackson of Edinburgh Varsity, Jim Russell, Victoria Park, and P McParland of Springburn.”   When he did win the title for the second time on 26th February 1955, the runners behind him included many who would go on to be real quality athletes.   The result:

1.   J McLaren (Shotts)   33:07;   2.   AS Jackson (EU)   33:28;   3.   J Russell (VP)   33:35;   4.   G Everett (Shettleston)   34:50;   5.   P Moy (Vale of Leven)  35:13;   6.   G Nelson (Bellahouston)   35:13;   7.   JC Harris (Beith)   35:18.    On the strength of his season as a whole, McLaren was chosen for the Senior team to run in San Sebastian and he finished 48th to be third counter for Scotland in front of Andy Brown (a first-year senior, 9th in the National), Joe McGhee and John Stevenson.

Having won the Scottish crown, he then made his bid for the British championship.   Farrell again: “McLaren’s Epic Victory.   Few could have failed to be thrilled by John McLaren’s victory in the English junior championship where he successfully tackled a field of some 600 runners.   True, like his colleagues he did not set the heather on fire in the International at San Sebastian (how much their poor form was due to the heavy rich food perhaps it is difficult to assess) but this temporary fall from grace cannot blot out the thrill of the Shotts boy’s display at Cardington.   All set to have a tilt at Ian Binnie over 2 miles on the track this ambition has been temporarily denied him due to Achilles tendon trouble.”

Winning the English Junior National

By the start of season 1955-56 McLaren was a member of Victoria Park AAC and turned out in the McAndrew relay on 1st October at Scotstoun.   Running for the second team he was on the third stage and his time of 15:47 was fastest in the B team and quicker than that of Chic Forbes in the A team that won the race.   In the Edinburgh to Glasgow in November he ran the fourth stage where despite a leg injury, he was equal second fastest time.   He kept the club in second place and by the end of the afternoon he had a silver E-G medal among his trophies.   Spoken of as a contender for first place in the Midland Championship at Lenzie, he won in 30:11 from Andy Brown (30:17), Eddie Bannon (30:30) and Joe McGhee 30:44).   A cover picture in the January ‘Scots Athlete’ had a caption saying that he would be a strong contender for he Scottish Championship.   In February Emmet Farrell previewed the race: “Intriguing Senior Race.   If the Junior championship looks an open and exciting one, the Senior race looks even more so, especially with the various trends in recent form.   Earlier Eddie Bannon looked quite the best prospect, but now seems to have shaded a trifle.  The McLaren’s win in the Midland championship (excellently laid and stewarded by Springburn Harriers) appeared to give him a slight edge.   Now Andy Brown after a season of consistent excellence defeated both his rivals to win the inter-district race.   Brown seems to be reaching his peak at the correct time and may start a slight favourite.   What an amazing advance the little Motherwell runner has made and after so many second places his win will enhance his confidence.”   The crystal ball was almost right – the National was won by Eddie Bannon (46:55) from Andy Brown (47:06), Tom Stevenson (47:30), John Stevenson (47:42 (both Greenock Wellpark) and John McLaren (5th in 48:08).   He led the Victoria Park squad into first place ahead of Greenock Wellpark.   The team packed so well that Johnny Stirling in 26th was a non-scorer!   The run was good enough to see him into the team for the international at Balmoral, Belfast, where he was twelfth, first Scot and less than a minute behind Alain Mimoun, the legendary French distance running athlete.   The names head of him included Mimoun,. Sando, K Norris, F Norris, H Ameur and F Herma and behind him were such as Van de Wattyne and Peter Driver.

Missing almost the entire summer in an attempt to shake off his leg injury, McLaren did manage to run 14:31.2 at Scotstoun in April (maybe the race referred to in Christie’s article above).   But he did not run in the McAndrew but was in the first team on 3rd November for the Midland relay where he ran on the last stage for the first team which finished second to Shettleston.   Fastest club runner by 27 seconds he had the impossible task of setting off behind an in-form Graham Everett who had quickest time (13:43) of the day and McLaren’s 13:56 was fourth fastest.   First race back after a long lay-off, it was a very good run indeed.    Later in the month he was again on the fourth stage of the Edinburgh to Glasgow where he held first place and set a new record for the stage.   Winning the Midland District championship for the third year in succession, he went into the National in good form.   However despite beating Russell and Bannon and more of his rivals of previous years he was third behind Harry Fenion, who was to go on to win the marathon later that year, and Bellahouston team-mate Joe Connolly.   His third place saw him lead Victoria Park into first place – again Johnny Stirling was the unfortunate seventh man in 37th – one place behind sixth counter Andy Forbes!     The international was held that year at Waregem Racecourse in Belgium and Scotland was eighth out of ten teams.   The counting runners were Moy 28th, McLaren 35th, Bannon 37th, Russell 38th, Fenion 51st and McDougal 53rd.

Winter 1957-58 and in the McAndrew relay he ran in the first team which won the race – despite being slowest in the team he was equal fifth fastest time (equal with Graham Everett) as the other three had the three quickest times of the afternoon.   On to the Midland relays and John McLaren on the last stage ran the fastest lap of the day – 8 seconds faster than George Govan of Shettleston.   The race was also notable for the fact that Alex Breckenridge running for the VPAAC second team handed over at the end of the first stage ahead of Bobby Calderwood of the first team.   On 18th November as part of the winning Victoria Park team which led from start to finish, McLaren took a huge 50 seconds from his own course record of the previous year.   The Glasgow Herald report on the Midland District Championship in January 1958 read: “MIDLAND TITLE FOR McLAREN: Well Judged Race.    J McLaren (Victoria Park AAC) won the Midland District Cross-Country Championship at Renton on Saturday over a 6 mile course.   Although he was nearly 20 yards behind Graham Everett (Shettleston) at half-way, he displayed tenacity and fine judgment over the latter half of the journey in bad conditions.   He made ground, passed Everett and won his fourth consecutive victory with 40 yards to spare at the end.”   Things were looking very good indeed for the National.   Alas, the best that McLaren could manage in the National was fifth place – mind you in front of him were Andy Brown (48:19), Graham Everett (48:34), Jim Russell (VP) 48:43, Alastair Wood (48:52) with McLaren on 49:18 pursued by Joe Connolly, Adrian Jackson, Harry Fenion, Des Dickson and Pat Moy!     It was good enough however to get him into the National team for the race at Cardiff but that was not a good day for him either.   McLaren finished 68th and out of the counting six.

The following year  McLaren ran on the third stage for the club in the District relays with seventh fastest time of the afternoon.   Later in November, pulling the club from third to first on the fourth stage of the Edinburgh to Glasgow with the fastest stage time of the day, he gave the club a position they could not hold as they slipped to third by the end of the event.   In the Midland District race at Renton, McLaren led his team home when he finished third, the club was also third in the team race.   That left the National of 1959.   Unlike the previous year this time McLaren was among the medals again and finished second to Alastair Wood with Bert Irving of Bellahouston third.   Victoria Park was second to Shettleston in the team race.   In the International in Lisbon, he was down in fifty eighth position.

Season 1959-60  began as usual with the McAndrew relay where McLaren, running the third fastest time of the day behind Andy Brown and Alastair Wood, pulled Victoria Park into second place at the finish.   There was a repeat of second place in the Midlands relay at the start of November when John McLaren on the last leg held second place with the seventh fastest time of the day.  Then came the Edinburgh to Glasgow when he again ran fastest time of the day on the fourth leg gaining two places to third which was where the team stayed.   On 23rd January 1960, McLaren was sixth in the Midland District Championships at Renton leading the team to first place ahead of Bellahouston.   The big one, of course, was the National at Hamilton.  Here he finished ninth and out of the International team after five consecutive appearances in the event.

Winter 1960 – 61 was almost a complete washout for him after a good start.   On 1st October, McLaren was a member of the team which finished second in their own McAndrew relay race only two seconds down on Shettleston Harriers.   He missed the District relays and Victoria Park, missing both McLaren and Bill Kerr could only finish fifth.   They also missed the Edinburgh to Glasgow and in their absence, the club was down in twelfth position – its lowest for many a year.   Nor was there any sign of John McLaren in the District Championships in January or the National Championships.

McLaren was back in his place in the club team that finished second in the McAndrew Relay in October 1961 and in the team that was second in the Midland Relay a month later with fastest club time and fifth fastest overall.   Later the same month he was back in place on the fourth stage of the Edinburgh to Glasgow where again he had fastest time of the afternoon – the only runner inside thirty minutes he was a full fifteen seconds clear of the next quickest.   Into January and the District Championships and he finished fifth leading the team to fifth place.   In March 1962 he finished seventh and qualified for the team for the international: it was to be his sixth international honour over the country and his last.   He finished eightieth this time and out of the counting six.

His best running had been done by this time although he continued to compete with some fine runs still to come but his career at the very to was basically over.   He kept running for the team though – much  appreciated at the time for a team not quite as good as the great squads of the 50’s.  In the National he was twenty first in 1963, twentieth in 1964, twenty third in 1965, thirty fifth in 1966, forty sixth in 1967 and fifty sixth in 1968.   He ran second fastest on the fourth stage of the Edinburgh to Glasgow in 1962, third fastest in 1963, sixth fastest in 1964, fourth fastest in 1966, sixth again in 1967 and equal sixth on the third stage in 1968.

Two mile team race start: note the calibre of the field: Bert McKay, Alec and Andy Brown, Hugh Barrow, John McLaren, Henry Summerhill, Tom O’Reilly. Allan Faulds, Calum Laing – none noted for taking prisoners on the first bend!

John did not seem to enjoy running on the track, possibly using it as a means to an end, although he did run in many two mile team races which were fairly common on the circuit at the time.   The picture above is evidence of that.   It also indicates that, bad arm or not, he could hold his own in a crowded starting melee!   The best times and rankings I can find for him at various distances are 9:12.5 for two miles in 1959 which ranked him ninth, 14:26.4 for three miles in 1959 which ranked him eleventh and 30:40.0 for six miles in 1962 which ranked him seventh.    Given his times on the short relays over the country and on the road he was clearly much faster than these times indicate.

I have not mentioned his disability very much at all, preferring to stick to his qualities as a runner which were top class by any standard.   However, it must have had some effect.   Poliomyelitis was a scourge in the 40’s and 50’s until the vaccine was found.   One of my own near neighbours had the disease and as a result spent most of the rest of her life with an iron brace attached to her leg.  Referred to as “Scotland’s Murray Halberg”, John had to run holding the left hand with his right to maintain proper balance although he did let go when leaping the fences or ditches that were common at the time.   He was given special dispensation in the Edinburgh to Glasgow relay not to have to carry the baton.    A loyal club man he had won two Junior titles, won both Scottish and British cross-country titles in the same year and four consecutive Midlands championships.   Although he had never won the senior title over the country, he had been second third with several other top seven finishes.   Fastest time repeatedly on stage four where he set two records.   A quite outstanding career.    A hero at home,  he was chieftain at Shotts Highland Games and a local SNP councillor for many years.

Andy McKean

Good Andy

Scotland really is two countries when it comes to athletics – east is east and west is west and seldom the two will meet.    The number of athletes from the east who suddenly burst upon the consciousness of the runners and hangers-on in the west is high, and I assume the same is true in the other direction.   However that may be, there is no doubt that Andy McKean was unknown to most of us in the west when he burst upon the scene with a series of superb performances in the 70’s.   And his running in the National Championships at Coatbridge was outstanding.    His career is outlined here by his friend Colin Youngson.  

Andrew McKean was a formidable international cross-country runner who also starred in the Edinburgh to Glasgow Relay.   He won the Senior National Cross-Country title four times and led Edinburgh AC to many team championships, with ferocious displays of determined front-running. No one could push himself harder than tall, red-headed Andy.

Although he was born in London in 1948, Andy first appears in the record books as a first-year student at Edinburgh University in season 1967-1968.    I was starting my second year at Aberdeen University at the time, and there is no doubt that Andy was occasionally beatable for a few years, but very seldom in serious cross-country contests. Andy made an immediate impression by running the third stage in the 1967 E to G, for the winning EU team. He went on to finish a good seventh in the National Junior CC in 1968, with EU picking up the third team award. Although he represented Scottish Universities frequently during the next few years, it was apparent that Andy ‘trained through’ several minor races, such as team trials, Glasgow University Road Races, and shorter track events.

In 1969, EU was third in the E to G, with Andy promoted to the very difficult Stage Two where he ran a very good seventh fastest of the day.

In 1970, Andy made significant progress.   Having learned to cope with hard consistent training, he was narrowly beaten by Northern Irishman Dave Logue in the Scottish Universities CC Championship, nevertheless defeating another current international runner John Myatt; and followed that with a meritorious 11th in his first attempt at the Senior National CC. Once again, Andy finished just behind Dave Logue, who was to be a major rival on the long sixth leg of the E to G!   Dave reckons that “Andy was not a big mileage man. However he seemed to be able to absorb hard training, without many injuries; and that helped in his success. Yet there was more to it than that – he was rightly nicknamed ‘Andy Machine’ – he just went to the front and kept going!”    That summer, representing Hillingdon AC as well as EU, Andy improved his 5000m PB to 14.23.4; and in the Glasgow University Road Race, he was third behind Fergus Murray and the precocious Jim Brown.  Then he ran well in a poor EU team in the E to G, being third fastest on Stage Six.

 Andy writes: “In the early years at EU, I often trained with Dave Logue (and Alex Wight) and it was certainly very hard! At that stage I was doing ‘only’ around 60 miles per week – so I guess what Dave said was true for that period anyway. Dave was right also that I suffered very few injuries during my career, although my absences from track racing in 1968 and 1969 were actually caused partly by injuries sustained towards the end of the country seasons in those years. However in the summer of 1970 I did a bit more track running (partly inspired by the Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh). I substantially upped the mileage to over 100 mpw for several months, leading to the significant breakthrough in cross-country and road races in the subsequent season. In the later years at EU, Jim Dingwall was my most frequent training partner, so it remained pretty hard, as you can imagine, but after graduating in 1973, I did most of my training alone (most of it at night after work, and the mileage settled down to around 80 mpw for the remainder of my career. In fact I remember calculating that from 1970-77 I had averaged well over 4000 miles per year, only tailing off a little in 1978 before retiring. So I suspect that it was not so much the quality as the consistency of my training which really paid dividends in the end.”

 Andy McKean improved to sixth in the 1971 Senior National CC and was selected to represent Scotland in the ICCU Championships in San Sebastian, where he finished 69th, not far behind Alistair Blamire and Lachie Stewart. In March, Andy broke the record (49.06) in the very hilly EU ten mile road race. Having strolled to the East District 5000m title, he improved his 5000m best to 14.19.6 for third in the British Universities 5000m at Birmingham, behind Frank Briscoe and Andy Holden (but in front of future marathon star Ian Thompson). Then he was fastest on Stage Six of the E to G, recording 31.36, 21 seconds faster than ex-National CC Champion Dick Wedlock.

The National CC in 1972 featured a dour battle for third place between Andy McKean and Alistair Blamire, the latter ‘sitting’ on Andy before sprinting away near the end. In the very last ICCU Championships at Cambridge, Andy finished fifth Scot in 44th position. His track season was successful. For a start, he easily won the SU Championship 5000m and the SAAA 10 miles track event (49.25.8). Then he improved his bests for 5000m (14.12.8) and 10,000m (29.40.2 for third in the SAAA). Then Andy McKean was even faster (31.13) on the E to G long leg, more than a minute better than Jim Wight.

From 1973 until his retirement in 1978, Andy seldom raced on the track, although he did regain the East District 5000m title in 1977 and also improved his best time to 14.12.5 in that season. Although Andy did produce some fine performances in the prestigious Tom Scott 10 miles race, he tended to devote the summer to ‘active rest’ before getting fit again for the E to G and cross-country championships.

In 1973, Andy finished his university running career in excellent style. Colin Shields takes up the story: “Over a snow-covered course at Drumpellier Park in Coatbridge, 1200 runners competed in the National Championships. Pre-race favourite Andy McKean, with a big build up of Eastern District title, Scottish and British Universities wins and impressive runs in International races throughout the Continent, was in fine form over the open, rolling course broken only by a short, steep hill at the end of each lap. McKean took the lead on the third of the five laps, with only the surprising Adrian Weatherhead challenging him. He eventually won the first of his four National titles by 100 yards from Weatherhead.” Later, in the inaugural World Cross Country Championships, under the control of the IAAF, at Waregem Racecourse outside Ghent, Belgium, Andy improved to 30th and second Scot behind Norman Morrison. In November, Andy McKean finally broke Fergus Murray’s 1965 record (31.07) for the long sixth stage of the E to G, recording 31 minutes precisely, sixteen seconds faster than Dave Logue (Glasgow University) and 21 seconds faster than the great Ian Stewart (Aberdeen AAC). However Edinburgh Athletic Club, Andy’s new team, was never destined to finish better than second place, which, with Andy’s invaluable assistance, they managed five years in a row (1973-77).

Good Andy 75

Andy winning at Coatbridge in 1975

In 1974, however, EAC won the National CC team title, with East District champion Andy McKean second individual after a fierce battle with front-running Jim Brown, who was in the form of his life. Subsequently in the English National CC, Andy gained revenge on Jim over nine muddy miles. Andy was third, only eight seconds behind future Olympians David Black and Bernie Ford, and in front of Tony Simmons, with Jim Brown ninth. However in the IAAF World Championships at Monza, Jim Brown ran brilliantly to finish a close fourth, while Ronnie MacDonald was second Scot in 31st, with Andy McKean 46th and Colin Falconer 47th. Scotland finished seventh country from fifteen. In the E to G, Andy McKean was once again fastest on Stage Six, 20 seconds faster than Jim Brown.

 Andy writes about the 1974 English National CC. “It was nine miles of deep snow and mud at the aptly-named Graves Park in Sheffield, and it suited my running style perfectly (slight build, long stride) and I consider it to have been one of my best ever races. I ran in the English National CC also in 1975 (at Luton) and 1976 (at Leicester), finishing 7th and 5th respectively, and I remember Alistair Blamire (who had also run well in the English on previous occasions) remarking that it felt good to know that, if we had been running for English clubs, we would have been picked for the English Team, which still dominated the international cross-country scene at the time.”

 1975 saw Andy McKean regain his National Senior CC title, which he went on to win three times in a row. Previously, he had show good form when, wearing a Great Britain vest for the first time, he was only narrowly outsprinted by European Steeplechase Champion Bronislaw Malinowski (Poland) in a major international road race in Barcelona.   (Malinowski was rumoured to be part-Scottish!)   Andy remembers this as a real highlight in his career. At the Scottish National at Coatbridge, Andy finished 46 seconds in front of EAC clubmate Adrian Weatherhead. The team’s total was a record-low 37 points, which easily won the team title from ESH (101 points). EAC’s other scorers were Jim Alder (5th), Alex Wight (8th), Doug Gunstone (10th) and Jim Wight (11th). Jim Dingwall was an unlucky non-counter in 13th, which was one of the reasons that caused him to switch to Falkirk Victoria. The World CC Championships were in Rabat, Morocco. Gloriously, Ian Stewart won the race. Andy was fourth Scot in 53rd place, with Scotland 6th team from 23. In the E to G, Andy McKean was fastest on Stage Two (for a change) in an outstanding 27.37, 18 seconds faster than Jim Brown.

In 1976, Andy McKean and EAC repeated their victories in the National CC. Colin Shields wrote: “McKean and Weatherhead went into the lead early in the race and stayed together until the final lap, where McKean established a winning lead 80 yard lead from his clubmate, with Allister Hutton third.” At Chepstow Racecourse, Wales, in the IAAF World Championships, Jim Brown (24th) was first Scot, with Allister Hutton 34th and Andy McKean 41st. In the E to G, Andy was second fastest on Stage Two, just six seconds slower than the flying Jim Dingwall, after a tremendous head-to-head battle. Third fastest was 48 seconds further behind.

In 1977, Andy McKean won a record twelfth Eastern District League Race and followed this with his third East District CC title; and then his fourth and final National Senior CC. Colin Shields writes: “Andy McKean became the sixth athlete to win the National title three times in a row when he defeated over 400 entrants at Glenrothes Golf Course. Running in six inches of snow, McKean won by 21 seconds from Allister Hutton with a superb display of front running.” However EAC were narrowly squeezed into third team place by Shettleston and ESH. In the IAAF World Championships in Dusseldorf, Allister Hutton was first Scot in 14th, ahead of Jim Brown 36th, Laurie Reilly 41st and Andy McKean 49th. Later that year, Andy was fourth in a high class race at El Goibar, Spain, proving once more that he was always to be reckoned with in both National and International races. In November, Andy ran his final Edinburgh to Glasgow Relay, with second fastest on Stage Two, 9 seconds quicker than Jim Brown but 15 seconds slower than rising star Nat Muir.

The 1978 cross-country season was to be Andy McKean’s swansong. He won a fourth East District CC title, overcoming treacherous mud over a hard ice base to lead EAC to a team victory over Falkirk Victoria. The National Championships, held at Bellahouston Park, Glasgow, used the five-lap trail for the World Championships a month later. On a dry day, Allister Hutton finished well in front of Rees Ward and Andy McKean. In the World Championships, however, “the weather deteriorated badly, and appalling conditions of rain, hail and sleet were blown by strong winds horizontally into the faces of runners and spectators.” Young Nat Muir ran brilliantly to finish seventh, “and was backed by Andy McKean (19th) and Allister Hutton (24th) for the senior Scottish team to finish ninth from 20 countries.” I was spectating that day, and admired greatly the tremendous effort that Andy exerted to produce an excellent run the highest placing he ever achieved in this World Championship on a horrible day.

 Thereafter, Andy McKean retired from racing to concentrate on his successful career as an Edinburgh architect. His contemporaries breathed sighs of relief. Rivals in ESH tended to assume that, if Andy turned up at a race, the only question was who would be second. In the E to G, the problem was to have enough good runners to make up for Andy’s predictably superior performance. Overall, he had a wonderful career and must be remembered as an outstanding British and Scottish International runner who, on country and road, consistently achieved his full potential.

In the 1990s he took part in several 10k races and in 2007, after 40 years in Edinburgh, moved to Gatehouse of Fleet, Galloway, to start a self-employed business as an artist. Check his impressive website at Andrew McKean Arts. He keeps fit by regular exercises and walks, with a weekly run and a swim.

Liz McColgan

Liz McFinish

Liz McColgan (nee Lynch) is possibly Scotland’s best ever distance runner using any criteria that you care to choose – times run, titles won, whatever.   She was born on 24th May, 1964 in Dundee and took up running at the age of 11 when she was picked for the school cross country team.   She quickly joined Dundee Hawkhill Harriers where she was coached by Harry Bennett and was recognised as one of the best in her age group.    But athletics is full of ‘might have beens’, talented young athletes who ‘could have’ done great things.   Trouble is that many were badly advised, many were pushed too hard by relatives and many of them were just unrealistic about their talents and what it would take to develop them.   Well, Liz was well looked after by her family and by Harry but one of the personality traits that was to stand her in good stead throughout her own career was that she was always realistic about what could be done and what route had to be taken to get there.   Before we go on to the story of her running career, let’s have a look at her personal best times.

Event Time Year Event Time Year
1500 m 4:01.38 1987 5 Miles 25:25 1998
Mile 4:26.11 1987 10K 30:39 1989
2000 m 5:40.24 1987 12K 38:20 1987
3000 m 8:34.80i 1986 15K 47:43 1988
2 Miles 9:50.85 1986 10 Miles 52:00 1997
5000 m 14:59.96 1995 20K split 65:22 1992
10000 m 30:57.7 1991 Half Marathon 67:11 1992
5K 14:57 1991 20 Miles split 1:51:27 1992
8K 24:48 1992 Marathon 2:26:52 1997

I quote Doug Gillon on the blog at www.scotstats.net where he writes of her greatest race.   Talking of the difficulty she had picking the race he said: “There was plenty to consider: back-to-back Commonwealth Games 10000 metres gold medals; three world records at 10000 metres on the road; a world half marathon title in world record time; world records on the road and indoors.   Numerous Scottish British and Commonwealth records.   There was the time in Budapest when she smashed Zola Budd’s world indoor 3000 metres records only to be beaten on the line by Elly van Hulst who had been towed in the Scot’s wake all the way.   There was the time the roars of the crowd drowned the stealthy approach of Joyce Chepchumba who stole past to deny her a successful London Marathon defence by a single second in what was the tightest finish ever.   That was in 1997, a year after McColgan had ensured financial security for life over the same Kenyan.   There was the …..”   But you get the picture, I don’t need to go on.   I would urge you to go to the scotstats website and read the entire article.

Many a successful athlete would have packed the spikes after such a career and gone on their way leaving a wonderful tradition for others to follow.   But Liz wasn’t finished with athletics.   She went back to Dundee and to the Hawks and started coaching.   Not doing what many TV pundits do and ‘polish’ someone else’s athletes – :Linford Christie famously said “I’m not the kind of coach who goes down to the track side in winter and works on the sessions.”    Liz is.   This is so well known that the Power of Ten website (www.thepowerof10.info) lists the athletes that she was coaching at the time it was set up!   Why is she doing it – apart from the fact that, like all serious coaches, she enjoys it?   There might be a clue in an article in the Los Angeles Times of April 12th 1987.   In an article there it says: “Liz believes that coming from the sporting backwater of the north east of Scotland has been her major obstacle.   “In Dundee we probably have one major track meet a year, whereas in London, for example, there are several to choose from,” she said.   “I have spent hours on the phone trying to get races.   People think of me as a marathon runner but I can go down to 800’s and 1500’s..”   Huddled in gloves, scarf and waterproof jogging suit in rain-lashed Dundee, Lynch said that in Alabama we run in shorts every day.   We never had to put track suits on.”   So when it comes to knowing the difficulties that talented local youth face, she knows whereof she speaks.    Liz was more than a runner and is still doing sterling work for the sport in Scotland.

Liz McMedal

Simply type her name into a search engine and the internet will produce a wealth of information about Scotland’s most successful female athlete.   The UK Athletics Hall of Fame Profile is particularly good and is printed here.  Two interviews will also be referred to: one for runbritain.com and one for Dundee University’s on-line magazine ‘The Bridge’.     First the UKA Profile.

Full Name:   Liz Lynch McColgan

Date of Birth:   24th March, 1964.

Born:   Dundee

Club:   Dundee Hawkhill Harriers

Coached by:   Harry Bennett/John Anderson.

TRIPLE TRIUMPH

The brilliant career of Liz McColgan can be broken up into three parts: Her glory at the Commonwealth Games in her own country;    her superb World Championships in Tokyo;   and her ability then to adapt that track technique to the roads.   All three of them were memorable because of the drama McColgan brought to events and her refusal to allow anyone to pass her on the way to gold.

As Liz Lynch she won the Commonwealth 10000 metres title in Edinburgh amid amazing patriotic scenes; in 1991 her amazing front-running performance to win the world 10000 metres title was mesmerising; and then she transferred that ability to making a record-breaking marathon debut.   When she was at her peak she was unstoppable.

LYNCH LEADS THE WAY

When the Commonwealth Games returned to Edinburgh, 16 years after the Scottish capital had last staged them, one of the new events was the women’s 10000 metres.   It was a stage ready-made for a Dundee Hawkhill athlete who had made her first steps to world class while at the University of Alabama for whom she won the NCAA indoor Mile that same year.   While the weather had been typically Scottish for the championships, rain and gloomy conditions never being too far away, Lynch brought rick emotion to the occasion with a tremendous and emphatic victory.   What made her stand out, and it remained such a glorious trait throughout her career, was this bloody-mindedness to dominate races just how she wanted.   If the rest of the field wanted to follow, then they knew they would be in for a tough afternoon, as the Commonwealth’s best women long distance runners discovered.   Cheered on by a packed crowd at Meadowbank Stadium with the blue and white flag of Scotland turning the event into a spectacularly colourful occasion.   Lynch ran to victory in 31:41:42, a British record and a triumph by nearly 12 seconds, with Anne Audain of New Zealand second in 31:53:31.    It was was the first of four times that McColgan would break the British record for this distance, and the lap of honour was something to behold, as Scotland celebrated their only gold medal winner of the Games.   She was second in the World Cross Country Championships in 1987 and smashed her best at all events from 800 to 10000 metres, in which she was fifth at the World Championships in Rome in 31:19.82.   Further British records at 10 K came with 31:06.99 in 1988, and 30:57.07 in 1991.

In 1987 she married Irish International Peter McColgan and twelve months later, after a hugely successful campaign on the roads, she took the Olympic silver medal at 10000 metres in Seoul in 31:08:44 as Olga Bondarenko of Russia won in 31:05.21.   She showed her strength once again in 1989 setting a world 10K road best of 30:38 at Orlando, just a week after winning world indoor silver at 3000 metres in Budapest having led nearly all the way, then returning to finish sixth at 1500 metres just 13 minutes later.   In 1990 in Victoria, she retained her Commonwealth 10000 metres crown in 32:23.56.   She was also third in the 3000 metres but her best was yet to come.

BABY WHAT A RUN

On November 25th, 1990, McColgan gave birth to her first child, Eilish, but by March of 1991 she was fit enough not only to compete at the World Cross Country Championships in Antwerp, but finish third, showing no signs that motherhood affecting her physical build or mental aggression.   It is believed that having children can actually help the make-up of an athlete, the body’s reaction providing even more substance, and on a steamy night in Tokyo at the World Championships in August,  McColgan proved that theory totally correct.   “It was the greatest performance by a British distance runner,” said Brendan Foster, the Olympic 10000 metre bronze medallist from 1976, and now a BBC television commentator.   His words were providing a backdrop to the pictures of McColgan systematically taking apart the field in the final of the 10000 metres, with an astonishing front running display which took her to the gold medal.

McColgan destroyed her rivals from the start, including defending champion the brilliant Ingrid Kristiansen of Norway, as she ran the first kilometre in 3:02.95.   The pace barely relented and McColgan, ignoring the tremendous humidity, won in 31:14.31 from China’s Zhong Huandi in 31:35.08 with her team mate Wang Xiuting third in 31:35.99.   While that pair had a race of their own, McColgan was in a class of her own and her performance won her the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award.    It was an honour at the end of a year when after Tokyo she won the New York in the fastest ever debut time of 2:27:32.   A bold new step and one which would signal the final part of her career.

THE ROADS AHEAD.

The marathon was her long-term aim, but first she was determined to win the Olympic title over 10000 metres but it was not to be.   In Barcelona in 1992 she was fifth, unable to break the field this time in a year when she broke the world indoor 5000 metres with a time of 15:03.17.   But she returned to Tokyo to win their marathon in 2:27:38 and finished third in the Flora London Marathon in 1993.  She was injured for that summer and by 1995 she had been told that she might never run again as the toil on her body looked like taking its toll, having suffered with pains in her back, her knee and her foot, but her doctors probably didn’t realise who they were dealing with:   this was Liz McColgan.   In soaring heat in 1996 she won the Flora London Marathon and  BUPA Great North Run, but again she was left disappointed at the Olympics.  McColgan had chosen the marathon but just days before, while preparing at her base in Florida, she suffered an insect bite.   The poison entered her system and she was never herself, finishing sixteenth in the Games in Atlanta.

In 1997 she was so close to successfully defending her London Marathon title, losing by one second to Kenya’s Joyce Chepchumba who took victory with virtually the final step of a memorable race.   But McColgan’s time of 2:26:52 was a personal best and twelve months later she was second in London again.   After ‘retiring’ in 2001, due to a series of stress fractures she made a comeback and in 2004 she won the Scottish Cross Country and indoor titles  before finally bowing out in April that year.   Liz has been involved in coaching since she stopped competing herself and has worked with many very good athletes.

 That is a pretty comprehensive summary of Liz’s wonderful career.   One significant omission was her 1992 victory (68:53) in the inaugural World Half Marathon Championship, which was held as part of the Great North Run in Newcastle.   After her first retirement in 2001, Doug Gillon wrote in ‘the Herald’, “She was brought up in a council house in the Whitfield area of Dundee, but now lives in almost baronial splendour, with her parents occupying a second house within the grounds.    Blunt-spoken, wilful, but unfailingly honest about her own frailties, she was never far from controversy.”

Liz McLuddon

Winning the Luddon inaugural Street Mile – note the Alabama vest and race organiser Hugh Barrow on the right

The interviews state that she started running at 12 years old, in her first year at secondary school.   Her PE teacher spotted her talent and she joined her local club.   She loved running longer distances from the start and never seemed to tire as much as others in her group.   She did not consider herself the most talented; but began to train much harder than the rest.   By the age of 19 she had won her first UK title.   Philosophically and wisely, she says, “Running is full of disappointments; they far outweigh the better performances.”   To the age of 17 she was coached by Harry Bennett.   After his death she self-coached to win the 1986 Commonwealth title when she was 22.   She met John Anderson after the Games and he coached her for 18 months.    She then coached herself to the World 10,000 metres title, and London Tokyo and New York marathon wins.   Then she met Grete Waitz who coached her from 1992 – 1996.

After her first Commonwealth success, Liz says, “I felt a good deal of relief when I won my first championship medal; it was Scotland’s only gold medal on the track for the entire Games.   The pressure was unbelievable before the race especially when, one by one, athletes were coming into the camp without medals they thought they were going to get.   When I got to the Stadium it was the most nerve-wracking moment of my life but I knew I was going to do it which was really weird.”   She also comments, “Winning in front of a home crowd is amazing.   Winning the 1986 Commonwealth gold was the best experience of my life.   The roar in the Stadium was elctrifying.   The hairs on the back of my neck were standing up.   It was my proudest moment and to be honest nothing really ever topped it.”

As for training, she says that when she was racing on the track, she ran twice a day, and for marathons three times.   She got up at 5:30 am to run ten miles before breakfast, and also fitted in track sessions and circuits.   Bedtime was 9:30 pm but “Although my whole day was sport, I really enjoyed it and, because I was so focused, I didn’t miss going out or socialising.”   A great disappointment was the silver in the 1988 Olympics.   “I was devastated to get only silver.  I went out there aiming for gold but I was beaten in a sprint.   I was so annoyed I threw the medal in a cupboard.   I only dug it out in 1998 after seeing Paula Radcliffe, who had worked so hard, failing to win a medal in the Olympic marathon which made me realise that maybe silver wasn’t so bad.   That was the first time Eilish had ever seen it.”

Liz McMurray

Liz Hugs Yvonne After Kenya v GB 3000m in June 1992

Perhaps her biggest setback was the Atlanta Olympics.   “I had prepared the best I ever had, moved to the athletes village two nights before my marathon and got bitten on the Achilles tendon by an insect.   Because of the heat, the poison went straight into the bloodstream.   I was given two different penicillin medicines, and although I could still run the race it was a total disaster.   I don’t know how I ever finished that race, but it was one of the worst moments of my career.”

Liz admits that her single-mindedness allowed her neither time nor space to appreciate fully her greatest achievement in Tokyo 1991.   “Looking back, it would have been a good thing to live in the moment a bit more, but at the time I was on a bit of a bandwagon.   Runners at their peak have a very short time and I was very aware of that.   I wanted to do as much as I could , so as soon as the race was over, I moved on.   I never really thought about being world champion.   I just focused on my next race and running faster.”

Her motivation throughout her career was not, she insists, the pursuit of medals or titles but simply a burning desire to run and run fast.   “I loved running, I still do.   It didn’t cost me money and no one said I couldn’t do it.   I think I had the right personality too.You need to have single minded determination.   I had no dreams of becoming a world champion or an Olympic medallist.”   However, having worked in a chip shop in her early years, and also a jute factory, she had to earn a living through the sport.   “I was never lottery funded.   I had to win races to get my income.   I employed one therapist who worked solely with me and travelled to my races.   I had my husband who was my training partner and manager.”   Her tips to young runners include, “train hard and be true to yourself.   Don’t be happy just to make a team, but try to be the best you can be.   Don’t be afraid to dream big.   I was told all through my career that I would never do anything, but I always believed in myself and never let anyone’s thoughts affect me.   In athletics you have to be positive – accept the bad races and learn from them.”

McColgan would like to be remembered – and certainly will be – “as an athlete who always ran her hardest, no matter what; who was never afraid to give it a go.”

Liz McBook

Liz’s book – well worth reading as it gives a bit of insight into her as a person and about her career. 

Scotland was fortunate to have two real giants of women’s endurance running in action at the same time.   Liz was only six months older than Yvonne Murray and their distances were almost identical with Yvonne tending towards the 1500, 3000, 5000 metres end of the scale with Liz eventually specialising in 10000 and the marathon.   There were some notable tendencies – Liz always ran what Brendan Foster would call ‘a true run race’; in other words she would always go out and do her best running and regardless of what the opposition was doing.    Always focused she was a redoubtable competitor whereas Yvonne spoke about ‘tactics’, read up on her opponents and their weaknesses and used that knowledge to help win races.   Both are perfectly acceptable ways of running.   As an indication of how they liked to run and of Liz’s character I will look at two races.   In 1991 they met up in a specially organised race in Duthie Park in Aberdeen and although there was no one close to them, Liz ran a hard race all the way to the end – well as hard as she was allowed – Yvonne was right up on her shoulder, crowding her, jostling her all the way to the finishing straight where she won the sprint finish.   I was actually shouting at the TV because of the amount of physical contact involved.   The following year they were representing Britain against Kenya and they were in the same event – the 3000 metres.   There was a lot of talk about it being a ‘grudge match’   Well it didn’t turn out quite like that – with two Kenyans to beat, Liz quickly went to the front, Yvonne settled in on her shoulder keeping the opposition back, there was no jostling, it was not one against the other but looked more like a team race – and usually it was the Kenyans who ran as a team!   Then with 300 to go, Yvonne produced ‘one of her famous kicks to win in 8:36.63.’    Emphasising that they still felt that they were firm friends – whatever certain elements of the Press  would have you believe – the two doyens of Scottish athletics then embraced and embarked on a lap of honour together.   the mood was apparently so pleasant that McColgan even found time to joke about her defeat (although 8:41.07 over 3000m for a woman whose sights are set on the 1000m is hardly something to be ashamed of)   ‘Liz said to me during our lap of honour that she made a good pacemaker for me,’ a jovial Murray revealed to the assembled Press.’   The quotes are from a report on ‘Scotland’s Runner’ of August 1992.    The accompanying picture is below as proof.   Genuine rivals over a long period, never afraid to race each other and no grudges held!

*****

At a marathon seminar at the Inchyra Grange in Grangemouth on Wednesday 25th August, 2010, Don Macgregor said, in reply to a question that in his opinion the greatest Scottish marathon runner was either Liz McColgan or Donald MacNab Robertson (six times UK Marathon Champion, first Scottish marathon champion, double Olympian, etc.   It is a compliment to either to be compared to the other – I think however that my money is on Liz!

There are several videos of her in action at the youtube website – just type in ‘liz mccolgan’ and take your pick of what’s there.

Meanwhile her daughter Eilish, coached by her Mum is a regular member of the GB team with appearances in several major Games to her credit – eg 2008 Commonwealth Youth Games 1500m and 3000m; 2011 European U23 Championships3000m steeplechase   and   Spar European Team Championships 3000m steeplechase;   2012 Olympic Games 3000m steeplechase, and   2013 IAAF World Championships 3000m steeplechase.

Liz McIngrid

 

Liz McColgan has been inducted into the Scottish Athletics Hall of Fame.

Ian McCafferty

EE IMc 1

Ian McCafferty in the International Cross Country in Clydebank, 1969

The 1970’s were a Golden Age for Scottish Endurance running and the Commonwealth Games of 1970 in Edinburgh was surely the best single showcase for the athletes of the period.    Ian McCafferty was one of the very best of the runners, known across the world for his immense talent, and was involved in one of the best 5000 metres races of all time in the Games.    His talent on the track as matched by his ability on the road and over the country where he finished third in the International Cross Country Championships in 1969 and was a winner of the Junior International Cross Country in 1964 in his only appearance in that age group in the  event.    Although he stopped racing almost 40 years ago he is still ranked highly in the all-time lists – see the table below.

Event Time Date Ranking
1 Mile 3:56.8 11 June 1969 6th
2 Miles 8:31.8 3 June 1968 4th
3000 metres 7:56.2i 25 February 1967 12th
5000 metres 13:19.66 14 July 1972 3rd

Ian John McCafferty was born on 24th November, 1944, only eighteen months after his great domestic rival, Lachie Stewart..    There were many very good athletes across the board at that time but on the track and over the country the top three were Lachie Stewart Ian Stewart and I McCafferty.    They won races for Scotland and for Britain across Europe and even further afield.   There were many invitation only races at that time and promoters would ask for one or other of the ‘Big Three’ and they usually got one or other of the ‘Big Three’ if they invited some other less well known Scots.    It was through their efforts that many another Scot had his first taste of big time running on the Continent.

Ian McCafferty first makes his appearance in the records in 1963 when as a member of Motherwell YMCA he won the Midland District Youths Championship.    In 1963-64 he became even better known to athletics aficionados when he won his first Midland District Championship proper ahead of team-mate Andy Brown and Lachie Stewart.    Motherwell won the Championships with one of the lowest ever winning totals of 30 points – six runners in the first nine.   Colin Shields in his book “Whatever the Weather” says of the young McCafferty: “Even at this early stage McCafferty combined speed training and distance racing throughout the cross-country season.   The week after the National he took part in a 2 mile race at half time in a football match at Ibrox Stadium.   He had to swerve to avoid a policeman in the home straight and losing ground, finishing second to Lachie Stewart, both timed at 9:02.”   He finished second to Mel Edwards (Aberdeen) in one of the most hotly contested cross-country races that I or anyone else witnessing it had seen.    Going on to the International Championship at Leopardstown Racecourse, Dublin, he created something of a stir as well as serving notice that he had arrived by winning the race.   Colin Shields again: “In the International Championships at Leopardstown, McCafferty displayed his sharpness when winning the Junior title.   He went into the lead at the start and dictated the pace throughout the race to win by 25 seconds – the largest winning margin in the history of the race”   He led Scotland to second in the team race, one point behind England.

 That summer he showed that it was no fluke when he set a new UK Junior record for 2 Miles of 9:00.2.   In 1964-65, he won the Nigel Barge in January 1965 easily in a new course record, he won the Midland District Championship easily and won the National Junior from Roger Young of Edinburgh University.   In a trip to a cross-country invitational in Spain he was eleventh in the three man team (Jim Alder 4th and Andy Brown 8th) that finished second.    It was up an age group for the International but he was equal to it and led the Scottish team in when he was seventy first finisher.   Came the summer and he set a Scottish record for the 2 Miles of 8:42.2 and also won the SAAA Mile Championship with 4:12.0.    In 1965-66,  he ran in an International race in Madrid which he won before winning the Junior Cross-Country title for the second successive year and in the International Cross Country championship he was much higher up than before (14th) and again led the Scottish team home.   The race was described thus by Colin Shields: “It was the breath-taking confidence and ability that McCafferty displayed during the race that marked him out as a potential world-beater.   From the start McCafferty was in the leading group, and running strongly and confidently, the self-assured young Scot went into the lead at two and a half miles.   Still in the lead at 4 miles misfortune struck and he had to stop to take a stone out of his shoe.  The stop cost him over 20 places and he carried on in bare feet catching up six places in the remainder of the race to finish two places behind Stewart and two in front of Alder.

In summer 1966 he won the SAAA Mile for the second successive year with a time of 4:07.5.   Selected for the Empire and Commonwealth Games in Jamaica that year, he went with the pace set by Ron Clarke (Australia) and Kipchoge Keino (Kenya) before dropping back but nevertheless ran an excellent race to be fifth in 13:12.2 for the 3 Miles.   The result of all this fine racing was his first GB international vest – against Sweden in Stockholm where he won in 13:47.2 for the 5000m.    His record in these two country internationals was impressive from then until 1972.

He started 1967 with three wins in three weeks:    On New Yaer’s Day he won at Beith from Andy and Alex Brown and Lachie Stewart in a new record time, the next Saturday he won the Nigel Barge Road Race at Maryhill becoming the first man to break 22 minutes for the two and a half mile trail and then the following Saturday he won the Springburn Cup race at Bishopbriggs by half a minute from Eddie Knox.   He then won the Midland District championship at Bellahouston Park by 68 seconds from Lachie Stewart.   Colin Shields observed: “McCafferty, who regarded the winter season purely as a time to prepare for the summer track season when the meaningful and important races in international matches and major championships would be held, devised a varied yet interlocking system of races.   He competed on road and cross-country to develop strength and took part in shorter indoor track races to retain and sharpen his speed.   This arduous and testing schedule was copied by few athletes with any success and only Ian Stewart who carried out the same formula of race preparation a few years later was able to equal McCafferty’s success at indoor and outdoor competition.”

He won the Midland District Championship for the third time in four years.   He had a busy and successful weekend at the beginning of February when he won the AAA’s 2 Miles Championship at Cosford in 8:36.4, running the last half mile in 2:04 which was not only a UK, but also a European best for the distance.   24 hours later at Hannut in Belgium he was second, only 5 seconds behind Gaston Roelants (Belgium) in a team with Lachie Stewart (4th) and Jim Alder (15th).   He missed the National after being picked for the GB v France International in Lyons where he won the 3000m in a GB record of 7:56.6.   However the next race was the European Indoor Championships in Prague where he was disappointed to finish fifth in a time of 8:10.

On the 29th May, he added the outdoor 2 Miles record when he won an invitation event at the White City in 8:32.2.    The SAAA’s championship was won for the third time in 4:05.7.    In the AAA Championships at the White City he was third behind Ron Clarke and Lajos Mecsar (Hungary) in a Furth of Scotland record of 13:09.8 for the 3 Miles.    Only two days later he was in Santry Stadium in Dublin (where Billy Morton was in the habit of putting on very fast races with very good runners) and finished second to Ron Clarke in 13:06.4.   The following month it was back at the White City where he won the 5000m in 13:45.8.   1968 saw him lead the Scottish team home in the International fixture when he crossed the line in tenth place to end a successful cross-country season.   That summer, on 8th June, he won the 3 Miles at the British Isles Cup at Grangemouth in 13:25.8 ahead of Ian Stewart who ran 13:28.4.

He missed the Mid;and District Championships in 1968 as well when he was winning an International 8000 metres race in Minove, Holland.   He had arranged his wedding for the day of the National so he missed that one as well but when it came to the international in Tunis he did run well.   The Scottish team had prepared well for the race with monthly training sessions at Cleland Estate, Motherwell, and on the day they were fourth of the thirteen teams to finish.   The whole team started off steadily but then moved through in the second half: McCafferty who had won two races in Belgium against the best runners on the continent, “showed his great ability when he charged through the field to gain seven places in the second half and finish tenth.”   Again he was first Scot.

He had an excellent cross country season in 1968-69 culminating an a wonderful third place in the International Cross-Country Championship at the hilly Dalmuir Park Course in Clydebank.   As had become a habit he had done some indoor racing in the lead up to the major cross-country races and in January he had won the AAA Indoor 3000 metres in 8:08.4.  It clearly paid off.   Colin reported on the International Cross as follows: ” The international championships for the first time since 1960 were staged in Scotland and the Union, in conjunction with Clydebank Town Council, staged them in Clydebank.   A hilly picturesque course was laid out around Dalmuir Park and the adjacent golf course that was acclaimed the most testing course over which the championships had been held for a good number of years.   Without any of the bad luck that had affected his performance in previous international championships, Ian McCafferty finished third for the best individual performance by a Scot since Flockhart’s 1937 victory in Brussels.   Always up with the leaders he surprised everyone with his lion-hearted approach to the event, refusing to give way to anyone throughout the race, resisting every challenge to his forward position and finishing strongly to take the bronze medal ahead of England’s Mike Tagg.”   It was a real star-studded field that year and not all enjoyed it – Mohammed Gammoudi, double medallist at the Olympics the year before, of Morocco dropped out complaining of the hills. 

 He then  lost a lot of the summer through injury.   In the same month as McCafferty was running the International Cross, Ian Stewart set a new UK record of 7:55.4 which removed McCafferty’s 7:56.2.   Stewart of course won the European 5000 metres championship that year.  On 11th June both Stewart brothers (Ian and Peter) took on McCafferty in the Reading Chronicle Gala Night of Sport.   There had only been one Scot sub-four for the Mile up to then (Mike Berisford) but there were three afterwards.   The pre-arranged pace-maker (M Duff) took the field through 440 yards in 58.1 and 880 in 1L58.9 before McCafferty took over.   Ian Stewart passed him after only 220 yards and carried the pace until the last furlong when McCafferty made his big break and although Ian Stewart was closing all the way, managed to win in 3:56.8 (which was over five second faster than his personal best) with Stewart second in 3:57.3 and brother Peter third in 3:58.7.    The Stewart parents had come from Musselburgh outside Edinburgh and although Ian was born in Birmingham, Peter was born in Musselburgh.   So there were three new Scottish 4-minute milers faster than Berrisford’s 3:59.2 after the one race.   The times for the two Ians were to be lifetime bests for the distance.    McCafferty’s best for 1500 metres was to come in the next year’s Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh when he ran 3:44.2 to be seventh.

                                       The famous Sub-4 Mile at Reading in 1968: Ian Stewart (1), Ian McCafferty (5), Hugh Barrow (26)

In winter 1969-70 Ian was only eight in the Nigel Barge race a minute behind winner Lachie Stewart but when it came to the District Championships in Lenzie the rolling countryside suited him and he won in fine style.   When it came to the International in Vichy, France, there were lots of travel problems and the re was a bug travelling around the team.   When it came to the race, the expected high position from McCafferty failed to materialise and he actually dropped out.

1970 was Commonwealth Games year in Edinburgh and it was the year that Ian and Peter Stewart finally opted for Scotland.   The Games started in fine style when on the very first night Lachie Stewart won the 10000 metres from Ron Clarke and Dick Taylor of England.   McCafferty’s 1500 metres final was listless and lack lustre.    I was sitting down at the water-jump end of Meadowbank and when the runners came up out of the tunnel he just looked totally enervated – his last few strides on the track were not encouraging at all.   Peter Stewart was fourth but Ian was ‘way back in seventh.   When they came out for the 5000 metres final on the last day, it was a totally different McCafferty on display.   All three Scots (Ian McCafferty, Ian Stewart and 10000 metres victor Lachie Stewart) had qualified for the final and as McCafferty came out of the tunnel there was a spring in his step and a real desire that you could almost feel as he completed his preparations and removed his tracksuit.   The opposition?   Well, everyone who mattered was there.    Clarke, Taylor, Kip Keino, Allan Rushmer and seven more made up the fourteen man field.   No pace-makers, just a real race.   The first lap was only 70.8 but then Englishman Taylor took up the running and really made a race of it.   The field started to string out and then when McCafferty took up the running with a full 800 metres to go he increased the pace yet further and then there were three men left in with a chance: McCafferty, Stewart and Keino.   500 to go and Stewart went into the lead and kept it up, with 200 to go McCafferty moved up to Stewart’s shoulder and really looked as though he might pass him.   Many still believe he settled for second but I’m not so sure, although every time I see the film or video of the race I think, “I don’t care about last time, this time he’s going to do it!”   The truth is probably that Ian Stewart’s will-power was probably indestructible that day and no matter what anyone did, he would have beaten them.    Two Scots fighting it out up the finishing straight!    Stewart won in 13:22.8 which was a new European, UK and Scottish National record and McCafferty was rewarded with a new Scottish Native record of 13:23.4 erasing his own record of 13:29.6 set earlier that year.

 

1971 was not as good a season but McCafferty won the SAAA 5000m title for the only time in 13:52.   He ended the 1971-72 cross-country season as Scottish Champion when the race was held at Currie, Midlothian and finished eighty first in the International.  These were to be his final Scottish and international cross country races.

1972 was Olympic year and naturally they were all trying to qualify for the event.   The AAA 5000 metres championship at Crystal Palace  on 15th July was the big test.   David Bedford (Shaftesbury) just ran away from the field but with just under three laps to go McCafferty pulled himself through to second (13:19.8, a new Scottish National record) with Ian Stewart third (13:24.2).   They were in the team.    They both seemed to be in good shape when the Games started in Munich.   McCafferty ran a scorching last lap in 54.7 to win in 13:38.2 while Stewart was second in his Heat in a time of 13:33.0.   Not one of the three British men ran well in the final.   The pace was not hard – 3000m in 8:20.2 before Lasse Viren (Finland) made a long (2000m!) run for home and was never caught.   John Keddie in his Centenary History of Scottish Athletics thinks that McCafferty was probably suffering from anxiety and sleeplessness over a race he knew he could win and just went through the motions.   Maybe so.

Whatever the truth, Ian McCafferty was so disappointed that he never raced again as an amateur – indeed he barely ever raced at all.    The sport world-wide and the Scottish scene was the poorer when he hung up the racing spikes.

In January 1973, Ian McCafferty became a professional, a decision he came to regret, and in May 1976 his application to the SAAA for reinstatement was approved.