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Sir Roger Bannister obituary
First athlete to run a mile in under four minutes and an eminent neurologist
Nick Mason and Caroline Richmond
• Roger Gilbert Bannister, athlete and neurologist, born 23 March 1929; died 3
March 2018
a..
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Sir Roger Bannister, British athlete who broke four-minute mile – video obituary
On a blustery spring evening in Oxford in the 1950s, Roger Bannister, who has
died aged 88, became an athlete of world renown, establishing himself as the
most celebrated British sportsman of the period following the second world war.
He never won an Olympic title, he set only one individual world record (which
he
relinquished after barely six weeks) and he retired from running at the height
of his powers when he was only 25. But on 6 May 1954, on the Iffley Road cinder
track that he had helped to lay as an undergraduate a few years earlier, he ran
a mile in under four minutes, a target that had begun to assume almost
superhuman proportions in the eyes of the public, the media and many athletes,
too.
Runners in Europe, the US and Australia had whittled down their mile times as
the world record assumed an ever-increasing importance. In the US, Wes Santee
clocked 4min 2.4sec, and some weeks later failed in a widely publicised attempt
at a four-minute mile. In Australia, John Landy ran four separate races in and
around 4min 2sec. Bannister himself, with the help of Christopher Chataway,
broke the British record in Oxford with 4min 3.6sec.
But nobody came really close to the four-minute mark; indeed, no one seriously
threatened the world record of 4min 1.4sec set in 1945 by the Swede Gunder
Hägg.
Early in 1954 Landy announced that he would spend the early part of the summer
training – and racing – in Finland. Expectations of a four-minute mile were now
at boiling point, and Bannister knew he had to strike fast. With two friends
providing the most elite pacemaking squad that could be imagined – Chataway,
who
later that summer took the 5000m world record, and Chris Brasher, who won an
Olympic gold medal in the steeplechase two years later – Bannister devised an
even-paced three-and-a-quarter-lap schedule that would leave him to capitalise
on his speed and strength in the final 350 or so yards.
On that momentous evening, with the stiff breeze moderating and the showers
stopping barely an hour before the race, the plan worked. Brasher led for a
metronomic two laps, Chataway for the next one, and a bit more. Bannister,
always on the leader’s shoulder, needed to run the final quarter-mile in 59
seconds. He collapsed at the finish, and revived to hear another friend, the
statistician Norris McWhirter, announce over the public address: “a track
record, English Native record, British National, British All-Comers, European,
British Empire and World record; the time: three …” (the rest drowned out by
cheering) “… minutes, 59.4 seconds.”
Hägg’s record had stood for almost nine years. Bannister’s lasted just 46 days
before Landy, running from the front at a meeting in Turku, Finland, posted an
astounding 3min 58sec, to set up the “Mile of the Century” at the British
Empire
Games (as they were still called) in Vancouver early in August. The two milers
arrived in Canada to a media frenzy, and there was a real danger that the race
itself would prove a dismal anticlimax. But their widely differing strategies
ensured that the final, far from descending into a cat-and-mouse tactical duel,
would produce one of the great confrontations in the sport’s history.
Landy needed to run the finish out of Bannister; Bannister needed to run
even-paced laps and conserve enough energy for the sustained power of his
sprint.
Landy led from the gun, increased his lead as the first two laps progressed to
seven yards, 10 yards, 15 yards at one point. Then gradually, halfway through
the third lap, Landy began to slow and Bannister’s even stride pulled the gap
tighter and tighter. By the bell he was back to Landy’s shoulder, but tired. At
the end of the final bend he flung himself past Landy’s right shoulder just, as
chance would have it, Landy glanced anxiously over his left. He was away, the
Australian could not respond, and the Mile of the Century was Bannister’s. Both
men, applauded to the skies by the packed stadium, had run under four minutes.
Bannister trained on for one final triumph at the end of August, a prestigious,
hard-fought but ultimately comfortable victory in the European 1500 metres in
Berne, Switzerland, in a championship record – a commanding exhibition from a
thoroughly confident athlete in a week when he was the only British man to win
a
gold medal.
And that was it. He never competed again.
Bannister, whose long career as a distinguished neurologist overlapped his
short
athletic career, was born in Harrow, north London, the son of Ralph Bannister,
a
worker from the depressed cotton towns of Lancashire who had landed a clerical
post in the civil service in London, and his wife, Alice. The family was
evacuated to Bath during the second world war, before moving back to London,
where Roger attended University College school, Hampstead. There, he played
rugby, rowed a bit, and ran the legs off everyone else, older and younger; but
he was equally enthusiastic about medicine; as a teenager he listed his role
models as Louis Pasteur, Marie Curie and England’s favourite middle-distance
runner, Sydney Wooderson.
Pushed hard by his school, he sat his university entrance exams at 16, and won
a
scholarship to begin medical studies at Exeter College, Oxford, in 1946. He was
only 17, at a time when many of his fellow freshmen were experienced, sometimes
battle-scarred, ex-servicemen. He took a BA in physiology before moving to St
Mary’s hospital, London, for his clinical studies, having been awarded a
scholarship by the dean, Lord Moran.
As an athlete at Oxford, it said much for this shy, willowy young upstart that
his fellow students embraced him without rancour. While still a teenager, he
was
elected president of the university athletic club and was instrumental in
re-instituting the prewar athletics matches between joint teams from Oxford and
Cambridge and America’s Ivy League universities. More significantly, he drove
forward the conversion of Oxford’s running track from an uneven,
586-and-a-bit-yard (three laps to the mile) monster which, in the face of all
received convention, was run clockwise, to a new flat, six-lane quarter-mile
cinder track on which runners travelled the “right” way round.
By the time the track was opened in 1950, Bannister had established himself as
the best mile and 1500m runner in Britain, with several important American and
European scalps to his name. He was, without a doubt, among the favourites for
the 1952 Olympic title at 1500m at Helsinki. However, he finished a
disappointing fourth. Many observers concluded that, when faced with the
supreme
test, Bannister’s nerve had let him down.
He certainly entered the final in a negative frame of mind -- and with good
reason. In combining his work at St Mary’s with his build-up to the Games he
had made do with the barest minimum of training, often no more than 35 minutes
a
day at lunchtime -- very little in the 1950s; inconceivable today. This, he
reckoned, would sustain his speed and strength over a heat, a rest day and a
final.
But the Olympic organisers not only added a semi-final to the schedule, but
declared that the three rounds would be run on consecutive days. Bannister knew
that his chances had plummeted and, just as he dreaded, his legs gave out after
three laps of the final.
To the press and the public and, to an extent, to himself, this was a failure.
However, for Bannister, British athletics and history, it ended up being a
merciful failure.
If he had won his gold medal at Helsinki, there is every chance that he would
have retired from athletics there and then. Running was important and
challenging, but medicine was paramount. As it was, he decided to stay in
training for just one more two-year cycle: to aim for the Empire and the
European championships of 1954, and prove, as much to himself as to the rest of
the world, that he was indeed championship material.
He had passed his exams for his basic medical qualification – MRCS LRCP – a
month after the victory over Landy in Vancouver. A year later, in 1955, he got
his medical degrees of BM BCh, was appointed CBE, and published his first book,
"The First Four Minutes."
From 1955 to 1957 he did his house physician and house surgeon jobs. The first
was under the physician Sir George Pickering at St Mary’s, who became a
lifelong
friend and whom, 30 years later, he succeeded as master of Pembroke College,
Oxford. The second was in surgery at Oxford. This was followed by a spell back
in London at the Hammersmith hospital under another eminent physician, Sir John
McMichael, and ending at the Brompton hospital under the brilliant cardiologist
Paul Wood.
From 1957 to 1959 he did his national service, which he had delayed until he
had
passed the exams to obtain membership of the Royal College of Physicians and
could enter in a specialist medical grade. For the first year he worked at the
army hospital in Millbank, London, looking after senior officers.
Then he volunteered to go out to Aden, using his physiological experience to
investigate deaths among young soldiers. He found that young soldiers were
susceptible to potentially fatal infections if they were put through strenuous
exercise before they had acclimatised. To prove this hypothesis he carried out
research at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and published
the outcome in two Lancet papers.
In 1959, when he left the army, he started his training in neurology as a
registrar at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery in London. In
1962 he was awarded a Radcliffe travelling fellowship from Oxford University to
Harvard University, where he spent a year doing research on oxygen shortage on
blood circulation in the brain.
On his return, he was appointed consultant neurologist at the Western
Ophthalmic
(now Eye) hospital and St Mary’s hospital in London. He remained there until
1985. During this time he became a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians.
His particular research interest and expertise lay in the autonomic nervous
system, which unconsciously controls all the automatic systems of the body from
digestion to the heartbeat.
In the course of this, he carried out research into multiple system atrophy
(also known as Shy–Drager syndrome), a potentially fatal condition, finding
that
many patients benefited from sleeping with their heads raised.
As a consultant at two London teaching hospitals, he acquired a reputation not
only for the effective treatment of patients, but also for his ability to
organise resources and run medical committees. These talents soon led him to
the
higher realms of hospital administration.
In 1974, when he was 45, he was halted cruelly by a serious motor accident. He
was in a car when it was hit by another that had crossed a motorway’s central
reservation. Recovery was slow (he had difficulty in walking comfortably for
the
rest of his life); he abandoned all private practice and directed his energies
towards his autonomic nervous system research, a specialty that had tended to
fall between cardiology and neurology.
He founded the Autonomic Research Society, lectured widely in the US and
Europe,
and edited "Autonomic Failure: A Textbook of Clinical Disorders of the
Autonomic
Nervous System," a standard work that ran into multiple editions (he co-edited
later editions with Christopher Mathias). He was also editor of the textbook
"Clinical Neurology" for several years.
In 1975 he was knighted, and 10 years later returned to Oxford as master of
Pembroke College, where he served until his retirement in 1993.
Nonetheless, he continued working as honorary consultant physician at the
National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery.
He was a rather formal person -- though liked by his colleagues and juniors --
and it is said that he arrived in his Daimler punctually at 9am and expected to
see his house surgeon waiting for him at the door.
Roger Bannister carries the Olympic torch along the Iffley Road running track
(now named after him) in 2012. Photograph: David Hartley/Rex/Shutterstock
As chairman of the Sports Council (1971-74, now Sport England), he introduced
the highly sensitive radio-immunoassay test for anabolic steroids. He was
president of the International Council for Sport and Physical Recreation
(1976-83), and served on many committees and advisory bodies including Oxford
regional and district health authorities, a government working party on sports
scholarships, and a Ministry of Health committee on drug dependence.
As well as maintaining many of these activities well into his retirement, he
wrote for the Sunday Times and for the American magazine Sports Illustrated.
Bannister returned to the Iffley Road track, now named after him, in 2012,
bearing the Olympic torch.
In 2014 he published his autobiography, "Twin Tracks."
The same year he revealed that he was suffering from Parkinson’s disease.
In 1955 he married Moyra Jacobsson, an artist. She survives him, along with
their two sons, two daughters and 14 grandchildren.