Paavo Nurmi
Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox sportsperson Paavo Johannes Nurmi ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}; 13 June 1897 – 2 October 1973) was a Finnish middle-distance and long-distance runner. He was called the "Flying Finn" because he dominated distance running in the 1920s. Nurmi set 22 official world records at distances between 1,500 metres and 20 kilometres, and won nine gold and three silver medals in his 12 events in the Summer Olympic Games. At his peak, Nurmi was undefeated for 121 races at distances from 800 m upwards. Throughout his 14-year career, he remained unbeaten in cross country events and the 10,000 metres.
Born into a working-class family, Nurmi left school at the age of 12 to provide for his family. In 1912, he was inspired by the Olympic feats of Hannes Kolehmainen and began developing a strict training program. Nurmi started to flourish during his military service, setting Finnish records in athletics en route to his international debut at the 1920 Summer Olympics. After winning a silver medal in the 5,000 m, he won gold in the 10,000 m and the cross country events. In 1923, Nurmi became the first runner to hold simultaneous world records in the mile, the 5,000 m and the 10,000 m races, a feat which has never been repeated. He set new world records for the 1,500 m and the 5,000 m with just an hour between the races, and took gold medals in both distances in less than two hours at the 1924 Summer Olympics. Seemingly unaffected by the Paris heat wave, Nurmi won all his races and returned home with five gold medals,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> although he was frustrated that Finnish officials had refused to enter him for the 10,000 m.
Struggling with injuries and motivation issues after his exhaustive U.S. tour in 1925, Nurmi found his long-time rivals compatriot Ville Ritola and Sweden's Edvin Wide ever more serious challengers. At the 1928 Summer Olympics, Nurmi recaptured the 10,000 m title but was beaten for the gold in the 5,000 m and the 3,000 m steeplechase. He then turned his attention to longer distances, breaking the world records for events such as the one hour run and the 25-mile marathon. Nurmi intended to end his career with a marathon gold medal, as his idol Kolehmainen had done. In a controversial case that strained Finland–Sweden relations and sparked an inter-IAAF battle, Nurmi was suspended before the 1932 Games by an IAAF council that questioned his amateur status; two days before the opening ceremonies, the council rejected his entries. Although he was never declared a professional, Nurmi's suspension became definite in 1934 and he retired from running.
Nurmi later coached Finnish runners, raised funds for Finland during the Winter War, and worked as a haberdasher, building contractor, and stock trader, becoming one of the richest people in Finland. In 1952, he was the lighter of the Olympic Flame at the Summer Olympics in Helsinki. Nurmi's running speed and elusive personality spawned nicknames such as the "Phantom Finn", while his achievements, training methods and running style influenced future generations of middle- and long-distance runners. Nurmi, who rarely ran without a stopwatch in his hand, has been credited with introducing the "even pace" strategy and analytic approach to running, and for making running a major international sport.
Early lifeEdit
his family in 1924
Nurmi was born in Turku, Finland, to carpenter Johan Fredrik Nurmi and his wife Matilda Wilhelmiina Laine.<ref name="SLU">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Nurmi's siblings, Siiri, Saara, Martti and Lahja, were born in 1898, 1902, 1905 and 1908, respectively.<ref name="Paavo Nurmi's home">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1903, the Nurmi family moved from Raunistula into a 40-square-meter apartment in central Turku, where Paavo Nurmi would live until 1932.<ref name="Paavo Nurmi's home"/> The young Nurmi and his friends were inspired by the English long-distance runner Alfred Shrubb.<ref name="SLU"/> They regularly ran or walked six kilometres (four miles) to swim in Ruissalo, and back, sometimes twice a day.<ref name="Top Distance Runners p. 15">Template:Cite book</ref> By the age of eleven, Nurmi ran the 1500 metres in 5:02.<ref name="SLU"/> Nurmi's father Johan died in 1910 and his sister Lahja a year later.<ref name="Paavo Nurmi's home"/> The family struggled financially, renting out their kitchen to another family and living in a single room.<ref name="SLU"/> Nurmi, a talented student, left school to work as an errand boy for a bakery.<ref name="Paavo Nurmi's home"/> Although he stopped running actively,<ref name="SLU"/> he got plenty of exercise pushing heavy carts up the steep slopes in Turku.Template:Sfn He later credited these climbs for strengthening his back and leg muscles.Template:Sfn
At 15, Nurmi rekindled his interest in athletics after being inspired by the performances of Hannes Kolehmainen, who was said to "have run Finland onto the map of the world" at the 1912 Summer Olympics.<ref name="Urheilumuseo">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He bought his first pair of sneakers a few days later.<ref name="Top Distance Runners p. 15"/> Nurmi trained primarily by doing cross country running in the summers and cross country skiing in the winters.<ref name="SLU"/> In 1914, Nurmi joined the sports club Turun Urheiluliitto and won his first race on the 3000 metres.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Two years later, he revised his training program to include walking, sprints and calisthenics.<ref name="SLU"/> He continued to provide for his family through his new job at the Ab. H. Ahlberg & Co workshop in Turku, where he worked until he started his military service at a machine gun company in the Pori Brigade in April 1919.<ref name="SLU"/> During the Finnish Civil War in 1918, Nurmi remained politically passive and concentrated on his work and his Olympic ambitions.<ref name="SLU"/> After the war, he decided not to join the newly founded Finnish Workers' Sports Federation, but wrote articles for the federation's chief organ and criticized the discrimination against many of his fellow workers and athletes.<ref name="SLU"/>
In the army, Nurmi quickly impressed in the athletic competitions: While others marched, Nurmi ran the whole distances with a rifle on his shoulder and a backpack full of sand.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> Nurmi's stubbornness caused him difficulties with his non-commissioned officers, but he was favoured by the superior officers,<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> despite his refusal to take the military oath even at the threat of a court-martial.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> As the unit commander Hugo Österman was a known sports aficionado, Nurmi and a few other athletes were given free time to practice.<ref name="SLU"/> Nurmi improvised new training methods in the army barracks; he ran behind trains, holding on to the rear bumper, to stretch his stride, and used heavy iron-clad army boots to strengthen his legs.<ref name="SLU"/> Nurmi soon began setting personal bests and got close for the Olympic selection.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> In March 1920, he was promoted to corporal (alikersantti).<ref name="SLU"/> On 29 May 1920, he set his first national record in 3,000 m and went on to win the 1,500 m and the 5,000 m at the Olympic trials in July.<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/>Template:Sfn
Olympic careerEdit
1920–1924 OlympicsEdit
Nurmi made his international debut in August at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp, Belgium.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> He took his first medal by finishing second to Frenchman Joseph Guillemot in the 5000 m. This would remain the only time that Nurmi lost to a non-Finnish runner in the Olympics.<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/> He went on to win gold medals in his other three events: the 10,000 m, sprinting past Guillemot on the final curve and improving his personal best by over a minute,<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1920">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the cross country race, beating Sweden's Eric Backman, and the cross country team event where he helped Heikki Liimatainen and Teodor Koskenniemi defeat the British and Swedish teams. Nurmi's success brought electric lighting and running water for his family in Turku.<ref name="Paavo Nurmi's home"/> Nurmi, however, was given a scholarship to study at the Teollisuuskoulu industrial school in Helsinki.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/>
Buoyed by his defeat to Guillemot, Nurmi's races became a series of experiments which he analyzed meticulously.Template:Sfn Previously known for his blistering pace on the first few laps, Nurmi started to carry a stopwatch and spread his efforts more uniformly over the distance.Template:Sfn He aimed to perfect his technique and tactics to a point where the performances of his rivals would be rendered meaningless.Template:Sfn Nurmi set his first world record on the 10,000 m in Stockholm in 1921.<ref name="Records"/> In 1922, he broke the world records for the 2000 m, the 3000 m and the 5000 m.Template:Sfn A year later, Nurmi added the records for the 1500 m and the mile.Template:Sfn His feat of holding the world records for the mile, the 5000 m and the 10,000 m at the same time has not been matched by any other athlete before or since.<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/> Nurmi also tested his speed in the 800 m, winning the 1923 Finnish Championships with a new national record.<ref name="Elite Games"/> After excelling in mathematics,Template:Sfn Nurmi graduated as an engineer in 1923 and returned home to prepare for the upcoming Olympic Games.<ref name="Paavo Nurmi's home"/><ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/>
Nurmi's trip to the 1924 Summer Olympics was endangered by a knee injury in the spring of 1924, but he recovered and resumed training twice a day.<ref name="Elite Games"/> On 19 June, Nurmi tried out the 1924 Olympic schedule at the Eläintarha Stadium in Helsinki by running the 1500 m and the 5000 m inside an hour, setting new world records for both distances.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In the 1500 m final at the Olympics in Paris, Nurmi ran the first 800 m almost three seconds faster.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/> His only challenger, Ray Watson of the United States, gave up before the last lap and Nurmi was able to slow down and coast to victory ahead of Willy Schärer, H. B. Stallard and Douglas Lowe,<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/> still breaking the Olympic record by three seconds.<ref name="Running Times">Template:Cite journal</ref> The 5000 m final started in less than two hours, and Nurmi faced a tough challenge from countryman Ville Ritola, who had already won the 3000 m steeplechase and the 10,000 m.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/> Ritola and Edvin Wide figured that Nurmi must be tired and tried to burn him off by running at world-record pace.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Realizing that he was now racing the two men and not the clock, Nurmi tossed his stopwatch onto the grass.Template:Sfn The Finns later passed the Swede as his pace faded and continued their duel.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/> On the home straight, Ritola sprinted from the outside but Nurmi increased his pace to keep his rival a metre behind.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/>
In the cross country events, the heat of Template:Convert,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> caused all but 15 of the 38 competitors to abandon the race.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/> Eight finishers were taken away on stretchers.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/> One athlete began to run in tiny circles after reaching the stadium, until setting off into the stands and knocking himself unconscious.<ref name="The Guardian"/> Early leader Wide was among those who blacked out along the course, and was incorrectly reported to have died at the hospital.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Nurmi exhibited only slight signs of exhaustion after beating Ritola to the win by nearly a minute and a half.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/> As Finland looked to have lost the team medal, the disoriented Liimatainen staggered into the stadium, but was barely moving forward.Template:Sfn An athlete ahead of him fainted 50 metres from the finish, and Liimatainen stopped and tried to find his way off the track, thinking he had reached the finish line.Template:Sfn After having ignored shouts and kept the spectators in suspense for a while, he turned into the right direction, realised his situation and reached the finish in 12th place and secured team gold.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/>Template:Sfn Those present at the stadium were shocked by what they had witnessed, and Olympic officials decided to ban cross country running from future Games.Template:Sfn
In the 3000 m team race on the next day, Nurmi and Ritola again finished first and second, and Elias Katz secured the gold medal for the Finnish team by finishing fifth.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/> Nurmi had won five gold medals in five events, but he left the Games embittered as the Finnish officials had allocated races between their star runners and prevented him from defending his title in the 10,000 m, the distance that was dearest to him.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1924"/><ref name="CNN"/> After returning to Finland, Nurmi set a 10,000 m world record that would last for almost 13 years.<ref name="CNN">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> As of July 2024, this is the second-longest-standing world record for the men's 10,000 metres. Kenenia Bekele's world record set in August 2005 in Brussels stood for over 15 years. Nurmi now held the 1500 metres, the mile, the 3,000 metres, the 5,000 metres and the 10,000 metres world records simultaneously.Template:Sfn
U.S. tour and 1928 OlympicsEdit
In early 1925, Nurmi embarked on a widely publicised tour of the United States. He competed in 55 events (45 indoors) during a five-month period, starting at a sold-out Madison Square Garden on 6 January.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1925">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> His debut was a copy of his feats in Helsinki and Paris.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1925"/> Nurmi defeated Joie Ray and Lloyd Hahn to win the mile and Ritola to win the 5000 m, again setting new world records for both distances.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1925"/> Nurmi broke ten more indoor world records in regular events and set several new best times for rarer distances.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1925"/> He won 51 of the events, abandoned one race and lost two handicap races along with his final event; a half-mile race at the Yankee Stadium, where he finished second to American track star Alan Helffrich.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1925"/><ref name="Meriden">Template:Cite news</ref> Helffrich's victory ended Nurmi's 121-race, four-year win streak in individual scratch races at distances from 800 m upwards.Template:Sfn Although he hated losing more than anything,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Nurmi was the first to congratulate Helffrich.<ref name="Meriden"/> The tour made Nurmi extremely popular in the United States, and the Finn agreed to meet President Calvin Coolidge at the White House.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Nurmi left America fearing that he had competed too often and burned himself out.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Nurmi struggled to maintain motivation for running, heightened by his rheumatism and Achilles tendon problems.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> He quit his job as a machinery draughtsman in 1926 and began studying business intensively.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> As Nurmi started a new career as a share dealer, his financial advisors included Risto Ryti, director of the Bank of Finland.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> In 1926, Nurmi broke Wide's world record for the 3000 m in Berlin and then improved the record in Stockholm,Template:Sfn despite Nils Eklöf repeatedly trying to slow his pace down in an effort to aid Wide.Template:Sfn Nurmi was furious at the Swedes and vowed never to race Eklöf again.Template:Sfn In October 1926, he lost a 1500 m race along with his world record to Germany's Otto Peltzer.<ref name="The Guardian 2008"/> This marked the first time in over five years and 133 races that Nurmi had been defeated at a distance over 1000 m.Template:Sfn In 1927, Finnish officials barred him from international competition for refusing to run against Eklöf at the Finland-Sweden international, cancelling the Peltzer rematch scheduled for Vienna.Template:Sfn Nurmi ended his season and threatened, until late November, to withdraw from the 1928 Summer Olympics.Template:Sfn At the 1928 Olympic trials, Nurmi was left third in the 1500 m by eventual gold and bronze medalists Harri Larva and Eino Purje, and he decided to concentrate on the longer distances.Template:Sfn He added steeplechase to his program, although he had only tried the event twice before,Template:Sfn the latest being a two-mile steeplechase victory at the 1922 British Championships.Template:Sfn
At the 1928 Olympics in Amsterdam, Nurmi competed in three events. He won the 10,000 m by staying right behind Ritola until sprinting past him on the home straight.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Before the 5000 m final, Nurmi injured himself in his qualifying heat for the 3000 m steeplechase.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/> He fell on his back at the water jump, spraining his hip and foot.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/> Lucien Duquesne stopped to help him up, and Nurmi thanked the Frenchman by pacing him past the field and offered him the heat win, which Duquesne gracefully refused.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/> In the 5000 m, Nurmi tried to repeat his move on Ritola but had to watch his teammate pull away instead.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/> Nurmi, looking more exhausted than ever before, only barely managed to keep Wide behind and take silver.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/> Nurmi had little time to rest or nurse his injuries as the 3000 m steeplechase started the next day.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/> Struggling with the hurdles, Nurmi let Finland's steeplechase specialist Toivo Loukola escape into the distance.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/> On the final lap, he sprinted clear of the others and finished nine seconds behind the world-record setting Loukola; Nurmi's time also bettered the previous record.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/> Although Ritola did not finish, Ove Andersen completed a Finnish sweep of the medals.<ref name="Urheilumuseo 1928"/>
Move to longer distancesEdit
Nurmi stated to a Swedish newspaper that "this is absolutely my last season on the track. I am beginning to get old. I have raced for fifteen years and have had enough of it."<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/> However, Nurmi continued running, turning his attention to longer distances. In October, he broke the world records for the 15 km, the 10 miles and the one hour run in Berlin.<ref name="Records"/> Nurmi's one-hour record stood for 17 years, until Viljo Heino ran 129 metres further in 1945.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In January 1929, Nurmi started his second U.S. tour from Brooklyn.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He suffered his first-ever defeat in the mile to Ray Conger at the indoor Wanamaker Mile.<ref name="The Day">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Nurmi was seven seconds slower than in his world record run in 1925,<ref name="The Day"/> and it was immediately speculated if the mile had become too short a distance for him.<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref> In 1930, he set a new world record for the 20 km.<ref name="Records"/> In July 1931, Nurmi showed he still had pace for the shorter distances by beating Lauri Lehtinen, Lauri Virtanen and Volmari Iso-Hollo, and breaking the world record on the now-rare two miles.<ref name="The Milwaukee Journal">Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He was the first runner to complete the distance in less than nine minutes.<ref name="The Milwaukee Journal"/> Nurmi planned to compete only in the 10,000 m and the marathon in the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, stating that he "won't enter the 5000 metres for Finland has at least three excellent men for that event."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
In April 1932, the executive council of the International Amateur Athletics Federation (IAAF) suspended Nurmi from international athletics events pending an investigation into his amateur status by the Finnish Athletics Federation.<ref name="St. Petersburg Times">Template:Cite news</ref> The Finnish authorities criticized the IAAF for acting without a hearing,<ref name="St. Petersburg Times"/> but agreed to launch an investigation. It was customary of the IAAF to accept the final decision of its national branch,<ref name="Telegraph Herald">Template:Cite news</ref> and the Associated Press wrote that "there is little doubt that if the Finnish federation clears Nurmi the international body will accept its decision without question."<ref name="St. Petersburg Times"/> A week later, the Finnish Athletics Federation ruled in favor of Nurmi, finding no evidence for the allegations of professionalism.<ref name="Telegraph Herald"/> Nurmi was hopeful that his suspension would be lifted in time for the Games.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
On 26 June 1932 Nurmi started his first marathon at the Olympic trials. Not drinking a drop of liquid, he ran the old-style 'short marathon' of Template:Convert in 2:22:03.8 – on the pace to finish in about 2:29:00,<ref name="The Olympic Marathon">Template:Cite book</ref> just under Albert Michelsen's marathon world record of 2:29:01.8. At the time, he led Armas Toivonen, the eventual Olympic bronze medalist, by six minutes.<ref name="Top Distance Runners">Template:Cite book</ref> Nurmi's time was the new unofficial world record for the short marathon.<ref name="San Jose News">Template:Cite news</ref> Confident that he had done enough, Nurmi stopped and retired from the race owing to problems with his Achilles tendon.<ref name="The Olympic Marathon"/> The Finnish Olympic Committee entered Nurmi for both the 10,000 m and the marathon.<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref> The Guardian reported that "some of his trial times were almost unbelievable,"<ref name="The Guardian">Template:Cite news</ref> and Nurmi went on to train at the Olympic Village in Los Angeles despite his injury.<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/> Nurmi had set his heart on ending his career with a marathon gold medal, as Kolehmainen had done shortly after the First World War.Template:Sfn
1932 Olympics and later careerEdit
Less than three days before the 10,000 m, a special commission of the IAAF, consisting of the same seven members that had suspended Nurmi, rejected the Finn's entries and barred him from competing in Los Angeles.<ref name="Telegraph Herald 2">Template:Cite news</ref> Sigfrid Edström, the Swedish chairman of the Council of the International Association of Athletics Federations (s.o. the board of directors), pushed independently and without receiving the support of the rules of the International Association of Athletics Federations for a decision to ban Nurmi from participating in the Los Angeles Olympics at the IAAF board meeting without consulting the Finnish Sports Federation (SUL) and Nurmi on 3.4.<ref>Nurmi uncompetitive. Helsingin Sanomat, 4.4.1932, p. 1. HS Aikakone (for subscribers only). Retrieved 2021-09-24.</ref> and 7/30/1932.<ref>Nurmi is not allowed to run at the Olympics. Helsingin Sanomat, 30.7.1932, p. 4. HS Aikakone (subscribers only). Retrieved 2021-09-24.</ref> [The rules for disqualification of an athlete were made only after the Olympics at the Congress (General Assembly) of the International Sports Federation (IAAF), where Edström and Bo Ekelund, secretary of the council, represented Sweden. The report for Nurmi's ban came from Avery Brundage, president of the American Sports Federation.]<ref>The truth about the Nurmi story and how to drive it in America. Helsingin Sanomat, 8.9.1932, p. 4, 7. HS Aikakone (subscribers only). Retrieved 2021-09-24.</ref><ref>The truth about the Nurmi story and how to drive it in America. Helsingin Sanomat, 9.9.1932, p. 4. HS Aikakone (for subscribers only). Retrieved 2021-09-24.</ref> Edström stated that the full congress of the IAAF, which was scheduled to start the next day, could not reinstate Nurmi for the Olympics but merely review the phases and political angles related to the case.<ref name="Telegraph Herald 2"/> The AP called this "one of the slickest political maneuvers in international athletic history", and wrote that the Games would now be "like Hamlet without the celebrated Dane in the cast."<ref name="Reading Eagle">Template:Cite news</ref> Thousands protested against the action in Helsinki.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Details of the case were not released to the press, but the evidence against Nurmi was believed be the sworn statements from German race promoters that Nurmi had received $250–500 per race when running in Germany in autumn 1931.<ref name="Reading Eagle"/> The statements were produced by Karl Ritter von Halt, after Edström had sent him increasingly threatening letters warning that if evidence against Nurmi were not provided he would be "unfortunately obliged to take stringent action against the German Athletics Association."Template:Sfn The IOC did not follow their own rules for disqualification for not being a non-amateur Olympic participant. The rulebook for the 1912 Olympics stated that protests had to be made "within 30 days from the closing ceremonies of the games."<ref>["usoc"]</ref>
On the eve of the marathon, all the entrants of the race except for the Finns, whose positions were known, filed a petition asking Nurmi's entry to be accepted.<ref name="HS 1932">Template:Cite news</ref> Edström's right-hand man Bo Ekelund, secretary general of the IAAF and head of the Swedish Athletics Federation, approached the Finnish officials and stated that he might be able to arrange for Nurmi to participate in the marathon outside the competition.<ref name="HS 1932"/> However, Finland maintained that as long as the athlete is not declared a professional, he must have the right to participate in the race officially.<ref name="HS 1932"/> Although he had been diagnosed with a pulled Achilles tendon two weeks earlier,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Nurmi stated he would have won the event by five minutes.<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/> The congress concluded without Nurmi being declared a professional, but the council's authority to disbar an athlete was upheld on a 13–12 vote.<ref name="Reading Eagle 2">Template:Cite news</ref> However, due to the close vote, the matter was postponed until the 1934 meet in Stockholm.<ref name="Reading Eagle 2"/> Finns charged that the Swedish officials had used devious tricks in their campaign against Nurmi's amateur status,<ref name="HS 2008">Template:Cite news</ref> and ceased all athletic relations with Sweden.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> A year earlier, controversies on the track and in the press had led Finland to withdraw from the Finland-Sweden athletics international.Template:Sfn After Nurmi's suspension, Finland did not agree to return to the event until 1939.<ref name="HS 2008"/>
Nurmi refused to turn professional,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and continued running as an amateur in Finland.<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/> In 1933, he ran his first 1500 m in three years and won the national title with his best time since 1926.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn At the IAAF meet in August 1934, Finland launched two proposals that lost.<ref name="Schenectady Gazette">Template:Cite news</ref> The council then brought forward its resolution empowering it to suspend athletes that it finds in violation of the IAAF amateur code.<ref name="Schenectady Gazette"/> With a 12–5 vote, with many not voting, Nurmi's suspension from international amateur athletics became definite.<ref name="Schenectady Gazette"/> Less than three weeks later, Nurmi retired from running with a 10,000 m victory in Viipuri on 16 September 1934.<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/> Nurmi remained undefeated in the distance throughout his 14-year top-level career.Template:Sfn In cross country running, his win streak lasted 19 years.Template:Sfn
Later lifeEdit
While active as a runner, Nurmi was known to be secretive about his training methods.Template:Sfn Always running alone, he upped his pace and quickly exhausted anyone who was bold enough to join him.Template:Sfn Even his club mate Harri Larva had learned little from him.Template:Sfn After ending his career, Nurmi became a coach for the Finnish Athletics Federation and trained runners for the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin.<ref name="Elite Games">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1935, Nurmi along with the entire board of directors quit the federation after a heated 40–38 vote to resume athletic relations with Sweden.<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref> However, Nurmi returned to coaching three months later and the Finnish distance runners went on to take three gold medals, three silvers and a bronze at the Games.<ref name="Elite Games"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 1936, Nurmi also opened a men's clothing store (haberdashery) in Helsinki.<ref name="HS 2006">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It became a popular tourist attraction,<ref name="The Calgary Herald">Template:Cite news</ref> and Emil Zátopek was among those who visited the store trying to meet Nurmi.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The Finn spent his time in the back room, running another new business venture; construction.<ref name="HS 2006"/> As a contractor, Nurmi built forty apartment buildings in Helsinki with about a hundred flats in each.<ref name="Doug Gillon">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Within five years, he was rated a millionaire.<ref name="The Calgary Herald"/> His fiercest rival Ritola ended up living in one of Nurmi's flats, at half price.Template:Sfn Nurmi also made money on the stock market, eventually becoming one of Finland's richest people.<ref name="HS 2000">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In February 1940, during the Winter War between Finland and the Soviet Union, Nurmi returned to the United States with his protégé Taisto Mäki, who had become the first man to run the 10,000 m under 30 minutes, to raise funds and rally support to the Finnish cause.<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/> The relief drive, directed by former president Herbert Hoover, included a coast-to-coast tour by Nurmi and Mäki.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Hoover welcomed the two as "ambassadors of the greatest sporting nation in the world."<ref name="Time">Template:Cite magazine</ref> While in San Francisco, Nurmi received news that one of his apprentices, 1936 Olympic champion Gunnar Höckert, had been killed in action.Template:Sfn Nurmi left for Finland in late April,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and later served in the Continuation War in a delivery company and as a trainer in the military staff.<ref name="SLU 2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Before he was discharged in January 1942, Nurmi was promoted first to a staff sergeant (ylikersantti) and later to a sergeant first class (vääpeli).<ref name="SLU 2"/>
In 1952, Nurmi was persuaded by Urho Kekkonen, Prime Minister of Finland and former chairman of the Finnish Athletics Federation, to carry the Olympic torch into the Olympic Stadium at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki.<ref name="HS 2000"/> His appearance astonished the spectators, and Sports Illustrated wrote that "his celebrated stride was unmistakable to the crowd. When he came into view, waves of sound began to build throughout the stadium, rising to a roar, then to a thunder. When the national teams, assembled in formation on the infield, saw the flowing figure of Nurmi, they broke ranks like excited schoolchildren, dashing toward the edge of the track."<ref name="Sports Illustrated">Template:Cite magazine</ref> After lighting the flame in the Olympic Cauldron, Nurmi passed the torch to his idol Kolehmainen, who lighted the beacon in the tower.Template:Sfn In the cancelled 1940 Summer Olympics, Nurmi had been planned to lead a group of fifty Finnish gold medal winners.<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref>
Nurmi felt that he got too much credit as an athlete and too little as a businessman,<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> but his interest in running never died.Template:Sfn He even returned to the track himself a few times. In 1946, he faced his old rival Edvin Wide in Stockholm in a benefit for the victims of the Greek Civil War.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Nurmi ran for the last time on 18 February 1966 at the Madison Square Garden, invited by the New York Athletic Club.Template:Sfn In 1962, Nurmi predicted that wealthier countries would start to struggle in the distance events: "The higher the standard of living in a country, the weaker the results often are in the events which call for work and trouble. I would like to warn this new generation: 'Do not let this comfortable life make you lazy. Do not let the new means of transport kill your instinct for physical exercise. Too many young people get used to driving in a car even for small distances.'"<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> In 1966, he took the microphone in front of 300 sports club guests and criticised the state of distance running in Finland, reproaching the sports executives as publicity seekers and tourists, and demanding athletes sacrifice everything to accomplish something.Template:Sfn Nurmi lived to see the renaissance of Finnish running in the 1970s, led by athletes such as the 1972 Olympic gold medalists Lasse Virén and Pekka Vasala.Template:Sfn He had complimented the running style of Virén, and advised Vasala to concentrate on Kipchoge Keino.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/>
Although he accepted an invitation from President Lyndon B. Johnson to revisit the White House in 1964,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Nurmi lived a very secluded life until the late 1960s when he began granting some press interviews.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> On his 70th birthday, Nurmi agreed to an interview for Yle, Finland's national public-broadcasting company, only after learning that President Kekkonen would act as the interviewer.<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref> Suffering from health problems, with at least one heart attack, a stroke and failing eyesight, Nurmi at times spoke bitterly about sports, calling it a waste of time compared to science and art.Template:Sfn He died in 1973 in Helsinki and was given a state funeral.<ref name="CNN"/> Kekkonen attended the funeral and praised Nurmi: "People explore the horizons for a successor. But none comes and none will, for his class is extinguished with him."Template:Sfn At the request of Nurmi, who enjoyed classical music and played the violin,<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> Konsta Jylhä's Vaiennut viulu (The Silenced Violin) was played during the ceremony.Template:Sfn Nurmi's last record fell in 1996; his 1925 world record for the indoor 2000 m lasted as the Finnish national record for 71 years.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Personal life and public imageEdit
Nurmi was married to socialite Sylvi Laaksonen (1907–1968) from 1932 to 1935.<ref name="HS 2006"/> Laaksonen, who was not interested in athletics, opposed Nurmi raising their newborn son Matti to be a runner and stated to the Associated Press in 1933, "[H]is concentration on athletics at last forced me to go to the judge for a divorce."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Matti Nurmi did become a middle-distance runner, and later a "self-made" businessman.<ref name="Doug Gillon"/> Nurmi's relationship with his son was termed "uneasy".<ref name="Doug Gillon"/> Matti admired his father more as a businessman than as an athlete, and the two never discussed his running career.<ref name="Doug Gillon"/> As a runner, Matti was at his best in the 3000 m, where he equalled his father's time.<ref name="Doug Gillon"/> In the famous race on 11 July 1957 when the "three Olavis" (Salsola, Salonen and Vuorisalo) broke the world record for the 1500 m, Matti Nurmi finished a distant ninth with his personal best, 2.2 seconds slower than his father's world record from 1924.<ref name="Doug Gillon"/> Hollywood actress Maila Nurmi, best known as the horror icon "Vampira", was often referred to as Paavo Nurmi's niece.<ref name="Maila Nurmi">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> However, the kinship is not supported by official documents.<ref name="Maila Nurmi"/>
Nurmi enjoyed the Finnish sports massage and sauna-bathing traditions, crediting the Finnish sauna for his performances during the Paris heat wave in 1924.<ref name="Nurmi 1932">Template:Cite news</ref> He had a versatile diet, although he had practiced vegetarianism between the ages of 15 and 21.<ref name="Nurmi 1932"/> Nurmi, who identified as neurasthenic, was known to be "taciturn", "stony-faced" and "stubborn".<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> He was not believed to have had any close friends, but he had occasionally socialized and showed his "sarcastic sense of humour" among the small circles he knew.<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> Acclaimed the biggest sporting figure in the world at his peak,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Nurmi was averse to publicity and the media,<ref name="Finnish Literature Society"/> stating later on his 75th birthday, "[W]orldly fame and reputation are worth less than a rotten lingonberry."<ref name="Doug Gillon"/> French journalist Gabriel Hanot questioned Nurmi's intensive approach to sports and wrote in 1924 that Nurmi "is ever more serious, reserved, concentrated, pessimistic, fanatic. There is such coldness in him and his self-control is so great that never for a moment does he show his feelings."<ref name="Nurmi as seen by others">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Some contemporary Finns nicknamed him Suuri vaikenija (The Great Silent One),Template:Sfn and Ron Clarke noted that Nurmi's persona remained a mystery even to Finnish runners and journalists: "Even to them, he was never quite real. He was enigmatic, sphinx-like, a god in a cloud. It was as if he was all the time playing a role in a drama."<ref name="Nurmi as seen by others"/>
Nurmi was more responsive to his fellow athletes than to the media. He exchanged ideas with sprinter Charley Paddock and even trained with his rival Otto Peltzer.<ref name="The Guardian 2008">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Nurmi told Peltzer to forget his opponents: "Conquering yourself is the greatest challenge of an athlete."<ref name="The Guardian 2008"/> Nurmi was known to emphasize the importance of psychological strength: "Mind is everything; muscle, pieces of rubber. All that I am, I am because of my mind."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Regarding Nurmi's conduct on track, Peltzer found that "in his impenetrability he was a Buddha gliding on the track. Stopwatch in hand, lap after lap, he ran towards the tape, subject only to the laws of a mathematical table."<ref name="The time machine">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Marathoner Johnny Kelley, who first met his idol at the 1936 Olympics, said that while Nurmi appeared cold to him at first, the two chatted for quite a while after Nurmi had asked for his name: "He grabbed ahold of me — he was so excited. I couldn't believe it!"<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Nurmi's speed and elusive personality led to nicknames such as the "Phantom Finn", the "King of Runners" and "Peerless Paavo",<ref name="Urheilumuseo"/><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="Scandinavian Review">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead link</ref> while his mathematical prowess and use of a stopwatch led the press to characterize him as a running machine.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> One newspaperman dubbed Nurmi "a mechanical Frankenstein created to annihilate time."<ref name="The Olympic Odyssey">Template:Cite book</ref> Phil Cousineau noted that "his own innovation—the tactic of pacing himself with a stopwatch—both inspired and troubled people in an era when the robot was becoming symbolic of the modern soulless human being."<ref name="The Olympic Odyssey"/> Among the popular newspaper rumours about Nurmi was that he had a "freakish heart" with a very low pulse rate.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> During the debate over his amateur status, Nurmi was joked to have "the lowest heartbeat and the highest asking price of any athlete in the world."<ref name="Scandinavian Review"/>
LegacyEdit
Nurmi broke 22 official world records on distances between 1500 m and 20 km; a record in running.<ref name="Records">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He also set many more unofficial ones for a total of 58.<ref name="Doug Gillon"/> His indoor world records were all unofficial as the IAAF did not ratify indoor records until the 1980s.<ref name="Records"/> Nurmi's record for most Olympic gold medals was matched by gymnast Larisa Latynina in 1964, swimmer Mark Spitz in 1972 and fellow track and field athlete Carl Lewis in 1996, and broken by swimmer Michael Phelps in 2008.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Nurmi's record for most medals in the Olympic Games stood until Edoardo Mangiarotti won his 13th medal in fencing in 1960.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Time selected Nurmi as the greatest Olympian of all time in 1996,Template:Sfn and IAAF named him among the first twelve athletes to be inducted into the IAAF Hall of Fame in 2012.<ref name="Reuters">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Nurmi introduced the "even pace" strategy to running, pacing himself with a stopwatch and spreading his energy uniformly over the race.<ref name="American Miler">Template:Cite book</ref> He reasoned that "when you race against time, you don't have to sprint. Others can't hold the pace if it is steady and hard all through to the tape."<ref name="Scandinavian Review"/> Archie Macpherson stated that "with the stopwatch always in his hand, he elevated athletics to a new plane of intelligent application of effort and was the harbinger of the modern scientifically prepared athlete."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Nurmi was considered a pioneer also in regards to training; he developed a systematic all-year-round training program that included both long-distance work and interval running.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Peter Lovesey wrote in The Kings of Distance: A Study of Five Great Runners that Nurmi "accelerated the progress of world records; developed and actually came to personify the analytic approach to running; and he was a profound influence not only in Finland, but throughout the world of athletics. Nurmi, his style, technique and tactics were held to be infallible, and really seemed so, as successive imitators in Finland steadily improved the records."Template:Sfn Cordner Nelson, founder of Track & Field News, credited Nurmi for popularizing running as a spectator sport: "His imprint on the track world was greater than any man’s before or after. He, more than any man, raised track to the glory of a major sport in the eyes of international fans, and they honored him as one of the truly great athletes of all sports."<ref name="Nurmi as seen by others"/>
Nurmi's achievements and training methods inspired future generations of track stars. Emil Zátopek chanted "I am Nurmi! I am Nurmi!" when he trained as a child,<ref name="Doug Gillon"/> and based his training system on what he was able to find out about Nurmi's methods.Template:Sfn Lasse Virén idolized Nurmi and was scheduled to meet him for the first time on the day that Nurmi died.<ref name="The time machine"/> Hicham El Guerrouj was inspired to become a runner so that he could "repeat the achievements of the great man of whom his grandfather spoke."<ref name="The New Zealand Herald">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He became the first man after Nurmi to win the 1500 m and the 5000 m at the same Games.<ref name="The New Zealand Herald"/> Nurmi's influence stretched further than running on the Olympic arena. At the 1928 Olympics, Kazimierz Wierzyński won the lyric gold medal with his poem Olympic Laurel that included a verse on Nurmi.<ref name="SUT">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1936, Ludwig Stubbendorf and his horse Nurmi won the individual and team gold medals in eventing.<ref name="SUT"/>
A bronze statue of Nurmi was sculpted by Wäinö Aaltonen in 1925.<ref name="HS 2009">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The original is held at the art museum Ateneum, but copies cast from the original mould exist in Turku, in Jyväskylä, in front of the Helsinki Olympic Stadium and at the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland.<ref name="HS 2009"/> In a widely publicized prank by students of the Helsinki University of Technology, a miniature copy of the statue was discovered in the 300-year-old wreck of the Swedish war ship Vasa when it was lifted from the bottom of the sea in 1961.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Statues of Nurmi were also sculpted by Renée Sintenis in 1926 and by Carl Eldh, whose 1937 work Löpare (Runners) depicts a battle between Nurmi and Edvin Wide.<ref name="SUT"/> Boken om Nurmi (The Book about Nurmi), released in Sweden in 1925, was the first biographical book on a Finnish sportsman.<ref name="SUT"/> Finnish astronomer Yrjö Väisälä named the main belt asteroid 1740 Paavo Nurmi after Nurmi in 1939,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> while Finnair named its first DC-8 Paavo Nurmi in 1969.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Nurmi's former rival Ville Ritola boarded the plane when he moved back to Finland in 1970.<ref name="SUT"/>
Paavo Nurmi Marathon, held annually since 1969, is the oldest marathon in Wisconsin and the second-oldest in the American Midwest.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In Finland, another marathon bearing the name has been held in Nurmi's hometown of Turku since 1992, along with the athletics competition Paavo Nurmi Games that was started in 1957.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Finlandia University, an American college with Finnish roots, named their athletic center after Nurmi.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> A ten-mark bill featuring a portrait of Nurmi was issued by the Bank of Finland in 1987.<ref name="Bank of Finland">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The other revised bills honored architect Alvar Aalto, composer Jean Sibelius, Enlightenment thinker Anders Chydenius and author Elias Lönnrot, respectively.<ref name="Bank of Finland"/> The Nurmi bill was replaced by a new 20-mark note featuring Väinö Linna in 1993.<ref name="Bank of Finland"/> In 1997, a historic stadium in Turku was renamed the Paavo Nurmi Stadium.<ref name="SUT"/> Twenty world records have been set at the stadium, including John Landy's records on the 1500 m and the mile, Nurmi's record on the 3000 m and Zátopek's record on the 10,000 m.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In fiction, Nurmi appears in William Goldman's 1974 novel Marathon Man as the idol of the protagonist, who aims to become a greater runner than Nurmi.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The opera on Nurmi, Paavo the Great. Great Race. Great Dream., written by Paavo Haavikko and composed by Tuomas Kantelinen, debuted at the Helsinki Olympic Stadium in 2000.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In a 2005 episode of The Simpsons, Mr. Burns brags that he once outraced Nurmi in his antique motorcar.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The NURMI Study, which aims to compare the athletic performance of vegetarian and vegan athletes to those with omnivorous diets, is named in honour of Paavo Nurmi.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Career summary (1920–34)Edit
SeasonsEdit
The starts figure excludes heats, handicap races, relays, and events where Nurmi raced alone against relay teams.
Season | Distances | Starts | Wins | Podiums | Template:Abbr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1920 | 1500 m – 10,000 mTemplate:Sfn | 14 | 13 | 14 | 0 |
1921 | 800 m – 10,000 mTemplate:Sfn | 17 | 15 | 16 | 0 |
1922 | 800 m – 4 milesTemplate:Sfn | 20 | 20 | 20 | 0 |
1923 | 800 m – 5000 mTemplate:Sfn | 23 | 23 | 23 | 0 |
1924 | 800 m – 10,000 mTemplate:Sfn | 25 | 25 | 25 | 0 |
1925 | 800 m – 10,000 mTemplate:Sfn | 58 | 56 | 57 | 1 |
1926 | 1000 m – 10,000 mTemplate:Sfn | 19 | 16 | 19 | 0 |
1927 | 1500 m – 5000 mTemplate:Sfn | 12 | 12 | 12 | 0 |
1928 | 1500 m – One hour runTemplate:Sfn | 15 | 12 | 15 | 0 |
1929 | Mile – 6 milesTemplate:Sfn | 14 | 12 | 14 | 0 |
1930 | 1500 m – 20,000 mTemplate:Sfn | 11 | 11 | 11 | 0 |
1931 | 2 miles – 7 milesTemplate:Sfn | 16 | 14 | 14 | 2 |
1932 | 10,000 m – MarathonTemplate:Sfn | 3 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
1933 | 1500 m – 25,000 mTemplate:Sfn | 16 | 13 | 15 | 1 |
1934 | 3000 m – 10,000 mTemplate:Sfn | 8 | 8 | 8 | 0 |
EventsEdit
The starts figure excludes heats, handicap races, relays, and events where Nurmi raced alone against relay teams.
Event | Years | Starts | Wins | Podiums | Template:Abbr |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
800 m / 880 yd | 1921–1925Template:Sfn | 8 | 6 | 8 | 0 |
1500 m | 1920–1933Template:Sfn | 33 | 30 | 32 | 0 |
Mile | 1920–1929Template:Sfn | 10 | 9 | 10 | 0 |
3000 m | 1920–1934Template:Sfn | 29 | 27 | 29 | 0 |
2 miles | 1922–1931Template:Sfn | 23 | 22 | 23 | 0 |
5000 m | 1920–1934Template:Sfn | 71 | 67 | 69 | 2 |
10,000 m | 1920–1934Template:Sfn | 17 | 17 | 17 | 0 |
Cross country | 1920–1934Template:Sfn | 23 | 23 | 23 | 0 |
OlympicsEdit
World recordsEdit
IAAF-ratifiedEdit
UnofficialEdit
See alsoEdit
- List of multiple Olympic gold medalists
- List of multiple Olympic gold medalists at a single Games
- List of multiple Olympic medalists
- List of multiple Summer Olympic medalists
- List of multiple Olympic medalists at a single Games
ReferencesEdit
BibliographyEdit
External linksEdit
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