
It was a damp overcast day in August, and the clocks were striking seven thirty. Paula Radcliffe, her heart pounding, her foot inching towards the start line, though not quickly enough to prevent an abundance of self doubt from swirling within. On the side of Tianmen Square, opposite the start line, the poster with the enormous face gazed from the wall. It was one of those pictures that are so contrived that the eyes follow you about when you move. YOUR LEGACY IS WATCHING YOU, the caption could have read beneath it.
Despite setting 10 world records and being arguably the greatest female marathon runner of all time it is the Olympic Games that will define Paula Radcliffe’s running legacy in her eyes and those of the great British public. Beijing is Radcliffe’s fourth and, now aged 34, probably final attempt at Olympic gold. A hugely talented track runner Radcliffe lacked a kick finish which repeatedly let her down at the medal end of a 5,000 or 10,000 metre race. Switching to the marathon Radcliffe proved unbeatable and world record setting: until she arrived in Athens, 2004. Pulling out of the marathon with dehydration and later the 10,000 metres, accusations were levelled that Paula choked. It seemed that she was destined never to win the Olympic gold that she so craved.
As the face of the weakest British athletics team in living memory and with a chunk of Nike’s UK Olympic marketing budget invested in her spindly frame the pressure has never been greater. Unfortunately for Paula her body has never been weaker. Still recovering from a stress fracture of her leg and with a lack of training miles under her belt she is candid about her fitness, "If it was a big city marathon or even a World Championships (I'd say) do not push it, make sure I was well prepared. But I do not want to sit there watching it wondering what could have happened." Her courage can not be questioned. As her every move is watched in the streets of Beijing, Radcliffe will enter her own Room 101, the place where she will confront her greatest fear; her Olympic legacy. Whatever happens in Beijing Radcliffe deserves to be able to sit in the Chestnut Tree CafĂ©, the struggle over, with the victory over herself won, her place in the pantheon of sporting greats assured.
You can admire Michael Phelps and his inevitably remarkable 8 gold medals but the men’s 100 metres is the blue riband event of the Olympics. It always has been. History reveals a roll call of Olympic greats; Abrahams, Owens, Lewis, Christie, Greene. To that illustrious company is added Bolt, Usain Bolt. Bolt by name, lightning by nature.
It was billed as a showdown between the three fastest men in history at the peak of their careers but it never materialised. Tyson Gay fell by the wayside in his semi final and Asafa Powell lived up only to his Olympic record by finishing fifth. There may have been five other people that finished the final in less than 10 seconds but only Usain Bolt started his warm down with 20 metres to go confident in the knowledge that the gold was his. From first heat to final tape it was a simply outrageous piece of running. Let us hope that no amount of laboratory work deep inside the Ministry of Truth will cause history to be rewritten and alter the authenticity of what we were privileged to witness in the Bird’s Nest.
DS





