Kenneth McArthur
From WikiRun
| Kenneth McArthur | |
| Height | 6'2" (188 cm) |
|---|---|
| Weight | 170 lbs (77 kg) |
| Nationality | South Africa |
| PR | Mar - 2:36:55 (1912) |
| Born | February 10, 1882 at Dervock, Antrim, Northern Ireland, Great Britain |
| Died | June 13, 1960 at Potchefstroom, North West, South Africa |
Kennedy Kane "Kenneth" McArthur (1882-1912) is a South African marathon runner who won the gold medal at the 1912 Summer Olympics.
Born in Dervock, County Antrim, Ireland, Kenneth McArthur was recognised as a promising athlete as a teenager, but he didn't pursue an athletics career until after emigrating to South Africa in 1901 at the age of 20.
After joining the Johannesburg Police Force in 1906, McArthur begun to take athletics seriously. Soon he had won the Transvaal half and one mile championships, the five mile track championship and also two national cross country championships. McArthur ran his first marathon late in the 1908 season, and surprisingly beat the Olympic silver medalist Charles Hefferon. He also won the national one and ten mile championships.
The 1912 Stockholm Olympic marathon took place in sweltering heat. McArthur and his South African teammate Christian Gitsham ran together and soon took the lead. Confident of victory, Gitsham stopped for water, expecting his colleague to join him, as agreed. Instead McArthur ran on, stretching his lead and taking him to certain victory over Gitsham by 58 seconds.
In the next season, McArthur injured his foot in an accident and was forced to retire from athletics. He ran six marathon races (including the Olympic marathon) throughout his career and never lost one.
External links
|
|||||