Men's 800 Metres - London 2012 - A Special Race

In 2012, the summer Olympics came to London, United Kingdom. It was a special summer for sports lovers, and one event in particular still gives me goose bumps when I watch the race back again.

Those with some knowledge of London 2012 could be thinking that I'm going to talk about Mo Farah's gold medals in the 5000 and 10000 metres, or one of the indoor cycling events in which GB picked up 8 gold medals, but the most memorable race for me was won by someone who said he was going to do just that, and break his own world record in the process.


David Rudisha came to London 2012 with two goals in mind - the 800 m gold and a new world record. Training had apparently gone well for the event, and Rudisha was confident that if conditions were right, he would go close to his own world record.

The heats were a breeze as Rudisha won both of his without trouble. At 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in), his stride looked huge as he bounced off the track to make his way into the final.

Winning the race was clearly important for him, but much of the prior hype around the event was the possibility of breaking his own world record. If it was to be done in the final, it would be the first since Cuba's Alberto Juantorena took the 800 metre gold and WR in 1976.

World record attempts at middle distances usually happen when there is a pace setter in the event. On this occasion, with all 8 runners hoping to pick up a medal, there was no pace setter and so Rudisha chose to make his own pace. He led from the start, at the 400m and 600m split, and crossed the line in 1 min 40.91 seconds.

That alone was enough to make the race a memorable one, but as the times and comparisons started to come through for the other competitors, you knew that something special had taken place.

Rudisha finished five metres clear of Nijel Amos of Botswana who timed at 1:41.73 - a world junior record, national record, and Botswana's first ever Olympic medal in athletics.

Third was Kenyan Timothy Kitum woh took the the bronze in a personal best of 1:42.53.

The chart below quickly explains the depth of quality in the race as Rudisha 'pulled' the other athletes round to each set a record themselves.



source

Seven of the eight finalists set personal bests and the GB competitor Andrew Osagie who finished in last, crossed the line in a time that would have won him gold in the 2008 Olympic final.

David Rudisha not only won gold and broke his own world record (which still stands today), he inspired the 7 guys behind him and pushed them to levels they'd not seen before.

Watch the race, it is most awesome!

Cheers

Asher

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I barely have any recollection of this olympic games in 2012.
Glad you post about it and I am trying to recall one cool fact about it.
Actually I went to youtube and I saw some of the highlight of the open ceremony.
Got it!
Keep on postin

These games were so good! I am biased being British but there was so much to enjoy. Cheers :)

And that is why I'm proud to say I'm Kenyan :)

without the post the race would just be a race for me tbh with the build up...it is a RACE

A proper race!

5000 m is good but does unfold slowly, and 100 m is over too fast to get really into it.

What a legend though, from the front!

I couldn't agree more. With his great writing, I couldn't wait to watch it..and then that got me on YouTube and the 1980 Moscow Olympics and then.....I had to drag myself away from YT lol

Exactly what happened to me while trying to put the post together - I was off to the 2016 games to watch him win again!

It's like when you start watching a top goals of the month compilation, and then the next one starts, and the next one, and then 3 hours have passed :)

Excellent review @abh12345.sports and athletes from Kenya have always been strong participants in these competitions!

You mean athletes from my country ? Haha

Thank you very much @serkagan. The Kenyans are great middle/long distance runners!

Brilliant write-up again mate! There has always been something magical about the middle distances, perhaps starting for me as a kid in 1980 watching Coe and Ovett and their incredible rivalry and competitiveness at the Moscow Olympics.

I wasn't born then.....

I saved you the trouble of typing it yourself lol ;-)

Watch Ovett at about 400m basically push two other runners out of the way to make space for himself lol...brilliant :-)

It is a race I don't remember (being 2 at the time) but I've seen it a lot over the years and agree it is an epic battle.

Middle distances are great, I find I can't get into the sprints before they are over, and would prefer to tune into the marathons when the first breakaway happens - they can be boring until then.

Cheers!

That Olympics in London was great. It’s such a great city for events . Interesting race you picked . Most people go for the 100 or 200m. The 800m often gets overlooked

It was brilliant. Even more so for me as I had a wad on the number of golds GB would pick up - more on that in a post at some point :)

The sprints are over too fast, and the marathons can get a bit boring. Middle distance gives you time to get into the tactics of the race and really appreciate the running.

What do you think if Usain Bolt joined that 800 meter race?

I don't think he'd stay the distance and would rather see Rudisha take him on over 400 meters - that would be interesting!

I remember the Olympics in 2012 and this was a great race! Thanks for sharing your review.

It certainly was. Cheers.

Great post! Thanks for your great effort in creating a wonderful article which made the race alive once again.

Thank you very much @rokyupjung, that is a nice compliment! :D

Yeah right the race would be most awesome and enjoy able to watch also excellent review @abh12345.sports . thanks for sharing.

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