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Donie Walsh - 1971 European Championships 10,000m Recalled - Guest Article by John Walshe

John Walshe recalls Donie Walsh's Run in the 1971 European Championships 10,000m

This article, by John Walshe, appeared on EchoLive! website, on Tuesday August 10th 2021

 

donie walsh echo tues aug 10th 2021Donie Walsh in action at the 1971 European Championships in Helsinki

 

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Leevale’s Walsh recalls the part he played in one of the very best races of all time

This article, by John Walshe, appeared on EchoLive! website, on Tuesday August 10th 2021

 

Regarded as ‘the best race I’ve ever seen in my life’ by former BBC commentator and Olympic medallist Brendan Foster, the 10,000m at the European Championships of 1971 was truly an epic affair

Held exactly 50 years ago – on Tuesday August 10 – it was the final event on the opening day of the 10th European Games held before a crowd of 70,000 in Helsinki’s Olympic Stadium

It gave the partisan Finnish crowd, starved of distance success for so long, a night to remember as Juha Vaatainen ran an incredible last lap to win in a championship and Finnish record of 27:52.78

The race also provided Corkman Donie Walsh with an Irish best for the distance which, somewhat surprisingly for a man who won a total of 16 national titles on track, road and country, was his sole national record

The odds-on favourite leading up to Helsinki was the six-foot tall British runner Dave Bedford, his distinctive long hair and drooping moustache matched by the famous red socks he always wore

The previous month, on a sun-scorched afternoon at Portsmouth and despite badly blistered feet, he had established a European record of 27:47.0 for 10,000m, the second fastest ever recorded over the distance

Bedford knew only one way to run, and that was from the front. At 5000m, reached in 13:54.4, he tried to drop his pursuers but to no avail. With a lap to go a group of five were still together and with 300m left Vaatainen and Jurgen Haase of East Germany kicked past Bedford and the home fans went wild

The Finn covered the final lap in 53.9 (with the final 200m in 26 seconds) to cross the line in a time of 27:52.78

Hasse was second in 27:53.35, Rashid Sharafetdinov of the Soviet Union third in 27:56.26 as the first five set national records. Bedford had to settle for sixth in 28:04.33. As Vaatainen was swept off his feet by the ecstatic Finnish fans, Leevale’s Donie Walsh was heading out on his final circuit enroute to an Irish record of 28:52.60

In the lead up to the Europeans, the Corkman was in fine form. He won the national 10,000m in 29:34.2, turning a last lap deficit of 15 yards into a winning margin of 20 yards over Fr Paddy Coyle

He finished first over 5000m in an international match in Spain, along with victories over the same distance at the Cork City Sports and Clonliffe International (PB of 14:02.6)

A half-century on from that unforgettable night, Walsh – now a highly successful coach at his beloved Leevale – looks back with fond memories. “The atmosphere there was incredible; the only other place I could compare would be Eugene in Oregon where I ran the NCAA championships

“I was happy with my run; it was good to run the European Championships to give you the experience more than anything else. It was an Irish record which was broken by Neil Cusack the following year.”

Two days later, Walsh was back on the track for the heats of the 5000m where he again was up against Vaatainen

Donie led through 800m in 2:24 before eventually finishing 11th in 14:12.6

The Finnish runner would go on to make it double gold when winning the final in another championship and national record of 13:32.48

In between the 10,000m final and 5000m heats, the Corkman also helped the disappointed Bedford to drown his sorrows, as he recalls: “After the 10,000m myself and Bedford went off out for a few scoops. Bedford was a real athletes athlete, the same as Steve Prefontaine was an athletes athlete

“They went out and they ran, and if you were better than them you beat them on the day

"They only knew one way to run, go out and run everyone into the ground. If you were able to stay then you could stay and if you can’t you can’t.” Walsh was 21st of the 33 finishers that night in Helsinki and four places ahead of him was another Finnish athlete, Lasse Viren

Twelve months later Viren would carve his own place in athletics history when emulating his countryman by winning the 5000m and 10,000m at the Munich Olympics

It’s also worth noting the man who finished 33rd and last that night

A 24-year-old Portuguese named Carlos Lopes could only manage a time of 30:05.64 – 13 years later he would take marathon gold on that memorable night at the Los Angeles Olympics ahead of John Treacy

Proving that in sport, on occasion, the Biblical phase of ‘the last will be first’ can certainly ring true

 
Additional Info from Cork Athletics

 

european 10000m championships 1971a

Dave Bedford leads the large field in the early stages. Fromm (208) and Tuominen
follow, with Gaston Roelants (30) and Mariano Haro (590) on the outside

Results of European Championships 10,000m 1971

PosAthleteNationalityTimeNotes
1 Juha Vaatainen Finland 27:52.78 CR NR
2 Jurgen Haase East Germany 27:53.35 NR
3 Rashid Sharafetdinov Soviet Union 27:56.26 NR
4 Danijel Korica Yugoslavia 27:58.38 NR
5 Mariano Haro Spain 27:58.33 NR
6 Dave Bedford Great Britain 28:04.33  
7 Mike Tagg Great Britain 28:14.65  
8 Seppo Tuominen Finland 28:17.88  
9 Manfred Letzerich West Germany 28:20.81 NR
10 Noel Tnou France 28:21.65  
11 Werner Dossegger Switzerland 28:22.88 NR
12 Lucien Rault France 28:23.11  
13 Jack Lane Great Britain 28:24.01  
14 Arne Risa Norway 28:24.41 NR
15 Joachim Krebs East Germany 28:26.67  
16 Karel Lismont Belgium 28:31.17  
17 Lasse Viren Finland 28:33.12  
18 Nikolay Sviridov Soviet Union 28:41.08  
19 Josef Jansky Czechoslovakia 28:43.08 NR
20 Rene Jourdan France 28:46.08  
21 Donald Walsh Ireland 28:52.60 NR
22 Edward Mleczko Poland 28:55.73  
23 Henryk Piotrowski Poland 28:01.68  
24 Eckhard Lesse East Germany 28:02.53  
25 Janos Szerenyi Hungary 28:03.83  
26 Lajos Mecser Hungary 28:07.48  
27 Giuseppe Cindolo Italy 28:13.65  
28 Jens Wollenberg West Germany 28:25.41  
29 Per Halle Norway 28:32.25  
30 Josef Wirth Switzerland 28:33.71  
31 Egbert Nijstadt Netherlands 28:48.08  
32 Deter Brand West Germany 28:58.28  
33 Carlos Lopes Portugal 30:05.64  
  Gaston Roelants Belgium DNF  
  Nedo Farcic Yugoslavia DNF  

 

Video of Men's 10,000m

 

 

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