Her 35 medals representing Jamaica at major Games are the most that any athlete has ever won with 9 of these gold including the 200m in both 1993 and 1995 in Stuttgart and Gothenburg. Her 9 Olympic medals are the most any female athlete has ever won but gold eluded her by 1000th of a […]
*TFT Rewind No. 48 – Merlene Ottey
*T&FT Rewind No. 47 – Daley Thompson
Having won the Decathlon at the 1980 Olympics in Moscow Daley defended his title in Los Angeles in 1984 with a WR score of 8847 points. From 1978 – 1986 he won 8 major titles and was the most complete multi-event athlete of his time – and a good whistler at medal ceremonies too! Click […]
*T&FT Rewind No. 46 – Emil Zatopek
*T&FT Rewind No. 46 – Emil Zatopek The golds he won in the 5,000m, 10,000m & Marathon (his debut) all in Olympic records in Helsinki in 1952 confirmed Emil Zatopek’s status as an all time great. He had won the 10,000m gold and 5,000m silver in London in 1948 and held both these distances world […]
*T&FT Rewind No. 45 – David Hemery
The totally dominant and elegant gold medal and 400m H WR performance of David Hemery in Mexico in 1968 with the excited commentary of the BBC’s David Coleman with his “Who cares who’s third” line – when, of course, it was GB’s John Sherwood finishing strongly that won the bronze medal! Click image for video […]
*T&FT Rewind No. 44 – Carolina Kluft
Carolina Kluft won 9 consecutive gold medals at all the major Olympic, World & European multi-events both outdoors and indoors that she competed in from 2002-2007 a remarkable consistency that many consider makes her the greatest ever female multi-event athlete. This fascinating mini-doc captures the moment when it all started – to our many Swedish […]
*T&FT Rewind No. 43 – Linford Christie
This compilation of Linford’s 100m career from 1986 European champion through to 1996 in Atlanta includes the highlights of his 1992 Olympic victory in Barcelona and emphatic gold medal winning performance in the 1993 Stuttgart World Champs: with relay and 200m medals Britain’s most successful ever male sprinter. Click on image for video clip
*T&FT Rewind No. 42 – Renaud Lavillenie
An effusive appreciation of the great French pole vaulter Renaud Lavillenie by the equally successful and prodigious Sergey Bubka, whose world records Renaud succeeded – his 6.16m indoor record was actually achieved in Sergey’s home town of Ukraine which is certainly an emphatic way of making your point to your predecessor! Click image for video […]
*T&FT Rewind No. 41 – Liz Nuttall (McColgan)
Liz’s determined front running triumph in the difficult humid conditions of the Tokyo 1991 World Champs epitomized her no nonsense style. This had brought her multi-medal success on the track and at cross country before she later took to the roads winning the World 1/2 Marathon Champs and the 1996 London Marathon. Click image for […]
*T&FT Rewind No. 40 – Cathy Freeman
The never to be forgotten night at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games when thousands of sparkling flashbulbs tracked Cathy Freeman’s every lithesome stride, with her seemingly detached in her one piece kit as if in a trance, but focused in that moment of immense national expectation to deliver the gold – as only great champions […]
*T&FT Rewind No. 39 – Dina Asher Smith
With her 200m victory at the Doha 2019 World Championships Dina Asher Smith won GBR’s first ever women’s global sprint title setting a new national record of 21.88 secs This followed her 10.83 secs 100m Silver medal and later she won another Silver in the 4 x 100m mining further riches from the Qatari sheikdom. […]
*T&FT Rewind No. 38 – Hicham El Guerrouj
The Moroccan middle distance star was favourite to win the 1500m in 1996 and 2000 yet failed to do so but then won Athens in 2004 with an incredible sub 1′ 47″ last 800m. He then went on to win the 5000m to complete his incredible career as a double Olympic champion. Click image for […]
T&FT Rewind No. 37 – Abrahams & Liddell
The Paris 1924 Olympics saw both Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell triumph unexpectedly in the 100m and 400m events to later be immortalised in the film “Chariots of Fire”. Abrahams went on to become an institution within British Athletics as an administrator but the more self effacing Liddell died as a missionary in a Japanese […]