I was pretty young in the late sixties. I remember hearing about marathon runners. Jim Fixx was all over the TV and magazines encouraging people to jog. That is until he fell over dead from a heart attack: While jogging. His death didn’t kill the sport. I never jogged. I’m a die-hard backpacker/hiker. I only run from bears.
I had completely forgotten that women were barred from the sport.
It seems completely unbelievable today. Why women were ever excluded is beyond my comprehension.
Switzer wasn’t the first woman to run the Marathon and complete it, however, just the first to register and compete “officially.” Bobbi Gibb ran the Boston Marathon without registering a year before in 1966, and also ran in 1967, beating Switzer by more than an hour. She’s recognized as the unofficial winner of the women’s race from 1966-1968.
There was a women’s 800 meter race at the 1928 Olympics. A description from the Olympic database tells of how that race led to women not being able to run distances longer than 200 meters in the Olympics until 1960.
I watched an interview with her on Monday after she finished - she did say that all the other male runners were very supportive of her. And her large boyfriend (number 390 in the picture) did body check Semple out of the way when he tried to grab her number.
I remember when women broke into not just marathons but running at all. People thought women’s uteri would fall out. Yep.
I also remember when girls had to wear skirts to public school which came to the exact middle of the knee. In my high school the girls’ competitive sports team was synchronized swimming (which is frankly harder than it looks). Or you could be a cheerleader I guess.
It doesn’t feel that long ago. I haven’t forgotten any of it.
I’m not surprised
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[li]We didn’t have 24 hour news back then[/li][li]Nobody died[/li][li]What she was doing was scandalous (:rolleyes:), to be swept under the rug & probably not celebrated.[/li][/ul]
I used to work for a Catholic academy for girls (high school). Our mail was delivered to the sisterhouse across from the school. One of the nuns would call over to say when it was there, and during the school year, it was a student office runner’s responsibility to pick it up. If there was a lot of mail, the sister would tell the school secretary to send two girls - why? Because lifting too much could ‘hurt your insides.’
During school recess, I was happy to go over and pick it up, and our secretary on more than one occasion was scolded for only sending over one ‘girl.’
And as funny as this sounds, I did find out in my old(er) age that for women, lifting heavy weight on a regular basis can, in fact, ‘hurt your insides,’ so there was at least a kernel of truth to it!
I suspect it’s not really hurting you in a way that men can’t be hurt, though. Maybe not by th exact same action, but it could be done.
I’ve definitely lifted something up and hurt my “insides” before. Felt kinda like being kicked in the crotch, but not as bad, and no pain on the outside.
So, here is a related question: Olympic cycling - why is there a difference between the men’s and women’s road race distances, as well as the men’s and women’s time trial? I get why they would not have a co-ed competition, but it’s not like the women cannot cover the same distance as the men and be competitive with each other. Anyone know?