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Nationality | England | ||||||||||||||
Born | 11 November 1941 Coventry | ||||||||||||||
Medal record
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William Arthur Adcocks (born 11 November 1941, in Coventry) is a British former long-distance runner who competed in the 1968 Summer Olympics. [1]
He was introduced to athletics at his primary and secondary schools – at secondary school he competed in both cross-country and track and field. [2] He started at school at the age of 12. [3]
He works as an information officer for UK Athletics. [4]
He wrote a book about his marathon performance in Greece in a book titled "The Road to Athens". ( ISBN 0954789601) [5] He was invited to start the Athens Classic Marathon in 2002. [6]
He joined the Coventry Godiva Harriers at the age of fourteen. [2]
In 1964, he ran his first marathon, in Port Talbot, finishing second in a time of 2:19:29. [2]
In 1965, he won the Amateur Athletic Association of England title in the marathon, held in Port Talbot, beating nearest rival Brian Kilby by over 40 seconds. [7]
In 1966, he represented England and won silver medal in the Commonwealth Games marathon, finishing 5 seconds behind Scotland's Jim Alder. [8] [9] [10] [11]
In 1968, he competed in the marathon at the Olympics, finishing in fifth. [12] He also medalled for a second and final time at the AAA Marathon Championships in Cwmbran, losing out on the title by 15 seconds. [7] Later that year he ran his personal best for the marathon distance while winning at the Fukuoka Marathon, running 2:10:48, a time which was just a minute outside the world record (which had been set on the same course a year previously) at the time, and was a new European record. [13] [14] He is the only Briton to have won the Fukuoka Marathon. [15]
In 1969, he ran in the Athens Classic Marathon, which is run over the same course as the original marathon run by Pheidippides. [16] He set a course record, clocking 2:11:07, which was not broken until 2004, when Stefano Baldini broke the record. [14] [17] [18] He also raced in the CAU (Counties Athletics Union) 20 Miles Championships, winning the title. [19]
In 1970, he won the Midland Counties 10,000 metres title. [20] He also won the Lake Biwa Marathon that year, setting a new course record in 2:13:46. [21] [22] He represented England in the marathon, at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, Scotland. [23] [24]
In 1972, he won the CAU 20 Miles Championships again, running 1:39:01, setting a British record. [19] He currently holds the 20 miles British National, British Domestic and British All-Comers record for times set during a race over that distance, although faster intermediate marks have been set in races over longer distances. [25] [26] [27] [28]
Adcocks ran 10 marathons under 2:20. In 17 total marathons, he won 5 times and placed second 5 times.
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