Summer Learning Journey!
Bonus Activity - The Three Rs - Rugby, Racing and
Running.
Greetings
Welcome back to my blog.
So in this activity it will be a bonus activity with about 14 points and I am so excited to start so in the year 1960's sports in New Zealand was dominated by the three R's which was Rugby,Racing and Running.The New Zealand national rugby team the All Blacks had a great decade of winning 36 of the 40 games that they had played.Many Kiwis also spent their week-ends at the local racetrack and in 1960 a man by the name of Peter Snell won a gold medal in the 800m race at the Olympic games in the Rome,Italy.So in this activity we had to read information about Peter Snell and then
create a one-page poster of Peter along with information
about his interests and other sporting accomplishments.
Here is what I had to read about Peter Snell.
Peter George Snell, (born December 17, 1938, Opunake, New Zealand), New Zealand
middle-distance runner, who was a world-record holder in the 800-metre race (1962–68), the
1,000-metre race (1964–65), the mile (1962–65), and the 880-yard race (1962–66) and, as a
team member, in the 4 × 1-mile relay race (1961).
After graduating from Mount Albert Grammar School (Auckland), Snell trained under Arthur
Lydiard, who stressed running long distances in training to build endurance. He burst onto
the international scene at the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome: the 800-metre race was
supposed to be a showdown between Roger Moens of Belgium, the world-record holder,
and George Kerr of Jamaica, but Snell shocked the field by charging past Moens in the last
25 metres to win by two-tenths of a second. In 1962 Snell set the 800-metre world record (1
min 44.3 sec), the world record for the 880-yard race (1 min 45.1 sec), and the world record
for the mile (3 min 54.4 sec), which he lowered in 1964 (3 min 54.1 sec).
At the 1964 Olympic Games in Tokyo, Snell won the gold medals in both the 800- and
1,500-metre races—a rare feat. In the finals of the 800, finding himself boxed in against the
rail with 250 metres to go, Snell dropped back to maneuver around the field before passing
the leader, Kenyan Wilson Kiprugut, to win with a time (1 min 45.1 sec) bested only by his
own world record. By the time he reached the finals of the 1,500-metre run, Snell was
running his sixth race in eight days. With a lap to go, Snell was once again boxed in. This
time, however, he simply raised his arm, and England’s John Whetton gave him room to
move. Snell broke free from the pack and cruised to his second gold medal of the 1964
Games.
In 1965 Snell retired from competitive racing; his autobiography, No Bugles, No Drums, was
published that year. He subsequently began a career in sports physiology, earning degrees
at the University of California at Davis (B.S.) and Washington State University (Ph.D.), and in
1981 he joined the staff at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas.
Snell was awarded the Member of the British Empire (MBE) in 1962.
Hope you enjoy reading now it is time for me to show my poster that I made with google drawing with some 3 interesting facts about him.
Here is my google drawing.
Feel free to take a look but don't forget to COMMENT below!.
IALT:create a poster about Peter Snell.
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