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Arch Jelley on growing up in Dunedin in the 1920s. || Runners Only! Podcast with Dom Harvey

October 17, 202252:35
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[Music]
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[Music]
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Runners only with dom Harvey and I'm
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sitting in the Retirement Village unit
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with the legion himself Arch jelly who's
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just gone away from the microphone he's
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just finished a cup of tea he's in the
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kitchen he's coming back around no roast
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mate no rush
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don't run
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this guy is incredible uh one in New
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Zealand's finest coaches ever uh 99
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years old when do you turn when do you
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turn 100 Arch jelly uh August if I make
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it what do you mean if you make it of
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course you're gonna make it you're
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looking incredible oh I'm okay yeah yeah
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I was um thinking about about you on the
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drive-in today and what you've been
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through so you were born in Dunedin in
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1922 you you your mum and dad they made
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you after your dad returned from
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Gallipoli that's correct
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um then they there was the Spanish Flu
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which they survived just before you came
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along and then in your own lifetime you
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went to World War II you lived through
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the Great Depression and now the the
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pandemic the covert pandemic how has the
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covert pandemic compared to all the
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other things you've been through
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well it hasn't affected us uh to any
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extent really because we're in The
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Fairly uh sheltered environment here in
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the village so it's uh it's you know cut
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down a bit on social activities but
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apart from it it's you know we're okay
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yeah do you do you remember much about
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being eight years old during the Great
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Depression
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I certainly do yeah what do you remember
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from that well uh my father had a
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struggling business and there was no
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help from the government for people who
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lived in towns and uh but uh we were
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we didn't uh we we did it it was
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difficult for my mother to make ends
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meet but we didn't think we would
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deprived anything like that we just uh
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we were pretty uh uh concerted family
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unit and uh how did how did you end up
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going to the you went to the war right
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you went to World War II uh yeah so I
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played a a very minor role in World War
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II uh
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I was working at the uh when I was about
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18 17 18 I was working in the survey
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Department in Dunedin and then I think
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at 18 or 19 we were conscripted into the
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uh into the army and and then my friend
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and I we decided to apply for uh to join
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the Navy
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and uh so we we joined what was called
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uh scheme B and that was for people who
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had possibly the potential to become
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officers in the Navy and we and so after
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a further few months in the uh Army I
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received a call up from the Navy where
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were you sent to for World War II we
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trained in England
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right with um Chase first of all thank
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you for what you've done for our country
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oh no as I said I I was uh
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I trained for three months in England in
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the Navy and then I was an ordinary
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seaman which is the lowest form of
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animal life and uh and then I was uh
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second to uh a cruiser I knew he said
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the Russian convo I better not say that
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now I went on the attic Convoy and then
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and we were very lucky we were no uh we
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we went via Iceland picked up the Convoy
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and went up to uh the Kohler Inlet and
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it was very bad weather in the in winter
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this was November December yes and we
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were sure in Kohler and uh with all
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sorts of uh cold uh attic gear and all
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this sort of stuff and then we came back
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and we were lucky again and we the
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weather was bad and overcome past and
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the German U-boats and and planes were
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hardly sighted us and we got through and
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so all convoyed into and then or if
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you're if your conducts were considered
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okay you were I went to King Alfred at
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Brighton and that was the Officers
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Training court and I went there and and
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then most of us most of the new
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zealanders got through and were
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commissioned as acting no temporary
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acting supplements
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and then you had to say what branch of
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the service you wanted to serve in for
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some unusual reason which I've never
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been able to Fathom uh I opted for a
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submarine service oh I don't know why I
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would never do it now oh why would you
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never do it now
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ah because it's too hazardous really
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even in peacetime you know boats get
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sunk and that sort of thing and then I
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was sent up north up north of Newcastle
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to blinds and and then the submarine
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course there and then then I was then I
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was on Coastal submarines for the rest
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of the war going even going in a
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submarine is something that most of us
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will never get to experience in our
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lives what's it what's it like being on
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a submarine how long are you under the
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water for do you get claustrophobic well
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when you run the submarine uh we just
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thought we were very privileged more or
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less and we never sort of you don't
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think of the day you're just sort of
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doing your job I was the uh either the
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Navigator or the Gunnery officer yeah
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well so what was the longest period of
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time that you were like submerged under
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the water in a submarine well the
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British
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submarines didn't have the snorkels so
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they could only uh there's only they
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could only stay under for a limited time
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okay um for a young man from New Zealand
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and a perverse way did it sort of feel
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like a sense of adventure we never
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really he just thought about doing the
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job really and he sort of enjoyed it but
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he didn't you never sort of realized you
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know the danger of it or anything like
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that and um so then you come back to New
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Zealand's post-war is is that when you
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started running
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no I started uh running at a very very
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early age and we used to we lived about
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three quarters of a mile from the school
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and uh we used to walk or run up to
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school at lunch hour we used to run back
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and have dinner and then then run back
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and uh so I was always a bit of a uh you
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know a runner and
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when I joined the survey Department I I
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was in the Methodist Church and the
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Bible class and sometimes said why don't
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you come and run in the uh in the uh
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Harry the Bible class run so I thought
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oh I will so I did and I won this race
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you say and even though I hadn't done
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any training but
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uh when I used to go down to work I if I
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missed the cable car I'd often run down
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to work and you know beat the cable car
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and naturally that's all the training
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I've done and so from that point on I
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became a runner at the junior level and
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I had a bit of success and uh and then I
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uh and then I was you know in the Army
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and in the Navy and when I when I got
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back uh from the war I came back with my
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elder brother who was in the fleet era
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uh we met the we we arrived in I think
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it was Christchurch first and uh uh
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we're talking to this young fellow and
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he he seemed to know a fair bit about
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our family and uh I said to my older
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brother uh who is this young fellow that
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you know knows all about our family
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and uh my brother said Jesus Christ
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that's that's your brother Stan he was
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only a small Schoolboy when I went away
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and he's sort of an adult didn't
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recognize him yeah and when I got back I
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rejoined the Mornington Harrier Club I
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was never a coach but I was a sort of a
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an organizer and I think being in the
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Navy and the commissioned capacity oh I
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was more confident that I'd been and so
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I I organized the club and and the
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runners in the club and we had we worked
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out what we what we called locality
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training and that was at all different
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parts of Dunedin the guys in our club
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did this special training that I set out
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and we uh and even though we were a film
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uh week club we we won quite a few teams
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races that's what I think and that's
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that's when I sort of started sort of
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coaching not exactly yeah now there's um
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I mean your coaching career is
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absolutely incredible and we're
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definitely getting to that soon but
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first of all I want to clear up a rumor
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that I heard about you I heard that you
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you were you were a very good runner
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yourself and yeah it's reasonable well
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this may be true or this may not be true
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but you can clarify this but I heard
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that you could have potentially made it
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to the Commonwealth Games or Empire
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games as they were called then but
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instead you went to Australia to chase a
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lady
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oh there's a bit of Truth in that yes I
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did go over to Australia and uh and came
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back uh
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empty-handed
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but I really yeah I really wasn't uh in
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the shape to qualify
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and this I'd put in a lot of training
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over seven I hadn't done that I was a
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sole charge teacher in the country yeah
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Jesus well I'm guessing was this
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pre-aviation so you would have had to
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get the did you get the boat to
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Australia flying boat a flying boat yeah
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what's that what's a flying boat oh you
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know the lands on the water on floats
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wow for an international flight I've
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seen I've seen them before I've been in
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one language this was a big one yeah
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yeah quite big Jesus how much can you
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remember how much it cost I'm guessing
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air travel I wouldn't have a clue yeah
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yeah she's not a good investment though
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you didn't get the girl so
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um okay just as well actually yeah well
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everything works out for a reason
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doesn't it so then you you come back and
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you start coaching and um this is before
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high performance sport New Zealand so
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there's no money in it this is just a
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it's just now well I was in the country
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then uh uh an in Soul Child school you
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know when I was in Dunedin I uh applied
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for a job uh uh the New Year's Soul
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charge school to Dunedin
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uh and I finished up 50 miles from
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wanganui on a sheep farm and then I ran
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for the Martin club uh no I didn't do
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any coaching in that club really yeah so
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yes you're like a career principal
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through your life that's how you that's
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how you made your bread and butter
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um but you just so you just sort of did
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coaching just sort of for fun or just
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because you sort of oh it was just quite
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good at it just my hobby really I just
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not like doing it right so when um when
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did you and John Walker meet when when
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did that I was in Wellington for about
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five years then I came to uh uh I came
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to Auckland in 37 on uh January 57 and
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uh and I I think in 59 I joined up with
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Oracle club right and uh and when I
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joined up there I was uh I'd always been
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you know either the club champion or or
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just about the club champion anything
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and I found I found that I wasn't even
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top six you know who was who was ahead
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of you can you remember the names yes
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there's one or two names you might have
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heard before like Peter Snell and Mary
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hellberg great packet Jeff Julian Etc so
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did you did you meet Arthur Lydia at
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that time oh yeah yeah yeah we never
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discussed running at any stage is that
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so uh never why not
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oh I don't know no no well he uh Arthur
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and I were feeling different types right
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yeah but uh let's see
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yeah well I didn't start coaching I
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could see though that Arthur's methods
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were you were very very good and uh
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basically so I took you know careful
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note of this and I did think at one
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stage of it might be a bit bumptious but
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I thought well um if a guy like a Hasa
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can do it I'm pretty sure I can too
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so
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but so I was uh or the club captain and
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a handicapper and goodness knows what
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and I was all I was the organizer of the
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Oracle cross-country races over at uh
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hobsonville that was about oh probably
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about 19 uh probably not in about 1970
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or 69 something like that then right
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after one of the junior races this uh
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tall lanky chap came up to me and he
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said my name's John Walker I said oh
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yeah he said I got beaten today I said
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well and that's what most people could
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be and
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he said well that's the first time I've
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ever been meeting in the cross country
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race I said all right I said well the
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chapter beat you it was a tap called
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McRae I said he does he's trained by Don
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mcfarqua and he's running about 90 miles
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a week wow
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and I said you know how much you know
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what sort of training do you do and he
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said well
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I don't do any training you know I just
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race on Saturdays
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so I gave him how old was John at the
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time
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it'd be about 18. right so us U.S first
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coach
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uh do you have any coaching before that
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or was it just sort of oh well I gave
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him a six-week schedule yeah and uh and
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he won the uh Auckland Junior cross
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country then he went down to uh
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parapuram for the national lead for the
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first mile then blew up
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and uh and I think I yeah I continued
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coaching him but then I I remember at
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once said somebody uh from uh I think
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was one of the journalists Raymond they
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said are you and do you still coach John
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I said I think so and he said well he
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said well uh
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so-and-so says that he is and I said oh
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well if if he's been coached by someone
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else I'll pull out so I pulled out
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and then later on John ran in the
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uh when he turned senior I think it was
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19 then Senior he ran into New Zealand
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uh uh championships 800 meters and uh
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you made the final but finished last in
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the final
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and then uh in about what you would be
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probably in about August or September
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1971 uh he uh approached me and said
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would I you know coach him probably back
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yeah okay yeah was it was it was it a
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sort of a case of um eating a bit of
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humble pie oh I don't know I'm not sure
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I never I never looked at it like that
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yeah
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but like Graham Douglas my old friend
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from India he said that my reaction was
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that I said I'll consider it but I don't
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know if that's true really yeah but I I
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said I would and
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uh and then he uh he he said he enjoys
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it John has always been a bit of a uh I
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won't say American but he you know
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really one of the boys and uh he he said
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I'm you know prepared to try and do
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everything possible to get the best out
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of herself
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so uh he started training and uh and he
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I thought he was okay I had no idea that
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he'd possibly be uh uh a worldbury or
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anything like that is that right so not
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not a huge amount of natural Talent
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would you say you know you get you get
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these very promising guys and they're
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good but you know they're never going to
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be well booted and then
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uh on the uh January the 1st 19
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72 he he was down at Tauranga watching
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right he'd done his training uh in the
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morning and he was down there watching
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and they said why don't you run against
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dick quacks in the 800 and he and John
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said oh well you know uh I've had my
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training and I haven't got my gear
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generate I talked him into it and gave
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him some borrowed gear and he ran and uh
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and he beat dick and uh he uh uh did a
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PB
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and because it's In fairness to Dick of
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course that's not dick was the top
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runner in New Zealand at the time but
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that's not Dick's distance at all so but
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I was pretty impressed and
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I wrote to the uh New Zealand selectors
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and said uh I've got a we've got a guy
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up here uh his big his name's John
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Walker he's big he's strong he's fast
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and and I think he's got the potential
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to erase the name of Peter Snell from
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the record book it's a big call yeah
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it's big call let's maybe you were that
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confident yep yeah yeah and uh and I
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sent this letter to the uh I think it's
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called The Evening Post in Wellington
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and uh Dominion maybe the Dominion or no
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uh maybe An Evening Post Yeah I think it
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was called the sports paper generally I
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I won the prize for the best letter of
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the of the week and they sent me uh at
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Union ticket which of course didn't win
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uh what sorry don't call it an art Union
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what's that like a lotto ticket okay was
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this free golden kiwi I think you
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remember the golden kid okay well uh
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idiot yeah so uh and then John went on
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to uh
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he went he went to Hamilton for New
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Zealand Champs and uh and won the 800
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easily after that he did a trial for the
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Olympic uh for the Olympics for the 72
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Olympics and uh who was the beat him uh
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skip Hunter the uh you know all black
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Winger really yeah he was also a New
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Zealand 800 meter Champion very good
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runner and and John ran a very uh poor
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tactical race and uh and he beat him so
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neither of them went to the Olympics
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that's a that's a well thank you so much
00:18:39
for the history lesson today skip Hunter
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I mean
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yeah and all black that's um you know
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top level 800 meter right now he was an
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excellent Runner yeah I mean it's you
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could believe a an all black would be a
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good Sprinter like uh you know there's
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been some particularly fast Wingers over
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the years but 800 meters it's a tricky
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distance yeah he was a good Sprinter too
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yeah so okay so what happened between
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1972 when John missed out on the
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Olympics in 1976 where we're going to
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get to this Zone yeah John was uh
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selected I'm not sure what the title was
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but they went out uh uh I'm not sure
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exactly where the venue was but they
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went up and I thought it would be 73.
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John was selected to run in the uh B
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grade Mile and he was a bit insulted by
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that he thought he should be in the a
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grade with you know Dixon and quacks and
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that sort of thing and uh and he and he
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made some rather oh he he made a few
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remarks which quacks didn't like and and
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uh and Nick what like can you remember
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what they were no no but I can remember
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what dick said well yeah what did Dick
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say dick said uh Walker you'll never
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make a runner's
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[Laughter]
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and and so John ran into B grade and and
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ran ran a sub ran about 348
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and it hadn't really run a mile
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seriously before and uh but but then
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after that dick
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in particular Enron they were very very
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good to John and they took him on this
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uh tour of Europe and that was 1973
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right and uh
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and that of course they were a fairly
00:20:27
big mileage man and they handled it
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quite well and and John was founded very
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very difficult but without uh Dick's
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help he would never have got into the
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race at all but he had no uh
00:20:41
credentials really so he you know we're
00:20:45
very grateful for dick for what he did
00:20:47
for John and John he did I'm not sure if
00:20:51
he won many races but he he brought his
00:20:53
times down and he he ran 338 for 1500
00:20:57
meters so which was you know not great
00:21:01
but I mean I don't know well I mean it
00:21:03
was a long way out of the top so he came
00:21:08
back to New Zealand absolutely exhausted
00:21:10
but it would have been a good experience
00:21:12
right just made him faster and stronger
00:21:14
yeah so at that point were you were you
00:21:16
also coaching um dick quacks and no no
00:21:19
no no no never coasted earthquake
00:21:23
not really I I helped him for a while
00:21:26
but his his real Coach was his brother
00:21:28
John right he did a great job yeah let's
00:21:31
go to the um 1976 Montreal um Olympics
00:21:34
what about are you going to miss 74.
00:21:35
what's 74. come north guys come games
00:21:39
yeah okay so the 1974 Commonwealth Games
00:21:41
where were they Christchurch
00:21:43
Christchurch the crisis my dad's right
00:21:45
I'll win uh John was running all right
00:21:48
he had done and done some good training
00:21:50
and uh he uh uh I wanted him selected in
00:21:55
the 800 and 1500 and uh Arthur Legend
00:21:58
said no that's a mistake he should just
00:22:00
concentrate it on the 800 because the
00:22:04
top uh 1500 meter runs were Rod Dixon
00:22:08
who was you know sued at Munich and uh
00:22:11
Tony Poe I guess right and vagina won
00:22:14
the uh New Zealand title but then then
00:22:16
he got beaten by Rod Dixon in the in the
00:22:19
uh 1500 mile just before so
00:22:23
and then we came to the games and he was
00:22:25
selected in both so uh I wasn't in
00:22:29
crisis but John was and uh and he was
00:22:32
running I think it was uh about a week
00:22:34
before his race he was had to run the
00:22:36
400 meters and he he ran like a dog and
00:22:40
he ran about 49 instead of about 48 and
00:22:43
then I found out that he'd been uh more
00:22:47
or less you know sleeping in the sun
00:22:49
most of the day you know and he was
00:22:51
pretty pretty tired
00:22:53
uh so they started to write him off
00:22:55
completely so I thought I better go down
00:22:57
so I went down uh to uh Christchurch
00:23:00
and put them over a 600 meters a time
00:23:04
trial and and he did a really good time
00:23:06
and I said to him you know you're you're
00:23:08
okay yeah so then he ran the uh 800 uh
00:23:12
and he made the final and then he ran uh
00:23:16
third in the final and 1 44 9 which was
00:23:22
you know as the second and Best Time
00:23:24
Ever yeah uh his PB easily and then he
00:23:27
ran the uh then he ran the Fantastic 59
00:23:31
moon race with Phil but broke the world
00:23:33
record John did too but John was second
00:23:35
in that race amazing in their eyes were
00:23:38
just uh
00:23:39
I think the uh the day before and uh or
00:23:44
two days before John I took him out of
00:23:47
the village and he stayed with me at my
00:23:48
brother's place in Christchurch and we
00:23:50
had a game of cricket uh one morning and
00:23:53
it just it wasn't a day or two before
00:23:56
the race and uh
00:23:58
and John battered for a long time and
00:24:01
the bat was only uh a foot long and he
00:24:04
hit the Crouch down and and when he woke
00:24:07
up the next day he was pretty stiff and
00:24:09
so I said well whoever runs a winter run
00:24:12
and and somebody said hey do you think
00:24:16
you guys are Olympians
00:24:18
only then you yeah if only they knew
00:24:21
yeah why did you why did you pull him
00:24:23
out of the village and take him to your
00:24:25
brother's house
00:24:26
uh I just wanted to you know
00:24:29
it was he was he like that did he need
00:24:31
did he need someone to keep an eye on
00:24:32
him no no not at all no no he's very
00:24:35
very good yeah and uh we discussed the
00:24:38
race plan and uh uh we thought Jeep Joe
00:24:42
would be the the toughest competition
00:24:44
and though we didn't discount uh filbert
00:24:48
but in every other race like Filbert's
00:24:52
best time was 334. John's best time was
00:24:56
338 so he was nowhere near you know
00:24:58
nowhere near the others in time and uh
00:25:02
but Philbert and every race he'd gone he
00:25:04
went out hard and then blew up and and
00:25:07
we thought he'd do that but of course he
00:25:10
didn't and John took about six seconds
00:25:13
off his PB so it was a phenomenal run
00:25:16
geez that must have been exciting for
00:25:18
you for him obviously but for you as the
00:25:20
coach yeah well I was they always called
00:25:22
me the cam coach because I didn't get
00:25:25
you know too excited about things but on
00:25:28
this occasion apparently I said I was
00:25:30
with my brother and we were watching and
00:25:31
we we saw that you know John just got
00:25:34
beaten and we I was a bit disappointed
00:25:37
but then I looked on my watch and I saw
00:25:40
it's really 32 and apparently I jumped
00:25:44
up on my feet and yelled out to
00:25:46
everybody it's a world record it's the
00:25:48
world record
00:25:49
and so it was you know really exciting
00:25:52
it was a fantastic Race by Philmont but
00:25:54
it was by John too yeah so I I was um I
00:25:58
was born in 73 so I I I'm too young to
00:26:01
remember those Commonwealth Games but I
00:26:03
do remember like growing up through the
00:26:05
through the 1970s and John John Walker
00:26:07
being one of my heroes like he was on
00:26:08
the fresh up ads and he had that long
00:26:10
hair and he was very very good looking
00:26:12
after the 74 Commonwealth Games did it
00:26:14
become like a like a nationwide hero oh
00:26:16
absolutely yeah but then in 75 he uh uh
00:26:21
I didn't I didn't go away with him but
00:26:24
he was with you know rod and deck and he
00:26:27
was running very well over 1500 and then
00:26:30
he decided to uh that he could you know
00:26:34
he could have a go at the world mile
00:26:36
record and he went to Gothenburg he uh
00:26:38
that's when he uh did that tremendous
00:26:41
son when he he broke like he was there
00:26:44
was somebody with him for the first part
00:26:45
but mainly he was just on his own and he
00:26:49
ran first sub uh 350 Mile and 349 for
00:26:54
and we're with someone Pace him like I
00:26:58
do nowadays he either run about 45 or 46
00:27:01
I guarantee oh yeah he ran 346 yeah
00:27:05
man that's quite so that run sort of
00:27:09
changed his life everybody wants him
00:27:11
really yeah yeah like in what way in
00:27:14
terms of like endorsements and uh oh
00:27:16
yeah
00:27:17
right yeah amazing did it change your
00:27:20
life
00:27:22
oh my life didn't change too much
00:27:25
I was you know uh principal of a school
00:27:29
and that sort of thing that was my main
00:27:30
job amazing it's amazing that you
00:27:33
managed to juggle both like that's um
00:27:34
that would be unheard of these days for
00:27:36
a top level coach what about James
00:27:40
mortem is doing fairly well doesn't he
00:27:42
the Sprint coach yeah he's doing a
00:27:44
full-time job yeah yeah that's amazing
00:27:46
and then so the Olympic Games at
00:27:48
Montreal and 76 did you you you you were
00:27:51
over there you went over yeah I was
00:27:53
selected as a team coach okay yeah
00:27:55
during his build up he uh he had a bit
00:27:59
of a problem
00:28:00
and and it was it it you know turned out
00:28:03
to be a severe problem the next year and
00:28:05
he was a bit lucky that he he got away
00:28:07
with the uh uh with the Olympics
00:28:09
Thumpers went away there was uh Rod
00:28:12
Dixon dick quirks and ordained and uh oh
00:28:15
quite a bit and I was saying with him
00:28:17
beforehand over to Scandinavia and we
00:28:21
had had quite a few meets there and one
00:28:24
of the Highlight there was when
00:28:27
John ran the 2000 meters and uh and he
00:28:33
broke uh Michael Jazzy's record by about
00:28:36
four seconds I think can you remember
00:28:38
the time for 2K 451 four I think oh my
00:28:41
God that's fast yeah and of course it's
00:28:44
much faster now but it was yeah that
00:28:46
that record lasted for uh 10 years and
00:28:50
then uh cram broke it by one tenth of a
00:28:54
second
00:28:55
but of course it's much faster now with
00:28:57
elgarish
00:28:59
so that was a pre-olympics yeah and and
00:29:03
then we went on to uh Montreal so how
00:29:07
confident were you and John going to
00:29:08
Montreal like were you thinking the the
00:29:10
this is ours to lose
00:29:13
oh well it's very difficult when you're
00:29:16
the favorite yeah because you know it's
00:29:20
uh you know you think you can win but I
00:29:22
mean you're never quite sure at the
00:29:23
Olympics because anybody can you know
00:29:25
come up and and do it and like you've
00:29:28
got uh you know you've got one chance in
00:29:31
in uh
00:29:33
and on one particular day every every
00:29:36
four years you've got to be absolutely
00:29:37
at your Peak to do it so you you've
00:29:39
gotta you've got to have a bit of luck
00:29:41
as well yeah but then what he had like
00:29:43
that day didn't he it was phenomenal
00:29:45
uh yes yeah he did but uh he things went
00:29:49
went well but I mean it was uh uh you
00:29:53
know during the race and it looked as if
00:29:55
like uh it looked as if he was in
00:29:59
trouble because the the first 800 meters
00:30:01
were so so slow and they had we had in
00:30:05
the field there were uh three people who
00:30:08
had broken 144 you know that was you
00:30:11
know Van Damme and well Hooter and
00:30:13
someone else I think they were 143 men
00:30:16
and John was really just a 145 800 meter
00:30:19
Runner so it looked if it was made for
00:30:22
them but but John did the job yeah how
00:30:25
did you celebrate afterwards
00:30:28
oh we just had an ordinary celebration
00:30:30
we were very very pleased but it was I
00:30:33
think to John he was terribly pleased
00:30:35
but a bit quite relieved too yeah right
00:30:38
yeah but there's that much how did he
00:30:40
cope with the pre-shot did he cope with
00:30:41
the pressure right oh he's very good
00:30:43
like that he uh like in the 800 meters
00:30:46
he uh he was knocked out I was never I
00:30:49
never wanted him to compete in the in
00:30:52
both finals and he didn't try and get
00:30:55
beaten in the 800 but he was just out
00:30:56
kicked why didn't you want him to be in
00:30:58
both finals did you think I wanted to
00:31:00
win one of them right
00:31:02
which final would have been first uh the
00:31:05
800 uh yeah so that would have tired him
00:31:07
out for the 1500 yeah yeah okay so he
00:31:11
got knocked out of the 800 and people
00:31:13
started to write him up and uh generate
00:31:16
he said that he was
00:31:19
he wasn't really uh
00:31:22
disappointed about being knocked out of
00:31:24
the uh 800 meters but he was a bit
00:31:28
disappointed in something else and they
00:31:30
said what's that he said well last night
00:31:32
he said I was beaten at snooker by my
00:31:35
coach for the first time and he was a
00:31:38
much better player than I was so
00:31:41
but I remember the uh I roomed with John
00:31:45
at Montreal and uh well you're kidding
00:31:48
is that you didn't have your own rooms
00:31:50
you're sharing rooms yeah really yeah
00:31:53
yeah
00:31:54
was that common I think so yeah if you
00:31:58
share a room with with someone like John
00:32:01
it means that you've got 1 8 and he's
00:32:02
got seven eighths that's right what do
00:32:05
you mean oh he's most of his gears all
00:32:07
strewn all over the floor
00:32:09
what sort of gear like I'm I'm just
00:32:13
picturing him with a pair of racing
00:32:15
games
00:32:17
lots of beers lots of singers lots of
00:32:20
shoes and all that sort of thing Direct
00:32:22
on the day of the race I remember saying
00:32:23
to John but look I said you know we've
00:32:25
done everything and uh what we want to
00:32:28
do now is just lie down and have a bit
00:32:29
of a snooze so we lay down and I set my
00:32:32
alarm clock both sleep for about two
00:32:35
hours
00:32:35
and we got up and then started to you
00:32:37
know get ready for that to do the job
00:32:39
what an amazing partnership an amazing
00:32:41
relationship so you you say okay we're
00:32:43
going to sleep now and then yeah yeah
00:32:45
and you just have a nap yeah but he was
00:32:48
a very very he's like Peter sell
00:32:51
temperament-wise yeah very very good
00:32:53
temperament yeah and uh
00:32:55
he uh knew what to do yeah would you
00:32:59
would you say it was um just a coach
00:33:01
athlete relationship or definitely more
00:33:03
of a friendship
00:33:04
oh friendship yeah yeah yeah yeah you're
00:33:07
still in touch these days yeah yeah I'll
00:33:09
be seeing him next week how is he
00:33:12
oh well you know he's these days
00:33:15
he's not too bad but I mean you know
00:33:17
he's got Parkinson's and you know it's a
00:33:20
difficult thing yeah
00:33:22
it's very rough yeah I've got so many
00:33:24
memories of him growing up like I I
00:33:25
remember watching on TV when he did his
00:33:27
um 100th sub four minute mile oh yeah we
00:33:30
used to as coach then were you were you
00:33:31
the only coach you ever had I only
00:33:33
coached him for about 20 years so you
00:33:36
you met him when he was 18. so yeah but
00:33:38
then there was I didn't then there's a
00:33:40
bit of a gap yeah and then I started
00:33:42
catching in when he was 20. right right
00:33:44
so so his whole competitive career you
00:33:47
were us as as coached about yeah it's
00:33:51
incredible it's incredible it's one of
00:33:53
the I think it's one of New Zealand's
00:33:54
finest um coach athlete relationships
00:33:57
ever that doesn't get there he was very
00:33:58
uh a very loyal person I think yeah and
00:34:01
uh but he was a very good judge of his
00:34:05
own Fitness himself he knew when he was
00:34:07
right and when he wasn't right you know
00:34:09
he's very good he didn't he never you
00:34:11
know kitted himself
00:34:12
yeah that's amazing what you guys did
00:34:15
together phenomenal I think I'll think
00:34:17
about the only two times he was late for
00:34:20
training was when he got involved in
00:34:22
traffic accidents right and but no he
00:34:25
was a fantastic person to train yeah
00:34:27
yeah and you retired from coaching in in
00:34:30
2000 so after John who who were you who
00:34:34
were you coaching up until 2000 oh it's
00:34:37
like you know uh quite a variety of
00:34:39
people yeah but in the in the finish I
00:34:41
decided to
00:34:42
call today so you would have been in the
00:34:44
uh like mid to late 70s then in 2000
00:34:46
yeah why did you why why did you retire
00:34:49
from coaching then my first wife Rachel
00:34:52
died in 2000 and uh so you know yeah I
00:34:56
think that was probably the reason
00:34:57
probably yeah yeah that's right so she
00:35:01
um
00:35:02
yeah you guys got married in uh 53 yes
00:35:05
53 years yeah
00:35:07
that yeah I'm so I'm sorry about that
00:35:09
and then um then you you remarried a
00:35:12
couple of years later to the lovely Gene
00:35:13
who's just doing some washing at the
00:35:15
moment
00:35:16
um I I believe so her husband died died
00:35:19
the same yeah certainly has been David
00:35:20
and the four of us used to go away on uh
00:35:23
trips to uh Bridge tournament
00:35:26
because I became a bit obsessive about
00:35:29
Bridge
00:35:31
is that is that the sort of person you
00:35:33
are like whatever you do you you get
00:35:34
quite excited yeah right right generate
00:35:37
uh Rachel uh uh wasn't a bridge player
00:35:42
and David was a terrible bridge player
00:35:45
and they used to Gene and I used to play
00:35:50
in the tournaments and they used to pass
00:35:52
it around secondhand shops and you know
00:35:54
art dealers and all that sort of stuff
00:35:56
and you know they both died and uh
00:35:58
within six months of each other in 2000.
00:36:01
right so you so you and you and Gene
00:36:03
just sort of we we sort of bonded
00:36:05
together do you think you know the four
00:36:07
of us have known each other for a long
00:36:09
time yeah a decade right so was it just
00:36:13
like a natural sort of thing it's like
00:36:14
well you know we should we should get
00:36:16
married
00:36:18
probably yeah Gene might be able to
00:36:20
describe it better where is he
00:36:23
there Jen
00:36:24
he's hiding
00:36:26
do you want to come and tell the story
00:36:27
about how you guys got together Ken you
00:36:30
needed hahaha
00:36:32
pull up pull up a c we're just talking
00:36:34
about how how you guys got together
00:36:36
after you after your first marriages so
00:36:39
this man here your second husband at
00:36:41
jelly 99 years old doesn't strike me as
00:36:43
being a particularly romantic sort of
00:36:44
person
00:36:45
definitely definitely not so how did how
00:36:49
did he woo you obviously you you sort of
00:36:51
both brought together by by a bit of
00:36:53
grief I guess after the death of your
00:36:54
your first partners and then um how did
00:36:57
he win you over after that
00:37:02
we were playing bridge together not
00:37:05
yesterday you're getting a little bit
00:37:07
closer yeah lean into it
00:37:10
yeah so you're playing bridge together
00:37:11
yes yes and that's all we would
00:37:15
we didn't do anything else together did
00:37:16
we how so how did he propose how did
00:37:18
that happen he's like quite a sprightly
00:37:20
thing did he get down on Monday no he I
00:37:22
was taking it I was in the car taking
00:37:24
him back home to his house
00:37:28
he's just bossing bossing her into the
00:37:31
mic yes he's very bossy
00:37:35
and that uh he was in the car and he
00:37:38
didn't get out and I thought
00:37:40
doesn't he move why doesn't he get out
00:37:41
the car and so I said you're going to go
00:37:44
he said well he said do you think I
00:37:46
should move into Pine song
00:37:48
he moved in without rep without saying
00:37:52
he was going to get married
00:37:54
so he just sort of invited himself yes
00:37:56
yes that's right and um how did you feel
00:37:58
about it I suppose you were both lonely
00:38:00
at the time so it must have been nice to
00:38:01
have some have a companion it was nice
00:38:04
to have a companionship we did lots of
00:38:06
things together we went traveling we
00:38:07
went to England we went to Australia so
00:38:10
we did a lot of things together after
00:38:11
that yeah and it's how old are you can I
00:38:13
ask is that I'm 10 years younger than
00:38:15
that oh younger woman a younger woman
00:38:23
so did you two um when you used to go on
00:38:26
bridge tournaments with your with your
00:38:28
first Partners did you guys ever sort of
00:38:30
think did it ever cross your mind like
00:38:31
oh he's a bit of a writer oh she's a bit
00:38:33
of all right no I never thought that you
00:38:35
never thought romantically no right what
00:38:37
about you Alex did you ever no there was
00:38:39
no spark or anything like that at that
00:38:41
stage right right
00:38:42
oh what a wonderful story I'm so pleased
00:38:44
you both found each other
00:38:46
it's great thanks for sharing that it
00:38:47
was so so I I believe you got married
00:38:50
and you didn't even you didn't tell your
00:38:52
kids or anything no no he it was his
00:38:55
it was his 80th birthday and his his
00:38:58
daughter gave her a little party and
00:39:01
during the party he spoke and he said I
00:39:04
have to tell you that Gene and I got
00:39:06
married yesterday is that how it
00:39:08
happened anything you want to you want
00:39:09
to chip him with well uh I was still
00:39:12
living in La Peter Avenue in Mount
00:39:14
Albert and Dean and I decided to get
00:39:17
married and we didn't I mean
00:39:21
well you didn't say no
00:39:24
and uh
00:39:27
and we told we told our family that we
00:39:30
were getting married but but we didn't
00:39:32
say when right so uh we got married next
00:39:36
door at Evelyn haynes's place and uh
00:39:40
uh Joe mcmenaman who's a famous coach
00:39:44
and uh uh he uh he came and uh married
00:39:48
us
00:39:50
and that was uh a few days before my
00:39:54
80th birthday
00:39:55
yeah a few days before right oh I'm so
00:39:59
pleased you found each other I mean it's
00:40:01
yeah yeah I think you've both been very
00:40:03
lucky haven't you you've both you've
00:40:05
both been married twice and you've both
00:40:07
been very successful Partnerships okay
00:40:09
so you you retired um when you were 78
00:40:11
in 2000
00:40:13
um what was that to focus on bridge and
00:40:15
bowls
00:40:16
no I I hadn't started balls in I haven't
00:40:18
yet okay so you retired the in the end
00:40:22
and then you you came out of retirement
00:40:23
in 2007 why did you come out but I
00:40:26
started playing balls when I was about
00:40:28
80. okay I got very keen on bowls too
00:40:32
it doesn't surprise me obsessive
00:40:34
character and uh uh we said and uh in
00:40:39
bowls if you're uh for the first five
00:40:42
years so I've never bowled before and my
00:40:44
sister came up to stay with us and she
00:40:46
was a a tiger champion in both she's and
00:40:49
uh and she said do you want to learn to
00:40:51
play balls and uh and we said oh I
00:40:54
suppose so you know we thought it was an
00:40:57
old man's game so we learned how old
00:40:59
were you at the time you were like 80
00:41:00
yeah
00:41:02
you're too young for bowls yeah so we
00:41:04
live we learned down here you see and
00:41:06
then right and then afterward played a
00:41:08
weaver we thought well we've been uh
00:41:10
join the block at Spade club so we
00:41:13
joined the broadcast Bay Club and and
00:41:15
then we bowling just about every second
00:41:17
day and and we entered for the
00:41:23
Auckland triples junior Championship
00:41:26
with Ellen Smith who's up here and we
00:41:29
won it and and then a couple days after
00:41:31
I I won it again with two other people
00:41:34
and but I was I think the last year I
00:41:38
won it I won the Auckland Junior triple
00:41:40
Championship uh I was 85 I think which
00:41:45
is really old age for a junior
00:41:50
yeah God it seems like whatever whatever
00:41:52
you whatever you decide to do it becomes
00:41:54
like an obsession
00:41:55
so yeah yeah
00:41:58
get a bit of Truth in that yeah yeah
00:41:59
yeah you must drive your Bonkers
00:42:02
sometimes
00:42:03
so so you came out of retirement as a
00:42:06
coach in 2007 what what was it what was
00:42:08
the trigger for that
00:42:10
a lady uh rang me up and said that she
00:42:14
had a promising Runner and she wanted
00:42:18
him coached by someone who knew what he
00:42:21
was doing and could tell him why he was
00:42:23
doing it and he wasn't too authoritative
00:42:26
and so that's how and I agreed and
00:42:31
that's how I started coaching uh Hamish
00:42:33
Carson right right and how did he what
00:42:36
was what's been his Peak is he still
00:42:38
running yeah yeah yeah yeah how's it
00:42:40
getting on is it good
00:42:41
oh he went to the Olympics yeah yeah and
00:42:44
he uh when he first started when I first
00:42:47
started coaching him he he used to get
00:42:48
trouble with Stitch and that sort of
00:42:51
thing and it took a long time to sort of
00:42:52
sort that out and then he won about I
00:42:56
think he won about six five or six New
00:42:59
Zealand titles that fifteen hundred yeah
00:43:01
and uh and then he uh we got him to the
00:43:05
Olympics the Rio Olympics he he didn't
00:43:07
uh qualify for the final but he made it
00:43:10
and uh he done quite well that's
00:43:12
brilliant that must be um the world
00:43:14
record for the biggest age gap between
00:43:16
coach and athlete surely surely I don't
00:43:19
know about that yeah it's got to be up
00:43:21
there and then then you retired again in
00:43:23
uh 2018 so you've been retired for four
00:43:25
years now yeah well Hamish is uh in a a
00:43:28
group with a over in Europe now and he
00:43:32
saw he sort of rang pretty well he
00:43:34
qualified for the world uh indoor Champs
00:43:37
and but then he he got covered just
00:43:39
before the champion he couldn't run yeah
00:43:41
but he's still running pretty well and
00:43:43
we we keep in touch yeah it seems like
00:43:45
you still keep an eye on Athletics and
00:43:47
you oh haven't you yeah you love it it's
00:43:49
just it's just part of your DNA yeah
00:43:51
what do you think of um that I mean
00:43:53
you've seen so much change in your in
00:43:55
your life like what do you think of the
00:43:56
technology now like um the information
00:43:58
I've got on this watch I'm wearing now
00:43:59
is probably more scientific data than
00:44:02
what oh yeah well I mean the same as I
00:44:04
mean all Hamish and stuff comes up in
00:44:07
here now right oh it doesn't oh yeah
00:44:09
yeah so his um his training stats and
00:44:11
his performances they come up on your
00:44:13
watch through Strava yeah yeah oh
00:44:15
there's been a huge change in that in
00:44:17
community yeah have you came because I
00:44:19
think like a lot of um a lot of people
00:44:22
when they they reach their Advanced
00:44:23
years they just they they they cut it
00:44:26
off and they stop learning new stuff or
00:44:27
oh no man I've always been a gadget man
00:44:30
yeah have you yeah I'm just trying to
00:44:31
think of like Dunedin in 1922 versus you
00:44:35
know Auckland uh alternating or anywhere
00:44:37
for that matter in um the year 2022 like
00:44:40
the amount of change that you've seen in
00:44:41
that time I remember when I was five and
00:44:44
uh and we were cutting our lawn at the
00:44:47
back and uh we didn't have a lawnmower
00:44:50
and and my elder brother he was two
00:44:54
years older than me he was using hedge
00:44:56
clippers and I was using a pair of
00:44:58
scissors and we got too close and he
00:45:00
chopped my finger off
00:45:02
and and and this is how and I remember
00:45:06
dangling by a bit then my father cut it
00:45:10
and buried it you see
00:45:11
whereas nowadays you'd put it in ice and
00:45:14
get it reattached and remember we asked
00:45:17
5 we walked up to the cable car got the
00:45:20
cable card down to Dunedin then took the
00:45:22
electric tram along then we walked to
00:45:25
the hospital and I and I was there for
00:45:27
about a week and but it was so you know
00:45:29
rudimental there's so primitive really
00:45:32
were cars around then in 1922 with their
00:45:35
with their motor vehicles there were two
00:45:37
uh people with cars in our street and
00:45:39
they were both plumbers right nobody had
00:45:41
a cat it was so expensive we used to
00:45:44
play cricket on the road yeah yeah and
00:45:46
no cars ever came through yeah and um so
00:45:49
you'd remember you would have been you
00:45:50
were probably you would have been a
00:45:51
grown man when television came along
00:45:53
oh well television came along in about
00:45:55
uh late 1950s as well right right yeah
00:45:58
that was that exciting black and white
00:46:01
oh yeah too right yeah yeah I thought it
00:46:03
was fantastic yeah and that's when I
00:46:06
lived in Mount Albert right any other
00:46:08
big things like that that you remember
00:46:09
there was just like super exciting I
00:46:11
don't know like cell phones or the
00:46:13
internet oh no I've just accepted it you
00:46:16
know yeah
00:46:17
just roll with it yeah because I I
00:46:18
reached out to you and you text me back
00:46:21
on your phone and I I've always been
00:46:24
keen on that sort of stuff you're 99
00:46:26
years old you're turning a hundred
00:46:27
when's your 100th birthday in August
00:46:29
yeah
00:46:30
how are you feeling about that
00:46:33
um I'm not feeling much about it I'll
00:46:35
just you know wait till I get there what
00:46:38
do you put your good health and um old
00:46:40
age down to
00:46:41
I don't know uh my my uh Grant and two
00:46:46
grandfathers died at uh 57 or today yeah
00:46:51
but there is a longevity on my mind on
00:46:54
my mother's side yeah my father died
00:46:57
from uh cancer of the esophagus is he a
00:47:01
smoker or yeah he didn't he we worked
00:47:04
out how many million cigarettes you
00:47:06
smoke okay yeah yeah that's never going
00:47:09
to be too good for the esophagus is it
00:47:10
so and you're still in remarkably good
00:47:13
shape I I've written an article about
00:47:14
you that said that uh so we're on we're
00:47:16
in your third floor apartment at the
00:47:17
Retirement Village
00:47:19
um up until 90 like you you were walking
00:47:21
and running up for three times I don't I
00:47:24
don't uh I don't run up now you take the
00:47:26
lift now or do you still walk I'm
00:47:29
walking about 4K a day
00:47:31
so yeah but not not in one like it'll be
00:47:34
in bits and pieces yeah yeah I mean
00:47:37
you've got all your marbles don't you
00:47:38
like you're physically I've never been
00:47:40
that Keen on Rivals actually
00:47:43
I mean that's one game we used to play
00:47:45
at school yeah yeah yeah yeah no but I
00:47:48
mean you like your memory is superb and
00:47:50
your ability to like recall details are
00:47:52
superb I mean it's just remarkable I
00:47:54
yeah oh well I think playing bridge is
00:47:58
quite helpful in that sort of thing and
00:48:00
you know I sort of invented my own
00:48:01
system at a bridge and we play that are
00:48:03
you much of a drinker uh I haven't had
00:48:07
any alcohol since about
00:48:09
1987 probably okay I was never a drinker
00:48:13
right I've had the idea and that's how
00:48:15
bad isn't it but uh no I never drink I
00:48:18
was never uh drank with the boys so
00:48:22
um not much of a drinker never smoked
00:48:24
physically I gave it up oh did you yeah
00:48:27
when did you when did you when did you
00:48:29
start and finish was that a war thing uh
00:48:31
I gave it up when I was nine right what
00:48:34
do you mean you gave it up when you were
00:48:35
nine well that's I haven't smoked since
00:48:37
then when did you start I used to smoke
00:48:40
a few wood bins behind the church
00:48:43
okay so none of my family have smoked
00:48:46
right so um the physical fitness and
00:48:49
basically just yeah you're just doing
00:48:52
all the good stuff I've always uh being
00:48:55
fairly active yeah
00:48:57
but I never uh I was never into big
00:49:01
mileage like you know uh my Runners were
00:49:04
ran big but I didn't yeah uh except when
00:49:07
I I used to go around the uh uh you know
00:49:10
out as the boys used to go around the
00:49:12
white x uh 22 miles yeah well then uh an
00:49:16
even bigger group used to go from our
00:49:18
place around the white X and and I used
00:49:21
to run with them uh 22 miles and at that
00:49:25
stage and of course I was a full-time
00:49:27
principal and uh going when I went
00:49:30
around the wire Tech treated that was uh
00:49:32
half my mileage for the week you know I
00:49:35
only ran about 40 40 50 miles a week
00:49:37
when I was running you know
00:49:39
I'm sitting in front of you like you're
00:49:41
you're 99 99 years old you're still in a
00:49:44
remarkable shape there's still so much
00:49:46
to live for you've got a wonderful
00:49:47
relationship are you are you are you at
00:49:50
peace with
00:49:51
oh yeah yeah yeah it's part of life
00:49:54
isn't it it is yeah yeah 100 it is
00:49:58
yeah
00:49:58
um I'm not that superstitious or
00:50:00
anything like that are you religious
00:50:03
no no no I was brought up in the Masters
00:50:07
Church yeah but I've got my own thoughts
00:50:09
yeah
00:50:10
how how much longer do you think you've
00:50:12
got because I was sitting in front of
00:50:13
you I could see you living to another 10
00:50:15
years oh that'd be
00:50:17
stretching it a bit do you think so but
00:50:19
I remember uh I wondered about a year or
00:50:23
two ago I I was working on my iPhone and
00:50:27
uh and I worked out how long I had to
00:50:29
have been putting in all the you know
00:50:31
variables and it was all the health
00:50:33
States and things yeah yeah and it was
00:50:34
three years and that was about two years
00:50:36
ago how many weeks no they don't know do
00:50:41
they no no no
00:50:43
I mean there's all sorts of variables
00:50:45
there's just a bit of fun really are you
00:50:47
um are you the oldest person in the
00:50:48
village here yeah and um are you excited
00:50:50
about the telegram from the queen no no
00:50:53
what are you going to do I know that
00:50:55
she's got nothing to do with it
00:50:57
that is so true she's not signing them
00:51:00
individually is she no probably can yeah
00:51:03
what's that what is the plan for the
00:51:04
birthday in August
00:51:05
no plan in prison yeah how old are your
00:51:08
kids
00:51:09
uh let's see Sue's 65 next month and
00:51:15
Martin's about 60
00:51:17
he'll be uh 62 very soon and Rocky's
00:51:22
about uh 55. yeah I know your son Martin
00:51:25
he taught me TM Transcendental
00:51:27
Meditation about two years ago yeah yeah
00:51:29
I was stoked to meet him I was like oh
00:51:31
so when I when I heard my um Team
00:51:33
instructor's last name was jelly I
00:51:35
thought I wonder if there's a connection
00:51:36
but between him and the great Arch yeah
00:51:38
he's your son yeah he's a great kid
00:51:40
saying well it's been a hell of a life
00:51:42
you've done so much any regrets
00:51:44
not really no no no no no no nothing I
00:51:48
mean there's plenty of things you could
00:51:49
have done better and that sort of thing
00:51:50
but I mean you know that's done and
00:51:52
dusted now yeah that's been a life well
00:51:54
spent and I still look forward to
00:51:57
improving my bridge system a bit
00:51:59
[Music]
00:52:02
I actually you're a remarkable man and
00:52:05
thank you
00:52:06
um on behalf of New Zealand for
00:52:08
everything you've done for athletics in
00:52:09
this country
00:52:10
um you should be very proud
00:52:12
yeah thanks John

Podspun Insights

In this captivating episode, Dom Harvey sits down with the legendary Arch Jelly, a 99-year-old coaching icon from New Zealand, who shares his extraordinary life story. From surviving the Spanish Flu and World War II to coaching some of the nation's finest athletes, Arch's journey is a testament to resilience and passion. The conversation flows effortlessly as Arch recounts his early days in Dunedin, his experiences in the Navy, and his unexpected transition into coaching running. With a twinkle in his eye, he reflects on the ups and downs of his coaching career, including his pivotal relationship with John Walker, one of New Zealand's most celebrated runners. The episode is sprinkled with humor and warmth as Arch discusses his love for bridge and the joys of companionship later in life. Listeners are treated to a rich tapestry of history, emotion, and inspiration, making this episode not just an interview, but a heartfelt celebration of a life well-lived.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 95
    Most heartwarming
  • 95
    Most timeless
  • 90
    Most inspiring
  • 90
    Best overall

Episode Highlights

  • Arch Jelly's Resilience
    At 99, Arch Jelly reflects on surviving the Great Depression and World War II.
    “We’re in a fairly sheltered environment here in the village.”
    @ 01m 39s
    October 17, 2022
  • The Start of a Running Career
    Arch Jelly's journey into running began with a simple race at a Bible class.
    “I won this race even though I hadn’t done any training.”
    @ 07m 13s
    October 17, 2022
  • John Walker's Potential
    Arch Jelly sees great potential in John Walker, believing he could surpass legends.
    “I think he’s got the potential to erase the name of Peter Snell.”
    @ 17m 17s
    October 17, 2022
  • John Walker's World Record
    John Walker breaks the world record in a phenomenal race, achieving a personal best.
    “It's a world record!”
    @ 25m 46s
    October 17, 2022
  • The Coach-Athlete Bond
    A deep friendship forms between coach and athlete, showcasing their unique relationship.
    “What an amazing partnership!”
    @ 32m 41s
    October 17, 2022
  • Retirement Reflections
    After a long coaching career, the coach reflects on his journey and the impact of loss.
    @ 34m 52s
    October 17, 2022
  • A Life of Change
    Reflecting on the vast changes in technology and life over the decades.
    “The amount of change that you’ve seen in that time is remarkable.”
    @ 44m 40s
    October 17, 2022
  • Remarkable Longevity
    At 99 years old, he reflects on health and longevity in his family.
    “I’m not feeling much about it, I’ll just wait till I get there.”
    @ 46m 33s
    October 17, 2022
  • A Life Well Spent
    He shares insights on his life, expressing no regrets and looking forward to the future.
    “There’s plenty of things you could have done better, but that’s done and dusted now.”
    @ 51m 49s
    October 17, 2022

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Arch Jelly's 100th00:55
  • Great Depression Memories02:21
  • Submarine Experience05:47
  • Coaching John Walker17:17
  • World Record25:46
  • Coach-Athlete Friendship32:41
  • Retirement34:52
  • Tech Enthusiast44:27

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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