Men's 1500m Freestyle - 1976 Montreal Olympics - Brian Goodell Breaks World Record

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  • Опубликовано: 13 фев 2020
  • Gold Medal - USA Brian Goodell 15:02.40
    Silver Medal - USA Bobby Hackett 15:03.91
    Bronze Medal - AUS Stephan Holland 15:04.66
    One of the greatest distance races of all time. All three medalists finished under the existing world record, which Goodell had set at the U.S. Trials a month prior.
    All three also split under Bobby Hackett's existing world record in the 800m freestyle (8:01.54) on the last 800 meters of the race. In fact, Goodell's final 800 of 7:56.9 was the first time a swimmer had broken the eight-minute-barrier over that distance (though it didn't count as a world record because it was swum at the end of the race).
    All three medalists were also teenagers - Holland was 18, Goodell was 17, and Hackett was 16-years-old. Actually, as of March 2021, Hackett's 15:03.91 is the United States National Age Group Record for 15-16 year-olds, despite that he swum the race without a technical suit or goggles.
    Stephan Holland, although he only finished with the bronze, still should be considered one of the greatest distance swimmers ever. He is the youngest male ever to break an individual swimming world record (at 15 years and 2 months) from when, in 1973, he broke the 1500 world record by over fourteen seconds. He was also the first swimmer to break 15:50, 15:40, 15:30, and 15:20 in the 1500 freestyle.
    Bobby Hackett, who was born and trained in Yonkers, New York, was a gritty young distance swimmer. At a time when a huge majority of elite American swimmers trained in California, Hackett emerged as a dominant force from the east coast. He was famous for training with long, grueling sets, including the infamous 100x100s on a 1:00 interval. Hackett set the world record in the 800 freestyle at the 1976 US Trials with his initial split in the 1500m race.
    Brian Goodell, who swam with the Mission Viejo Nadadores in California, was one of the masters of mental training. Over the years of training that led up to this race, Brian would visualize during practice. He would imagine overtaking swimmers in the Olympic final one by one, picture touching the wall in first place, envision standing on top of the victory podium. So when he actually found himself in the Olympic final - in third place, feeling exhausted and in so much pain from racing, losing his focus - he was able to revert to his mental training. He had pictured himself finishing first too many times to settle for third. Goodell roared back on Holland and Hackett to take gold. His last 400 meters were so fast that he would've won that event at the 1972 Olympics by over 3.5 seconds.

Комментарии • 35

  • @joegee7238
    @joegee7238 4 года назад +13

    The last six laps was amazing- the greatest 1500m race ever!

  • @mancebo7
    @mancebo7 4 года назад +7

    A race that truly inspired me to follow a career as a swimming coach, 44 years ago. (I started in 1975 - it's my career birthday tomorrow.) In 1987, at the European Champs, got a chance to see one of my pupils swim in the same heat with the great Vladimir Salnikov.

  • @NorthFletcherMike
    @NorthFletcherMike 2 года назад +5

    I had been a NYC swimmer my whole life. While I reached my peak around age 10, I continued to swim for Flushing Y in Queens and Fordham Prep in the Bronx. Must have been my senior year at Fordham, 1973-74, Bobby shows up. Big, tall freshman, but just looking like any other big kid. Then practice starts. He swam like nobody I had ever seen. Doing 50 second 100's in practice. He kicked like no swimmer I had ever even imagined could. He was a swimming machine! From start to finish, he swam, he swam fast, I mean, he swam really fast, every lap. And maybe that's it, he wasn't swimming like the rest of us, he seemed like an actual power boat. We swam, he powered through the water. Relentlessly. What was he, 14? Holly schmolly, man alive! What a joy to have witnessed him up close.

  • @ianfroud70
    @ianfroud70 3 года назад +2

    Last time USA dominated in 1500m , what a race 💯💯

  • @mancebo7

    Steve Holland's start was appalingly slow. I'd never noticed that before in all these years watching the video...!

  • @TheCopper05
    @TheCopper05 4 года назад +2

    WOW!!! What a finish!!!! I was only 10 years old when the Olympics were in Montreal. My one regret that I have, is that I wish I was older, so I could remember and appreciate the great swimming from this Era!!! There was Spitz, Nabor, Babashoff, Caulkins, Woodhead, and this race with Brian Goodell!!! These swimmers inspired who we have had during the 80s, 90s, and in the early 2000s, and right now!!!!

  • @chrisverby3047
    @chrisverby3047 2 года назад +5

    I wonder whatever happened to the guy in lane 8.

  • @AHC63
    @AHC63  +1

    Such a spectacular RACE!!

  • @Gregsmith1
    @Gregsmith1 4 года назад +14

    From 1972-1976, the world record in this event dropped about 50 seconds. Today, 44 years later, the record has dropped 31 seconds from Goodell's performance in Montreal. Goodell, Hackett, and Holland should be revered for taking distance swimming to the next level. This race represented no less than the culmination of a paradigm shift in distance swimming. Ironically, if Hackett would've pushed the pace more, the 15 minute barrier probably would've been eclipsed on that day. Imagine what they could've done in this era of improved technique, advanced swimsuit technology, and modern strength training and nutrition.

  • @juddis956
    @juddis956 2 года назад +4

    It's interesting how insane these old distance freestyle records are compared to today's times

  • @Sargebri

    This was a classic race. I remember watching it on television and even though it was 15 minutes I didn't budge. Of course, the expectation was that the 15 minute barrier would be broken that night. However, it wouldn't

  • @eduardomoreno2165
    @eduardomoreno2165 Год назад

    Uno de los 1,500 olímpicos, más épicos de todos.

  • @user-yz9ff3gb3j
    @user-yz9ff3gb3j 3 года назад +1

    Вот это замес! И Володя плыл , оказывается в 16 лет!