Steve Cram

Runner

Steve Cram was born in Gateshead, England, United Kingdom on October 14th, 1960 and is the Runner. At the age of 63, Steve Cram biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

  Report
Date of Birth
October 14, 1960
Nationality
United Kingdom
Place of Birth
Gateshead, England, United Kingdom
Age
63 years old
Zodiac Sign
Libra
Profession
Athletics Competitor, Marathon Runner, Middle-distance Runner
Steve Cram Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 63 years old, Steve Cram has this physical status:

Height
185cm
Weight
69kg
Hair Color
Not Available
Eye Color
Not Available
Build
Not Available
Measurements
Not Available
Steve Cram Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Not Available
Steve Cram Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Not Available
Children
Not Available
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Steve Cram Career

In 1980, Cram won his place in the British Olympic team after finishing in 2nd place to Steve Ovett in the mile at Crystal Palace. The race had been marked as a run-off between Cram and Scottish miler Graham Williamson for the final place (a selection decision which was severely criticised by Ovett in his 1984 autobiography). Cram, aged 19, reached the final of the 1,500 m at the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games, in which Ovett and Sebastian Coe famously vied for the gold medal. Cram finished in eighth place.

Capitalising on his Olympic experience, Cram made his major breakthrough in 1982, a year in which Coe and Ovett were largely absent with injuries. Cram took 1,500 m gold at the Commonwealth Games and also the 1982 European Championships in Athens, where he raced to gold after breaking from the field with 600 metres to go following Williamson's fall.

Injury had disrupted Cram in the early part of the 1983 season, but he recovered in time for the 1983 World Championships in Helsinki and just prior to the games beat Coe (who was suffering from an undiagnosed virus at the time) in an 800 m at Gateshead. In a slow final, he strategically beat a large field following Saïd Aouita's break with 500 metres to go. Ovett became trapped in the pack, ultimately finishing fourth, while Cram outkicked Steve Scott and Aouita in the last 200 metres. In a remark made in Cram's presence shortly afterwards which spoke to the depth of British milers, Ovett noted that Britain was the home of the Olympic champion, World champion and World Record holder in the 1,500 m - titles held by Coe, Cram and Ovett respectively.

At Crystal Palace later that summer, Cram won an epic mile race, in which he led Ovett by little more than a metre with 300 metres to go and maintained that lead right to the finishing line. In a 2006 interview, Cram described the race: "It was a cat-and-mouse affair - we both started off running at the back of the field. I beat him by little more than the thickness of a vest."

In 1984, Cram's season was severely hampered by injury, although he recovered sufficiently to win silver in the 1,500 m at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, behind defending champion Coe.

He came back stronger in 1985, a year in which he was only beaten three times; by Coe at 800 m, McKean at 800 m and Ovett in a road Mile. In the 800 m, not his best event, he beat the reigning 800 m Olympic Champion, Joaquim Cruz, in 1:42.88, the fastest time he was ever to run, off even splits of 51.2 & 51.7. He broke three world records (1,500 m, Mile, 2,000 m) within a 19-day span, and recorded a British All Comers Record over the 1,000 m, running 2:12.88 in windy conditions at Gateshead (the second fastest 1,000 m in history at the time behind Coe's 2:12.18). He was the first man to run under 3:30.00 for the 1,500 m, just beating Saïd Aouita in Nice (running 3:29.67 to Aouita's 3:29.71). His mile time of 3:46.32, recorded at the Bislett Stadium in Oslo, stood for eight years and, as of 2021, is still the European record. This run was notable for the fact that this was an actual competitive race against Sebastian Coe with the first three laps being below schedule, although pretty even in pace distribution (57.2, 57.3, 58.7), followed by an exceptional last lap (440yds) of 53.2.

While the likes of Coe and Ovett had a devastating sprint finish over the last 100 metres, Cram tended to wind up the speed gradually over the last 300 metres of races, making him very difficult to catch. However, during the 1985 season he said (and indeed demonstrated) that he could win from any position and happily ran near the back of world class fields before unleashing his kick, often with a lap or so to go. This tactic, his elegant, high stepping action and his effortless acceleration made him one of the most exciting middle distance runners to watch.

Cram's good form continued into the 1986 season. At the 1986 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, he won the 800 m, finishing 15 metres clear of Tom McKean and Peter Elliott in 1:43:22 - still the Commonwealth Games record. He followed this up with gold in the 1,500 m and was persuaded to run both events at the 1986 European Championships in Stuttgart. He arrived at the European Championships "just over the edge" as he suggested in David Miller's biography of Coe, "Born to Run". Nevertheless, he won the bronze in the 800 m having been blocked down the back straight by Tom McKean who made his run at the same time as Cram and, though leading into the straight, lacked the zest he showed in the Commonwealth games and was unable to hold off the challenges of McKean and a superlative Coe. Although disappointed by his 800 m defeat Cram bounced back to beat Coe to the gold medal in the 1,500 m. It turned out to be not only Cram's last major medal, but the end of the golden era for British middle distance running.

In 1987, he was no longer the outstanding 1,500 m athlete that he had been in previous years. Having previously been able to win races from any position and at any pace, he was now lacking confidence in his finishing speed, an area in which he had fallen behind some of his main rivals. He was beaten by José Luis González in the European Cup, and although he followed that with an impressive win in the 1,000 m in Stockholm, and won the Dream Mile for the third year running, he finished eighth after leading into the final bend of the 1987 World Championships final in Rome. He had said before the race that his only hope of victory was a fast race, in which he could run the finish out of his opponents, in particular Abdi Bile, the eventual winner. Unhappily for Cram, the pace was slow, and he faded badly in the last 100 metres.

His 1988 season saw him return to better form and he beat Bile in the Oslo Dream Mile in 1988 - his fourth consecutive victory in that race. Having run impressively in the Olympic trials over 800 m and winning in 1:44.16, (opening up an eight-metre gap over Tom McKean in a sprint down the home straight) he was touted as one of the favourites to win the gold medal over 1,500 m at the Seoul Olympics in 1988 until a calf injury just before the games in a 1000 m race hampered his progress. The injury affected his performance at the games and he was eliminated in the heats of the 800 m. He recovered sufficiently to reach the final of the 1,500 m, but could finish only fourth in a close race surprisingly won by Peter Rono.

Injury dogged him throughout his remaining years and although he continued to compete for some time, he never again looked likely to win a major championship. In the 1990 European Athletics Championships, he still finished fifth in the 1,500 m, but in the 1991 World Athletics Championships, he was eliminated in the 1,500 m semi-finals.

He retired from athletics in 1994 and remains the UK record holder over the mile and 2,000 m.

Cram is the coach of middle-distance runners Laura Weightman, Thomas Lancashire and Ross Murray. In April 2014 Cram joined British Athletics as an adviser and mentor in the run-up to the 2016 Summer Olympics.

Television career

Cram now works as a television presenter and athletics commentator predominantly for BBC Sport and as a motivational speaker. He participated in Prince Edward's 1987 charity television special The Grand Knockout Tournament. Cram starred alongside UK Olympic Gold medalists Sally Gunnell and Adam Eason in BBC's 2006 primetime TV series Run for Glory, helping the runners and participants overcome psychological barriers to running the London Marathon. He was the BBC's lead commentator for the Athletic events at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. Cram has also presented as part of four Winter Olympics - Vancouver 2010, Sochi 2014, Pyeongchang 2018 and Beijing 2022 - having replaced Dougie Donnelly as the main Curling commentator in 2010.

Source

SPORTS AGENDA: SPORTS AGENDA: New rules regarding briefings with referees are being disobeyed by Premier League bosses, while BBC employees commute to and from Budapest for the World Athletic Championships

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 27, 2023
SPORTS AGENDA: All managers should be present at pre-match briefings with referees as part of the much lauded'reset' of Premier League rules this season. However, multiple clubs' reports have confirmed that this is simply not happening. Rather, both sides continue to send their assistants, with the police apparently turning a blind eye. The ball boys and girls, on the other hand, are one group of a pre-match chat with the ref. The ball attendants' coordinationator is pulled into a summit in which they are told that shenanigans such as throwing the ball away when the opposition has a throw-in will not be tolerated.

Josh Kerr admits becoming 1500m world champion was something he had wanted 'his whole life'

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 23, 2023
Josh Kerr, the newly crowned 1500 meters world champion in Budapest, said he fulfilled a lifelong dream after defeating Jakob Ingebrigsten in Budapest. In 2021, the 25-year-old claimed bronze at the Tokyo Olympics but claimed that gold at these championships is much sweeter. We were both fighting,' Kerr said. "I wanted this for my entire life." I guess he was kind of broken down when I heard he had 50 meters to go. It was just about maintaining form at the time. I've been bronze, but gold is a lot sweeter.'

Seb Coe, the UK Athletics chief, supports UK Athletics' controversial decision to send their smallest squad in 18 years to the World Championships, hoping that the tournament will only feature the "best of the best" in the event

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 2, 2023
Seb Coe, the British Athletics president, has endorsed UK Athletics' decision to send their smallest squad of 18 years to the World Championships, insisting that the tournament should only feature the best of the best'. Only 51 people were selected for Budapest, and the rejection of up to 20 who had qualified by virtue of their world ranking. Any of the snubbed British athletes are considering legal proceedings and have alleged that their governing body has accused them of leaving them at home to save money. However, Coe has defended UKA's right to select only their top performers, despite them effectively overruling his own organisation's qualification system, in which half of the participants are expected to make Budapest by adhering to criteria and half in world ranking.