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Sport: Match-Up for Munich
When they first ran against each other in 1967, Jim Ryun of the University of Kansas was the world's premier miler and Marty Liquori was a 17-year-old hotshot out of Essex Catholic High in Newark, N.J. At the A.A.U. championships that year, Liquori streaked home in 3 min. 59.8 sec. to shatter the four-minute barrier for the first time in his career. The crowd cheeredbut not for Marty. He finished seventh, a full 70 yds. behind Ryun, who set a newand still unbrokenworld record of 3 min. 51.1 sec. for the mile. Last week the two met again in a race that was billed as the Super Mile. And super it was, as Liquori narrowly defeated Ryun in what amounted to the first lap of a long, long race that is likely to end in Munich at the 1972 Olympics.
Last week's meet in Philadelphia was the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. International Freedom Games. For Liquori, it was appropriately named. Ever since their first encounter, Liquori has been trying to free himself of a Ryun hex that plagued him even in victory. Two years ago, after losing six straight races to his nemesis, Liquori nipped Ryun by inches to win the N.C.A.A. championship. "Right away," recalls Liquori, "everyone said that he was holding back because he had to run the three-mile an hour and a half later." The next week he passed Ryun in mid-race and shouted, "Is there something wrong?" Something was indeed wrong. Ryun suddenly veered off the track, walked out of the stadium and into retirement, muttering, "Too much competition, too many races, too much pressure."
Hate Mail. Ryun's departure from competition left the field to Liquori. Asked if he missed Ryun, he said, "I don't think Wilt Chamberlain misses Bill Russell very much." But Liquori did miss the competition, if only because the pressure that buckled Ryun became "the monkey on my back." It was not too large a monkey; going into the Freedom Games, Liquori had won 27 out of his last 28 races. Ryun, in retirement, returned to school, packed on 35 lbs., and tried to forget all the hate mail that labeled him a "quitter." A year ago he decided "to try and get some fun out of running again." He returned to competition in January and in short order ran a 3:56.4 mile in San Diego, equaling the world indoor record. Last month, prepping for his rematch with Liquori, he posted a time of 3:55.8 at the Kansas Relays, the fastest mile that he or anyone else had run in three years. He was ready.
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