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Full name | Edwin Harold Flack | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nickname | Teddy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nationality | Australian | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | (1873-11-05)5 November 1873 Islington, London, England | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Died | 10 January 1935(1935-01-10) (aged 61) Melbourne, Victoria, Australia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Medal record
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Edwin Harold Flack (5 November 1873 – 10 January 1935)[1] was an Australian athlete and tennis player. Also known as "Teddy",[2] he was Australia's first Olympian, being its onlyrepresentative in 1896,[3] and the first Olympic champion in the800 metres and the1500 metres running events.[4][5]
Following Flack's Olympic appearance, he did not compete in any large events again, opting to breed cattle and help his family's accounting firm. Flack died aged 61 following an operation, and was buried in his hometown ofBerwick. He is commemorated there by a bronze statue on High Street and a reserve which includes several sporting grounds. Flack was also inducted into theSport Australia andAthletics Australia halls of fame in 1985 and 2000, respectively.
Born in London, England, Edwin Flack was five years old when his family migrated to Australia, to live inBerwick, Victoria. Soon after leaving theMelbourne Church of England Grammar School in 1892, where he studiedGreek history, Flack joined his father's accountancy firm, Davey, Flack & Co.[6] From 1892 to 1894, Flack was active in middle and long-distance running in amateur athletics in the then colony of Victoria, competing with the Melburnian Hare & Hounds athletics club.[7] In October 1892 he placed third in the inaugural Victorian 10-mile cross country championship, held at Oakleigh (Park) Racecourse, in a time of 1:02.42.0.[8]
On 9 to 11 November 1893, an intercolonial meet described as theAustralasian Athletics Championships was held at theMelbourne Cricket Ground, between athletes from the British colonies that were later to form the nations of Australia and New Zealand. This was the second such meet, the first having been held at Moore Park in Sydney on 31 May 1890.[9] Flack competed in the 1893 event and won the mile championship in a time of 4:44.0, with a winning margin of two yards.[10] He also competed in the 880 yards (won by Ken McCrae of New South Wales in 2:06.8) and three miles championship (won by Charles Herbert of Victoria in 15:33.6), but was unplaced in both events.[11] By virtue of his win in the mile event he was also awarded the Victorian 1893 mile championship title and, on 30 September 1893, was third in the Victorian 10 mile cross country championship in a time of 1:05.21.[12]
On 15 December 1894, Flack won both the 880 yards (2:07.2) and mile (4:49.4) Victorian 1894 championships and, earlier in the year, on 22 September 1894 was second in the 10-mile cross country championship (1:00.02).[13] The 1894 event was Flack's last appearance in the Victorian Championships. The same year, Flack was sent to London to receive further training as an accountant with the firm Price, Waterhouse & Co (nowPricewaterhouseCoopers). Flack joined theLondon Athletic Club and was intent on attending the cominginaugural Olympics.[7] Flack attended the Olympics as a member of the London Athletic Club, but competed in his Melburnian Hare and Hounds colours.[14]
Flack reachedAthens after an uncomfortable six-day rail and sea trip, during which he was plagued withsea sickness.[15] On the opening day of the Games he won his first race, the first heat of the800 metres run, finishing in a time of 2 min 10.0 sec.[6] On the second day he lined up against the American favourite,Arthur Blake, in the1500 metres run. Running shoulder to shoulder with Blake in the final straight, Flack powered ahead near the end to win by more than five metres in a time of 4:33.2.[16] On the fourth day of the Games, Flack earned his second first-place medal, winning the 800 metres in 2 min 11.9 sec.[6]
It may be noted that, even by the standards of the time, the times required to win the 800 m and 1,500 m at the first Olympics were slow. Although there was no official world record in that era, by way of comparison, the local 880 yards championship in Flack's home colony of Victoria was won that year in 2:04.4 and the previous year (1895) in 2:03.4.[17][18] At the Australasian Championships of 1896, themile run was won by New Zealander W. Bennett in a time of 4:28.6 – some 4.6s quicker than Flack's Olympic 1500 m time despite running 100 metres further.[19]
Just a day later, Flack tried for a treble with themarathon event despite never having run a race more than 16 kilometres.[20] He was in second place behind FrenchmanAlbin Lermusiaux—bronze medallist in the 1500 m run, whom Flack had already beaten—for much of the race. After 30–32 kilometres, the Frenchman dropped out and Flack was left in the lead, but 4–8 kilometres later (sources vary), Flack collapsed.[6][7] In his deliriousness, when a Greek spectator tried to help him, Flack punched him to the ground.[21] Flack was removed from the course and transported to the stadium by a carriage, wherein he was tended to byPrince Nicholas.[22]
Flack also competed in the tennissingles and doubles at the Olympics. He lost in the first round of the singles toAristidis Akratopoulos of Greece. In the doubles he was paired with an English friend,George S. Robertson. They reached the semi-finals after a walkover in the first round, but lost their only match toDionysios Kasdaglis ofEgypt andDemetrios Petrokokkinos of Greece.[10] They placed third due to their semi-final appearance, but medals for third places were not yet awarded in 1896. The medals were retroactively awarded in January 2008.[23]
Flack was a popular competitor at the 1896 games, and was commonly referred to as the "Lion of Athens".[4][24][25]
In 1898, Flack returned to Victoria and theMelbourne-based family accounting firm,was renamed Flack and Flack.[26] Flack purchased a property near Berwick, where he stayed on weekends and bredFriesian cattle. He never competed for Victoria again (or for Australia after the country was formed in 1901), but he joined theAustralian Olympic Committee (AOC) and was part of the first Australian delegation to attend anInternational Olympic Committee (IOC)Congress.[27] After developing heart problems, Flack died in 1935, following an operation at a private hospital. He was cremated and his ashes were interred at Berwick Cemetery.[4][3]
Flack is commemorated by a bronze statue on themedian strip of High St, Berwick,[4] which was unveiled in 1998 by former running great and laterGovernor of VictoriaJohn Landy.[28] The former Berwick Recreational Reserve was renamedEdwin Flack Reserve in 1996 to honour the town's first Olympic hero and medal winner,[27] and it includes several sporting grounds including an athletics track, anAustralian rules football oval,netball courts and soccer pitch.Melbourne Grammar School's sporting complex at Port Melbourne has been namedEdwin Flack Park in honour of their past student.[29]
Flack was commemorated on a 45-cent Australian postage stamp in the Olympic centenary year of 1996.[27] The AOC named one of the streets alongsideStadium Australia atHomebush Bay in Sydney, the venue of the2000 Summer Olympics, asEdwin Flack Avenue.[4] In 1985, Flack was inducted into theSport Australia Hall of Fame,[22] and he was inducted into theAthletics Australia Hall of Fame in 2000.[30] Athletics Australia's Edwin Flack Award, which is awarded to "an athlete who has rendered distinguished service to athletics", is named in his honour.[31]
Flack was portrayed by English actorBenedict Taylor in the 1984 television mini-seriesThe First Olympics: Athens 1896.[32]
Flack was a Victorian cattle-breeder and director of several companies when he died at 59 in Melbourne 21 years ago, after an operation. He never married but is survived by his elder brother, Henry, his partner in the accountancy firm of Flack and Flack.