By Satish Sekar © Satish Sekar (July 31st 2020)
“I need to pass my humble acknowledgement to Filbert Bayi for what he has done for South Africa,” Mamelodi Sundowns coach Pitso Mosimane said in his appreciation of Bayi.
“For him to sacrifice to go to the Olympics while he was the current World Record holder and did that on behalf of the support of South Africa to be changed to where it is and his contribution and his message make so much contribution.
“Look at the country we have at the moment – everything has changed and it’s through messages and sacrifices like people like him to sacrifice … and a lot of the world has also done that, but we don’t forget our African brother, our Tanzanian brother for the support that he’s given. We still salute.”
So, what is Mosimane talking about?
Filbert Bayi is without doubt the greatest athlete Tanzania ever produced. He was their best hope of an Olympic gold medal in 1976. Why? Two years earlier Bayi stunned the athletics world, not because he won, but the manner of his win. He changed the event.
He not only won gold in the Commonwealth Games in the backyard of his greatest rival, New Zealand’s John Walker, but did it leading from start to finish and shaving a second from the World Record.
Bayi and John Walker broke the previous World Record in that 1500m run.
That race also produced the fourth, fifth and seventh fastest times in the history of 1500m running.
Kenyan Ben Jipcho was only denied the third best time by the previous World Record of the USA’s Jim Ryun. Naturally, that Commonwealth Games 1500m final left the athletics world stunned but salivating.
Montreal’s 1500m would be mouth-watering – it should have been the best 1500m race of all time.
Forty-four years ago today an Olympic 1500m Final – an all-white race, which was astonishing even then – elicited very different memories for the men who should have made it one of the greatest races ever.
Two years earlier a 20-year-old Bayi had announced his arrival on the international stage in style. The Olympic Games of Montreal should or at least could have been the crowning moment of Bayi’s illustrious career.
But politics and human rights intervened.
“I have mixed feelings about it,” Bayi told me.
Like many he was disgusted by the violence of the Apartheid State towards black people in the Soweto Uprising, especially the slaughter of children.
Bayi wanted to help. He had trained hard. He was one of, if not the top athlete at his distance in the world.
It was not only his best chance of Olympic gold, but his country’s too. Tanzania has never won an Olympic gold medal.
And it was Tanzania that led the boycott of Montreal’s Olympic Games, costing both the nation and Bayi their best chance.
Four years later another boycott worked in Bayi’s favour – this one had nothing to do with sport. It was a protest against the invasion of Afghanistan led by the USA and supported by its political allies.
Bayi won silver in the 3000m – he was still a great athlete, but not the athlete he was in the mid-1970s. The late Bronislaw Malinowski pipped him at the finish to take gold for Poland in the 3000m steeplechase in 1980.
A year before his magnificent triumph in the 1500m in Christchurch’s Commonwealth Games, Bayi gave Africa notice of his immense talent. He won the 1500m at Lagos’ All-Africa Games by more than two seconds – Kenyan great Kipchoge Keino won silver.
In 1975 he broke Jim Ryun’s World Record for the mile, although Walker broke his mark within weeks, becoming the first to dip under 3 minutes 50 seconds.
Nevertheless, Bayi posed a big threat to Walker, as did other African athletes. Bayi retained his All-Africa title in Algiers five years later, beating Kenya’s Wilson Waigwa into second place.
Former World 400m hurdles champion (1991) and 1996 Olympics silver medallist, Zambia’s greatest athlete, Samuel Matete, acknowledges Bayi’s great contribution to athletics and his continent.
“Filbert Bayi inspired all of us in Africa for what he did in track and field,” Matete said.
“He sacrificed for his country, Tanzania, to be one of the best Africa has ever produced in the Mile and 1500m.”
Matete also highlighted the price Bayi paid in 1976.
“The boycott was done in good faith by member countries, he said.
“Definitely, this denied an opportunity for Bayi to collect another medal.”