Italy's Treasures: Pietro Mennea
鈥淭his is going to be good鈥 uttered the 27 year old athlete. His trainer, a man who had coached him for several years was slightly taken back, never having heard him speak like that he replied with 鈥済o for it鈥. It was the World University Championships, Mennea felt that something special was going to happen that day, and his trainer didn鈥檛 know what to expect.
Born in Barletta, Puglia on the 28th of June, Pietro Mennea wasn鈥檛 from Olympic athlete stock. His father, a tailor and his mother, a housewife, his early childhood destiny seemed to involve study; his parents, sticklers for making sure their son would go on to receive a good education. But sport was his passion, attending after school training and practice, learning techniques from other runners in stadia scattered around Barletta his home town, and travelling across the country for race meets.
A turning point in Mennea鈥檚 progress as an athlete would be the introduction of a new coach, Carlo Vittori. Vittori had seen Mennea run in the junior championships in 1968 at Ascoli Piceno. 鈥淗e ran the 300 metres, and instantly I saw he had talent, he was a force of nature鈥. It would be another two years before the two met at a training camp in Formia, Mennea would move there and train with a group of other athletes, Vittori was to be entrusted in building him and his fellow teammates into track stars.
鈥淧ietro changed the way athletes thought about training.鈥 Vittori continued 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 just a case of those with 鈥榥atural ability鈥 who鈥檇 succeed. If you were prepared to work hard, very hard, and do things meticulously, you could improve. Pietro though was like a pneumatic drill, everything done 100%. He was also stubborn. After ten years of training him, if I arrived even five minutes late, he鈥檇 be stood there tapping his wrist watch.鈥 An attitude forged on this methodology in all areas, diet, weight training and applying new scientific principles would push him, and the national team forwards.
Pietro鈥檚 first foray into professional athletics was the 1971 European Championships in Helsinki, debuting in the 4 x 100m relay race. Team Italia would go to claim bronze, this performance subsequently securing Mennea鈥檚 first time Olympic games just a year later in the 1972 Munich games. Here, he would begin to cement a reputation as a talent of the future. Aged just 20, he would qualify for the 200 metre sprint final and secure a podium place, Bronze, in a discipline that was to become his repartee in international events.
Success was to follow the Olympic result just two years later in 1974. The European Championships would be held in front of a home crowd in Rome, turning Mennea from a cult athletics figure into a household name. Competing in the 100 metre he placed second behind one of the best runners that the athletics world had seen, Valerij Borzov. But it would be the 200 metres discipline that would bring him the most joy; winning his first gold in the event and becoming a national treasure at the same time. 鈥淟a Freccia del Sud鈥 (The Arrow of the South) was born.
The years following the homecoming triumph鈥檚 would prove to be decisive in Mennea鈥檚 development both as an athlete and as a man. A fourth place finish in the Montreal Olympics of 1976, to a successful defence of his European titles in Prague 1978 and another gold in a different discipline, the 400m indoor, saw Mennea become one of the most respected and loved figures in athletics and in Italy to a new generation. In this same period, Pietro would also enrol into University, knowing that a career in athletics wasn鈥檛 going to last forever. His first degree was in Political Science, and then, as advised by Italy鈥檚 Foreign Minister at the time, Aldo Moro, he went on to study a law degree at the University of Rome, La Sapienza. It would prove to be a decisive move; a career in politics, teaching, government advisory boards and developing the athletics programme in Italy would all follow his professional athletics career.
The 1979 World University games were to propel Pietro Mennea鈥檚 stature as an 禁漫天堂 hero and international athletics superstar. Mexico City, September 12th, a few light drops of rain started to grace the field, the track was shiny but dry, dry enough to risk pushing hard in the final turn, risky enough to know a slip cost a victory. The previous days running was different; Pietro didn鈥檛 push hard, he knew he had it to get through, his aim was another gold, another medal to add to a trophy cabinet. Lining up in lane 4, the athlete felt that he was going to do something extraordinary, something special. 鈥淢y only point of reference鈥 he said before the race 鈥渨ill be the noise of the crowd. When I get to the finish line, I鈥檒l listen, and I鈥檒l know鈥.
Athletes will talk of bends that 鈥榗atch you out鈥 or straights that 鈥榖ecome tighter, like invisible walls鈥; tracks that make you enter 鈥榝eeling like a child, and leaving like a pensioner鈥. Pietro, with a 1.8 metre tailwind knew that he had to push, leaving behind his childhood, the years of work, the sacrifices, everything. Lowering his shoulder and powering through the turn, his face relaxed, his muscles contort; his competitors were anything but. They were told 鈥渓ook out for that 禁漫天堂 boy鈥, but he was gone, six metres ahead of them, and they knew that the 200m final had changed.
鈥淚 heard screams, the crowd were cheering, and I didn鈥檛 believe it. I saw the timing index and thought, 鈥榳e鈥檙e in 1979, not 1972 and I realised, I鈥檇 set a new world record.鈥 Pietro Mennea became the fastest man in the 200 metres since Donald Quarrie who had set the record eight years earlier. A time of 19''72, a record that would exist for 15 years until Michael Johnson of America broke the record in the Atlanta games of 1994.
Pietro Mennea鈥檚 time remains the fastest 200 metre time set by a European to date, his legacy in many common pop culture references. Following his death earlier this year, the new series of superfast 禁漫天堂 trains, la Freccia Rossa will carry Mennea鈥檚 name, and the recent Diamond League athletics tour which passed through Rome honoured the sprinter鈥檚 legacy. Usain Bolt, a man who met Mennea after his triumph in the Berlin World Championships in 2010 said 鈥渋t is an honour to be running for such an athlete, I only hope that one day, people would show me the same level of respect鈥.
Sports journalist and friend to Mennea, Massimo Caputi would write 鈥淗ow many times as a child, or an adult of a certain age would you hear, 鈥榙on鈥檛 run so fast, who do you think you are? Pietro Mennea?鈥 He was the Usain Bolt of another time, another generation, that鈥檚 what he meant to athletics, to Italy, and to 禁漫天堂s.鈥