AMERICAN TOUR OF 1925 As soon as Paavo Nurmi had established himself as the leading long-distance runner of the world, American athletics officials became anxious to have him run at the track circuit of the New World. They first approached Nurmi in November 1922, but their plans were put forward first by Nurmis studies at the Industrial School of Helsinki and later by his preparation for the Olympic Games in Paris in 1924. After the triumph in Paris, Nurmis market value only increased in the eyes of the American track promoters. In November 1924 Nurmi finally embarked on the journey across the Atlantic, accompanied by his loyal masseur Eino Hakoniemi. Conditions aboard the s/s Celtic were not ideal for training. Nurmi later described his trip: "I trained every day on board. Or, actually, at night under poor electric lighting. At daytime I was too ashamed and in the morning hours I didnt dare because the stewards were already up." The Celtic arrived in New York on the 10th of December, 1924, and hundreds of Finnish-Americans had flocked to the harbor to welcome their champion. There was an official reception at City Hall, and Mayor Hylan gave Nurmi the ceremonial key to the city.
IN SMOKE AND ROARNurmis "trainer, coach and advisor" in America was Hugo Qvist, the chairman of the Finnish-American Athletic Club of New York. He lived at first at Qvists home in the Bronx but soon moved to a more secluded place to avoid journalists and eager fans who kept looking after him. Nurmi started to train hard for the gruelling circuit ahead of him: after a two-and-a-half-week spell of outdoor exercise he had one week to get used to indoor tracks. His first race, sold out from the outset, was scheduled for the 6th of January, 1925, in Madison Square Garden. The 160-yard track of the Garden was considered the fastest in America, as Nurmi would himself later concur. The air was thick with cigar smoke but Nurmi only found that invigorating.
COAST TO COAST, RACE TO RACEThe promoters had devised a re-run of Nurmis famous exploit in Paris: Nurmi would run two races, one mile and 5000 metres, inside an hour. In the mile-race, the Americans Joie Ray and Lloyd Hahn seemed to pull to victory, but Nurmi catched both of them and crossed the finish line in new indoor world record time of 4:13.5. The start of the 5000 meters was somewhat delayed due to eager photographers. As in Paris, Nurmi now faced Ville Ritola. Ritola, running in his home town, kept early pace, but 200 meters to go, Nurmi launched an irresistible sprint and clocked the time of 14:44,6 - another indoor world record!
Nurmi was not going to spend the whole winter in America, but after his brilliant opening night, invitations poured from every corner of the country. All in all, Nurmi was to run 55 races during his tour, and in between he gave numerous running exhibitions at schools, universities and military barracks. Traveling and PR commitments took greater toll of Nurmi than racing ever did.
WHY DID AMERICANS CARE?He traveled from coast to coast, from Boston to San Francisco, with a couple of trips to Canada in between. All in all, he covered 50 000 kilometers in four months, mostly by train or automobile coach. As indoor meetings were mostly scheduled for late evening, and the main event, Nurmis race, usually started close to midnight, Nurmi could not go to sleep until the early hours. Considering the circumstances, Nurmis balance sheet was incredible: he won 53 of his 55 races (45 indoors, 10 outdoors), abandoned once and lost only once. He set 12 new indoor world records in regular distances and many more in rarer events. Nurmi suffered his only defeat in his last race, an 880-yard sprint, on the 26th May in Yankee Stadium in New York, to Alan Helffrich, the fastest half-miler of the hemisphere. Out of politeness, one newspaper article claimed.
Why did Paavo Nurmis American tour gain so much publicity as it did? How did the
"Phantom Finn", quiet and reclusive, capture the imagination of the American public in the roaring twenties, in the era of charleston, jazz and speakeasies, if only for a short time. Nurmi himself did not seek any undue attention: during the whole tour, he did not give a single interview - he never did. Once at home, he was awarded high national honours by the President of Finland as a matter of course, but why did President Calvin Coolidge want to meet the Finnish runner? From January to March 1925 the New York Times published over 70 articles on Nurmis tour, and smaller papers followed the lead. Media attention and Nurmis popularity fed each other: he made news as long as he sold news, and vice versa. Nurmi himself was perceptive in America: "You can see a newspaper in everyones hands, but they read only sports pages and then toss the paper away." In winter 1929 Nurmi made a second American tour. The publicity was there again, but this time his schedule was much more modest. Later in life, Paavo Nurmi visited the United States several times, always as a celebrated guest.
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Last Updated March 18th 1997
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