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Robert de Castella

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Robert de CastellaAO,MBE
Robert de Castella in 1983
Personal information
Full nameFrancois Robert de Castella
Born(1957-02-27)27 February 1957(age 67)
Melbourne,Victoria,Australia
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight65 kg (143 lb)
Sport
CountryAustralia
SportLong-distance running
ClubOld Xaverians, Glenhuntly Athletics Club, Melbourne
Mazda Optimists Track Club
Medal record
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1983 Helsinki Marathon
Commonwealth Games
Gold medal – first place 1982 Brisbane Marathon
Gold medal – first place 1986 Edinburgh Marathon

Francois Robert "Rob" de CastellaAO,MBE(born 27 February 1957) is an Australian former world championmarathonrunner.

De Castella is widely known as "Deek"or"Deeks"[1]to the Australian public, and "Tree" to his competitors due to his thick legs and inner calm. He holds theOceanicrecord for the marathon.

Early life

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De Castella is of French and Swiss-French descent. His family were part of both theFrench nobilityandSwiss nobility.[2]He was born inMelbourne,Victoria,the eldest of seven children. Sport was a way of life in his family – his father Rolet ran marathons in the 1950s. His mother Anne was a state-level tennis player. His brother Nicholas, took part in four World Cross Country Championships, whereas brother Anthony competed in running at club level for more than 25 years.[3]Rob de Castella attendedXavier Collegein Melbourne where he was an outstanding track athlete and trained underPat Clohessyfrom the age of 11.[4]

Marathon career

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De Castella wanted to represent Australia at the Olympics in Moscow and reckoned his best chance was in the marathon. He won the Australian championship and finished second in the Australian Olympic trials to gain a place on the 1980 Olympic team.[5]

1980 Olympic Games Moscow

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At his first big international marathon competition, DeCastella finished an admirable 10th in a time of 2:14:31, in a field of 74 runners. 21 competitors did not finish.

1981 Fukuoka Marathon

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De Castella first came to international attention when he won the 1981 Fukuoka Marathon in a time of 2:08:18, which was the fastest time recorded for an out-and-back course. It was not initially known to be a world best time, because his time was 5 seconds slower than the time set byAlberto Salazarin the 1981New York City Marathon.It later emerged that the New York course was about 148 metres short. De Castella's time was later ratified as the world record.[4]

1982 Commonwealth Games Marathon

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De Castella was the favourite to win the marathon at the1982 Commonwealth GamesinBrisbane.At the start of the race,TanzaniansGidamis ShahangaandJuma Ikangaaraced to the lead and were 50 m ahead of the pack after five minutes. After the 20 km mark, this gap had widened to several hundred meters. At the halfway mark, De Castella developeddiarrhoea.[6]In 100% humidity, he let go of his bowels and signalled for some damp towels from his crew members.[7]By the 23 km mark, Ikangaa had taken the lead from his compatriot, with de Castella in the main pack some 250 m behind but closing. De Castella passed the now-tiring Shahanga at the 38 km mark, and in the next kilometre drew level with Ikangaa and then took the lead. However, Ikangaa was not done yet, and he re-took the lead slightly. The duel continued for the remainder of the race. Eventually, de Castella pulled away and won by 80 metres in a time of 2:09:18, 12 seconds ahead of Ikangaa. BritonMike Grattonfinished third in 2:12:06, and Shahanga faded to finish 6th. The race finished on the streets of Brisbane, not in the main stadium.[4][8]

1983 Rotterdam Marathon

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In April 1983, De Castella defeated a deep field to win theRotterdam Marathon.The race was billed as a clash between de Castella and Salazar, who at the time was undefeated, and was also televised live back to Australia.[9]De Castella dropped all of the field exceptCarlos Lopes(who would win the Olympic marathon the next year), and defeated Lopes in a sprint for the finish, winning in a time of 2:08:37.[4]De Castella's time was, at that point, the fourth fastest in history.[10]

1983 IAAF World Championships

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World champion Robert De Castella (r.) receives congratulations from 3rd-place finisherWaldemar Cierpinski(DDR) inHelsinki 1983

De Castella won Australia's firstathletic World Championshipsgold medal when he won the marathon in August1983,beating EthiopianKebede Balchaby 24 seconds and Olympic championWaldemar Cierpinskiby 34 seconds.[11]

1984 Olympic Games

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De Castella was the favourite for the1984 Summer Olympics marathon.[4]He ran in a leading group of ten until about the 35 kilometres mark, when at a drink station, six leading runners picked up speed and de Castella could not keep up.[12]He caught some of the leaders during the final kilometres, and finished fifth.

1986 Commonwealth Games

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De Castella defended his Commonwealth Games title inEdinburgh,winning in 2:10:15.[13]

Cross country running

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In addition to marathon running, de Castella was also an accomplishedcross country runner.He won the Australian national title once as a junior and four times as a senior, along with five other podium finishes. He competed eight times at theWorld Cross Country Championshipsfrom 1977 to 1986, finishing in the top 20 five times.[13]

Post career and life

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De Castella failed to finish the marathon at the 1987 World Athletics Championships.[13]He represented Australia at the 1988 Seoul and 1992 Barcelona Olympics, competing in four straight Olympic Games. He finished in the top ten in three Olympics, but never won a medal.[1]

He retired from the sport in 1993 and lives inCanberra,together with his wife Theresa and four children.[14]Previously he was married to the former championtriathleteGaylene Clews.[4][15]He lost his family home, along with many of his medals and other citations, in the2003 Canberra bushfires.[16]Choosing to move rather than rebuild, he now lives in a nearby suburb. He later helped with the taskforce established for the reconstruction of areas worst affected by the fires.[14]

From 1990 to 1995, de Castella was the director of theAustralian Institute of Sport[15]and subsequently became executive director ofFocus On You,a company focusing on corporate and community health and fitness.[15]He has also been actively involved in other organisations dedicated to encouraging healthy living for both children and adults.[17]He also fronts the Indigenous Marathon Project. In 2014 he was made anOfficer of the Order of Australiaat the Australia Day honours.

In 2003, de Castella launched "deeks", a specialist chain of grain and gluten free bakeries & cafés.[18]In 2004, he earned a black belt in the traditional OkinawanGoju Ryu;he has also been part of a long-running advertising campaign for the multi-vitamin tablet "Centrum".[14]

On 10 October 2023, de Castella was one of 25Australians of the Yearwho signed anopen lettersupporting the Yes vote in theIndigenous Voice referendum,initiated by psychiatristPatrick McGorry.[19][20]

Results

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Records

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As of May 2009, de Castella still held the following records:[13]

  • Australian U20 10,000 m – 28'54 "4 on 16 December 1976 in Melbourne
  • Australian 20 km Track – 58.37.2 on 17 April 1982 in Rome
  • Australian 1 hr – 20,516 m on 17 April 1982 in Rome
  • Australian All Comers Marathon – 2h 09'18 "in Brisbane Commonwealth Games 1982
  • Australian Marathon – 2h 07'51 "at the 1986 Boston Marathon

Other awards

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References

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  1. ^abcdefEvans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen;Mallon, Bill;et al."Rob de Castella".Olympics at Sports-Reference.Sports Reference LLC.Archived fromthe originalon 18 April 2020.
  2. ^"Fribourg: Le château de Delley".
  3. ^Ant de Castella.Hawthorn Tri Club
  4. ^abcdefghijklmnoBenyo, Richard & Henderson, Joe (2002).Running Encyclopedia.Human Kinetics. pp.86–87.ISBN978-0-7360-3734-1.
  5. ^"How Rob De Castella changed the face of the marathon".
  6. ^"The day de Castella stopped the nation with marathon victory in 1982".ABC News.14 April 2018.Retrieved31 May2022.
  7. ^Pentony, Luke; Hull, Quentin (14 April 2018)."The day de Castella stopped the nation with marathon victory in 1982".ABC News.
  8. ^Wilson, Lorraine (1984).Robert de Castella.Thomas Nelson Publishing.ISBN0170064492.
  9. ^De Castellas have a marathon weekend,Canberra Times,11 April 1983
  10. ^"Robert de Castella wins".Reading Eagle.10 April 1983.Retrieved26 August2010.
  11. ^Wünsche, Wolfgang (1984).The Heroes of Racetracks.
  12. ^De Castella dignified in defeat,Canberra Times,14 August, 1984
  13. ^abcde"Robert de Castella – Profile".Athletics Australia.Archived fromthe originalon 21 August 2012.
  14. ^abc"Rob de Castella – Commonwealth Games Gold Medallist & Former Head of the AIS".IMG. Archived fromthe originalon 16 March 2012.Retrieved26 August2010.
  15. ^abcd"Robert de Castella MBE".National Australia Day Council. Archived fromthe originalon 6 August 2020.Retrieved7 February2022.
  16. ^Nicholson, Brendan; Crabb, Annabel; Gordon, Josh; Guerrera, Orietta (20 January 2003)."Disaster in the capital".The Age.Retrieved26 August2010.
  17. ^"AIS Alumni".Robert de Castella.Australian Institute of Sport. Archived fromthe originalon 6 March 2011.Retrieved26 August2010.
  18. ^"deeks bakery and cafe".The story of deeks.deeks bakery and cafe. Archived fromthe originalon 15 October 2009.Retrieved26 August2010.
  19. ^Butler, Josh (11 October 2023)."Australian of the Year winners sign open letter saying no vote in voice referendum would be a 'shameful dead end'".The Guardian.Retrieved11 October2023.
  20. ^Winter, Velvet (10 October 2023)."Voice referendum live updates: Australians of the Year Yes vote letter in full".ABC News (Australia).Retrieved11 October2023.
  21. ^"Robert Francois de Castella MBE".Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.Retrieved27 January2014.
  22. ^"Robert de Castella".Sport Australia Hall of Fame.Retrieved25 September2020.
  23. ^"Robert Francois de Castella".Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.Retrieved27 January2014.
  24. ^"Robert Francois de Castella".Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.Retrieved27 January2014.
  25. ^Best of the Best.Australian Institute of Sport
  26. ^"Officer (AO) in the general division of the Order of Australia at the 2014 Australia Day honours"(PDF).Official Secretary to the Governor-General of Australia.26 January 2014. p.18.Retrieved27 January2014.
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Records
Preceded by Men's Marathon World Record Holder
6 December 1981 – 21 October 1984
Succeeded by