Robert de Castella
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| Medal record | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Robert de Castella |
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| Men's Athletics | |||
| Competitor for |
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| World Championships | |||
| Gold | 1983 Helsinki | Marathon | |
| Commonwealth Games | |||
| Gold | 1982 Brisbane | Marathon | |
| Gold | 1986 Edinburgh | Marathon | |
Robert Francois de Castella MBE (born February 27, 1957 in Melbourne, Victoria) was a world champion marathon runner. He is popularly known as "Deek" or "Deeks". His strong marathon performances in 1981-83 made him the favourite for the marathon at the 1984 Summer Olympics, at a time when Australia had few prospects for Olympic gold. de Castella is of Swiss-Italian decent.
de Castella also held the World best time in the marathon from 1981 to 1984. It was not initially known to be a world best time, because his time of 2h 08'18" was 5 seconds more than the time set by Alberto Salazar earlier in 1981 in the New York City Marathon. It later emerged that the New York course was about 148 metres short. (See the Alberto Salazar article).
de Castella lost his family home, along with many of his medals and other citations, in the 2003 Canberra bushfires. He was married to runner Gaylene Clews.
He retired from the sport in 1993 and now lives in Canberra. From 1990 to 1995 he was the director of the Australian Institute of Sport, and subsequently became executive director of Focus On You. He is the co-owner of two cafe bakeries, in Pearce, and the Dickson Centre. de Castella has been part of a long-running advertising campaign for the multi-vitamin tablet "Centrum".
[edit] Achievements in sports
- 1979 - won the Victorian Championship and the Australian marathon title.
- 1980 - 10th in the 1980 Summer Olympics marathon in Moscow.
- 1981 - won the Fukuoka Marathon in 2h 08'18" (world record from 1981 to 1984)
- 1982 - won the 1982 Commonwealth Games marathon in Brisbane in 2h 09'18"
- 1983 - won the Rotterdam Marathon in 2h 08'37"
- 1983 - won the 1983 World Championships in Athletics marathon in Helsinki in 2h 10'03" (becoming Australia's first world champion in the sport).
- 1984 - 5th in the Olympic Marathon in Los Angeles
- 1984 - 3rd in the Chicago Marathon in 2h 09'09"
- 1985 - 3rd in the Chicago Marathon in 2h 08'48"
- 1986 - won the 1986 Commonwealth Games marathon in Edinburgh in 2h 10'15"
- 1986 - won the Boston marathon in 2h 07'51"
- 1988 - 4th in the Tokyo Marathon in 2h 08'49"
- 1988 - 8th in the 1988 Summer Olympics marathon in Seoul
- 1991 - won the Rotterdam Marathon in 2h 09'42"
[edit] Other awards
- 1983 - awarded the Australian of the Year
[edit] References
| Records | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by |
Men's Marathon World Record Holder December 6, 1981 – October 21, 1984 |
Succeeded by |
| Sporting positions | ||
| Preceded by |
Fukuoka Men's Marathon Winner 1981 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Men's Fastest Marathon Race 1981 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Rotterdam Men's Marathon Winner 1983 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Men's Fastest Marathon Race 1983 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Boston Men's Marathon Winner 1986 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Men's Fastest Marathon Race 1986 |
Succeeded by |
| Preceded by |
Rotterdam Men's Marathon Winner 1991 |
Succeeded by |
| Honorary titles | ||
| Preceded by Sir Edward Williams |
Australian of the Year 1983 |
Succeeded by Lois O'Donoghue |
| World Champions in Men's Marathon |
|---|
| 1983: Robert de Castella | 1987: Douglas Wakiihuri | 1991: Hiromi Taniguchi | 1993: Mark Plaatjes | 1995: Martín Fiz | 1997: Abel Antón | 1999: Abel Antón | 2001: Gezahegne Abera | 2003: Jaouad Gharib | 2005: Jaouad Gharib | 2007: Luke Kibet |

