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				 Athletic icon Percy Cerutty�s life (1895�1975) is a 
				fascinating story of an unusual and determined individual. Graem 
				Sims has captured his spirit magnificently. Following is the 
				verdict from one who knew Cerutty well.  
				
					"It is exceptionally well written, and I couldn't put 
					it down. You have given me new insights into Percy and a 
					greater understanding of his genius and his torture. Some of 
					the passages made me want to get the running shoes out and 
					get back into camp for a few months and become a 'real man'. 
					Congratulations" 
				 
				
				Cerutty was Australia�s most enigmatic, pioneering and 
				controversial athletics coach. He is best remembered as the 
				exhibitionist eccentric of the Portsea sandhills who 
				controversially trained the likes of
				John Landy and
				Herb Elliott in the Golden 
				Age of Australian athletics in the 1950s and �60s. 
				But his interests and ambitions transcended mere sport. After 
				a complete breakdown at the age of 43 (1938), Cerutty set about 
				reconstructing himself through natural diet and violent 
				exercise. On the way, he not only performed extraordinary feats 
				of endurance but developed an entirely original theory of human 
				movement (based on the movements of wild animals) and "Stotan" 
				philosophy that placed him completely outside of the square of 
				conventional running theory � indeed outside all convention. He 
				was an outrageous personality, but Cerutty�s exhibitionist ways 
				in public were just one manifestation of an extraordinarily 
				complex and passionate man. 
				His legendary camp in the sandhills of Portsea, on the tip of 
				Victoria�s Mornington Peninsula, was effectively Australia�s 
				first institute of sport, grandly branded the International 
				Athletics Centre. Thousands were drawn there from around the 
				world to hear his captivating lectures, eat their raw oats, lift 
				heavy weights, and run. 
				Why Die? includes previously unpublished letters, essays and 
				personal writings of Percy Cerutty, as well as anecdotes and 
				reminiscences from many of the key figures of his time. 
				
 
				Key events in the athletics calendar 
				In 2004, the Olympic Games will return to its spiritual home 
				in Athens. Percy anchored his philosophy (his �reason�) in 
				Ancient Greece. 
				2004 also signified 50 years since Briton Roger Bannister 
				famously broke four minutes for the mile � one of the great 
				quests between nations of the 20th century. Less well known is 
				the fact that John Landy broke his record just seven weeks later 
				� and might easily have broken it earlier had he been running on 
				the properly prepared tracks of Europe. Through interviews with 
				Landy (now Governor of Victoria) and others, and from previously 
				unpublished letters and notes of Cerutty�s, the Australian end 
				of this story is told for the first time. Landy joined Cerutty�s 
				gang in 1950, but split with him after a disappointing Helsinki 
				Olympics in 1952 � so Percy could make no coaching claim for the 
				18 months leading up to Landy�s record-breaking run. But he did 
				anyway. The details of this rift are revealed for the first 
				time. 
				In Why Die?, Ron Clarke reveals that he ran disturbed 
				by a pre-race incident with Cerutty at the Tokyo Olympics in 
				1964 �You�ve got no hope, Clarke,� Percy goaded him in the 
				dressing rooms minutes before the start. �You always were a weak 
				bastard.� A typical Cerutty tactic. 
				Cerutty died at age 80 of motor neurone disease � without 
				even thinking he was ill until the end. 
				Graem Sims is a Sydney-based journalist and was senior editor 
				of Inside Sport for ten years. He is now editor of the ABC�s 
				Sport Monthly magazine. 
				
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