THE THREE AMIGOS

(aka Peter Cartwright, Bobby Young and Brian Campbell)

 

Brian Campbell, Bobby Young and Pete Cartwright in 2005

 

The club has had many very successful teams in the years since 1885 – the founding fathers won many championships and gold medals between them but the club had up to 1000 members to do it with, the post war teams with George White, Cyril O’Boyle, Pat Younger and company were the last to win medals at National level over the country, the Ian Donald, Allan Faulds, Phil Dolan and Doug Gemmell generation won a lot as well and the middle distance men of the 1990’s were quite outstanding with three of them winning GB vests.  However possibly the most successful men’s team the club has ever had in terms of winning British titles is the group known as the Three Amigos who went everywhere as a team in the M60 Age Grouping and won just about every British Team Championship they entered, whether on the road or over the country, whether 5000 metres or 10000 metres, whether straight race or relay race between 2002 and 2008.   In that period they won thirteen titles and medalled in four others – quite remarkable!    Each was a very good athlete in his own right but if ever there was evidence of the total being greater than the sum of the parts, this was it.  Before detailing their main triumphs, I’ll have a word about each of the runners separately and I’ll just do it in alphabetical order.   Information was in the main supplied by the athletes themselves.

 

 

Brian Campbell

 

Brian started out as a schools football player after attending a school in Lanarkshire where the heroes were Billy McNeill and Bobby Murdoch.  By fifth year he was captain of the school first eleven and as was usual played for the school on the Saturday morning and for an amateur team in the afternoon, thereafter repairing to the pub or the dancing for a couple of pints.   He had what he calls the ‘dubious pleasure’ of playing against Jimmy Johnstone when he played outside right for St Columba’s Boys Guild and Brian was left back for St John’s!   

 

Athletics became a career purely by chance.   At the age of thirty six he had to give up weekly five a side football ‘due to several injuries – broken ankle, dislocated shoulder, broken fingers, fed up wife…’    By the age of forty he had gone up to 11.5 stones in weight and at New Year 1984 his resolution was to get back some fitness.   By January he had started easy runs with some other ‘potential geriatrics’.   By April he was running in the Galloway Marathon in 3:26:00 and then three weeks later he ran the Motherwell Marathon in 3:22:00.   In his first year he ran four marathons in all – not to be recommended he says!   In 1985 he joined his local club Hamilton Harriers and as his children grew he introduced them to athletics taking three of them to the club twice a week and to League Meetings at the weekend.   In 1986 he went to Inverclyde on a coaching course where he shared a room with one of his heroes, Commonwealth 10000 metres champion Lachie Stewart, and did some coaching at the club.   !987/88 saw him try some triathlons with a bit of success winning the vets prize at East Kilbride and Cumbernauld.   The training demands of three distinct schedules  were ultimately too much physically and time-wise and so he went back to road running where he picked up various age group prizes at a variety of distances and venues.  

 

 

His best performances as a veteran were:

 

Marathon:   2:49:55

Half Marathon:   74:52

10 Miles:   54:25

10K:   33:50

 

Brian had known Bobby Young and Pete Cartwright through road and cross country racing plus as members of the SVHC.   It was actually at one of the Vets Races in 2003 that he got talking with Pete and the upshot was that he joined Clydesdale Harriers as there were no other over 60’s at his club to make up a team.   Like the others Brian had many individual and team successes over the period in question – for example in 2006 he won both 1500 metres and 3000 metres at the Vets Indoor Championships in Kelvin Hall – but I won’t list them here because in this section we are dealing almost solely on the British dimension of their work.  

 

The team success thereafter is well documented and their raids south of the Border were so successful that they became known by the English as ‘The Border Raiders’.   I believe that one of the main ingredients of the success of the trio is that they are indeed The Three Amigos who delight in each other’s company.  Indeed at the start of this year (2009) they spent six weeks together in Australia and New Zealand: you don’t do that and not fall out if there is not something special in the relationship.

 

Peter Cartwright

Starting off in Manchester where he played professional football, he enjoyed training and never ever found motivation a problem.   He moved to Scotland to work with the G.P.O. at Stirling University as the resident engineer.   There was a group running at lunchtimes and he joined in with them – it was only about three or four miles of easy keep fit running and a chat at the same time.   It wasn’t long before the former pro footballer was roped in to the lunchtime 5-a-side football league.   By the time he was 38 years old, he met Derek Easton, brother of Stuart and a very good runner in his own right who went on to become a highly rated coach.   Derek told him that he would be eligible to run as a Veteran when he was 40 and explained the scheme to him.   He got a training schedule from Derek that had him wishing he had never met him, joined Falkirk Victoria AC and within months was covering 70/100 miles per week in training with three track sessions thrown in.   As he says, “it that’s what it took, that’s what I did!”   He did dinner time sessions and ran home in the evening from Stirling to the village of Thornhill where he lived which was 12 miles away.   He was training hard and wishing his life away – he couldn’t wait to get to 40!   His first ever race was a Vets Cross Country Race at Torrance where he was first and he says “running took over my life.”

 

He was very successful – two years later he won a round of the British Adidas Half Marathon series at Wilmslow in Cheshire followed by what he calls “a streak of title winning.”    At 1500 he won the SVHC, the British Telecom National Championship and the British Civil Service Championships plus a bronze medal in the Vets Commonwealth Games in Grangemouth.   1994 was probably his most successful year taking gold in the WAVA Games in Canada, running for Great Britain and wins in America over 5 miles and 10 miles.   His first individual title on home ground was when he took the 1500 and 3000 metres in the same day at Kelvin Hall.    He then won the 5K Road Championship and was very pleasantly surprised when his club (Falkirk Victoria) presented him with their Athlete of the Year Award.   Like everybody at the time he continued to race all over Scotland and he won his share of races but the standard of Masters Athletics was so high that hard fought races did not always end in success.   The highest honour of his career was when he won the Athlete of the Year Award for Central Scotland in 1999.

 

He raced and trained until he was 55 before he switched to Mountain Bike Racing.   Having raced motor bikes as a sidecar passenger in the Isle of Man TT and World Championships for 15 years and gone into SuperKart racing, the thrills of using his fitness for the thrills of mountain bike racing was a big attraction.   In his first two years he won the Scottish Masters Series title and became totally hooked on the speed, jumps, single track and adrenalin rush of downhill speed.   Like all bikers however he had a big accident which damaged several discs in his back and he had to spend six months having treatment.   He made his return with the intention of taking on the British Championships against the very best riders from the four home countries.   He made it to second in the series and then in the Welsh Series he attempted an eight foot drop off and things went wrong: he ended up with a suspected broken neck!   On X Ray he was told that he was lucky that he had only damaged the discs in his neck but that was enough for the doctor to tell him that any more disasters like that and there would be no more sport for Peter!   So it was back to running.

 

That’s when he joined Clydesdale Harriers, teamed up with Bobby Young and subsequently Brian Campbell with the avowed aim of trying to bring some British titles in the M60 age group back to Scotland.   They trained hard – individually and as a group – travelled a lot and had a great time winning titles and just being together.    The running led to the thirteen titles, the friendship led to a six week holiday in Australia and New Zealand in 2009.  

 

Bobby Young

Bobby leading the M60’s in Scottish colours.

 

Bobby took up running for the first time in December 1979 when he was thirty six with some friends and work colleagues.   A five mile run at 9:00 am in Pollock Park on Saturdays turned into a twice yearly handicap race and Dinner.   He had a go at several races including the Springburn Cup, Round Cumbrae and the Glasgow University Race over the next two years before there was a group decision to run in the second London Marathon and the first Glasgow Marathon – both in 1982.   These resulted in times of 3:03 and 2:46 after which training became more regular.  

 

He got up to 60/70 miles a week with a couple of speed sessions and the regular long Sunday run became standard practice.  Bobby joined Clydesdale Harriers and ran a couple of dozen marathons and recorded 2:37:18 in Glasgow in 1986.   His lifetime best for the marathon came at Lochaber in 1990 when at the age of 46 he ran 2:36:15.   He regularly ran 10K’s in 33 minutes, 5K’s in 16 minutes, 10 miles in 54 minutes and half marathons in 72 minutes testified to the quality of his running at this point.  

 

In 1988 he took part in the first ever British Veterans International at Wrexham where he won the bronze at M45 – Pete Cartwright had also been invited.   Bobby then ran in the British Vets International for 18 consecutive years until 2005 when he won gold in the M60 category.  

 

On the World Veterans stage, he competed in 1999 at Gateshead in the World Vets Track and Field Championships winning team gold in Cross Country and Marathon in which he also won the individual bronze.   Then in 2001 he went off to Brisbane in 2001 for the World Veterans Track and Field Championship winning team gold in cross country, team bronze in the marathon and individual bronze in the 10000 metres

 

And that is one of Bobby’s biggest virtues as an athlete – he is very competitive and goes looking for good competition.   The table below shows his record in Scottish Championships is summarised in the first 10 rows and successes further afield follow.

 

Event Gold Silver Bronze
1500 metres T 11 2 4
5000 metres T 8 3 1
1500 metres I 7 3
3000 metres I 6 5  
Cross Country 3 3 8
5K Road 9 2 4
10K Road 6 2 1
Half Marathon 3 2 1
Marathon 1 1
Hill Climbs 1 1
World Masters 1999/2001 3 3
European Indoor 3000 m 1
International Cross Country* 1 3 3
BMAF Championships 24 9 12

 

Bobby ran in 19 Cross Country International races

 

And you can add in 4 SAF Gold Medals and 4 SAF Silver medals that are unlabelled in any way!    As for open races, forget it, the calculator can only go so high.    He has been known to do three events in a weekend.    The other amigos have similar records but I think Bobby’s is unique in the sheer number of victories in County, Scottish, British and World Vets Championships.   

 

These then are the individuals who made up the team that brought so much kudos to Scotland – and to Clydesdale Harriers.   Now for the Championships and the stories behind them.

 

The Amigos

 

Pictures after the British Cross Country Relay Championships in 2007

 

None of them had had a significant running career before becoming vets but all had been medal winners, all had been highly ranked and all had run for Scotland after the age of 40.   13 victories in 17 races at British level is quite a record.    The first year as a unit was in 2004 and there was success right from the beginning.   The success did not come easily.    There might be some notion that because we are talking about the M60 grouping wins were easy to come by but that was most certainly not the case.   As in all running, there is always some one or some team that makes life difficult.   For our team the main opposition was always Bingley Harriers and in 2007 there was stern opposition from Oxford and then from Elswick.  

 

In 2004 they came second in the BMAF Cross Country at Durham Results here are decided by adding the times of the three top runners from each club.  Bingley was first with 2:17:36 to Clydesdale’s 2:18:58 – Bobby who had been leading all the way was tangled up among some back markers and misjudged the entry to the finishing straight which allowed Martin Ford of Cheltenham to gain a slight lead which he held to the finish.    The team was also third in the BMAF Road Relays at Sutton Park.   The trail there seems to suit the Amigos: it starts with an uphill 800 metres, followed by a flat and fast mid section before a long downhill swoop and ending with a punishing, sustained uphill half mile to the finish. This first run was more medals for the team and a personal triumph for Bobby.   Pete ran a good first leg after only one week’s training following a long lay off due to injury and finished sixth of the 69 starters in 18:38.   Brian who was going well early on tore a muscle running the second stage nevertheless pulled up to fifth in 19:36 before Bobby set off 23 seconds behind the third placed Thames Hares and Hounds runner and eventually caught him on the hard uphill finish to clinch third place by five seconds pulling in a whole two minutes on the leading two runners with the fastest run of the day with his time of 16:58.    Team bronze and individual gold were a fair reward for the journey.   Bobby’s time is still the only time under 17 minutes for the stage ever recorded.    Brian’s calf injury was so severe that it prevented the Amigos competing again as a unit in 2004.    

 

 

If that was impressive, the following year, 2005, turned out to be their best of all with an astonishing six wins in six championships.   They won the BMAF Cross Country Relays at Norwich from Bingley running in their favoured sequence of Pete, Brian and Bobby on the final stage.    Pete returned a time of 16:49, Brian 17:28 and then Bobby ran the second fastest time of the day of 16:23.   Gold for the team, silver for Bobby who was only beaten by Les Haynes.    At the Cross Country Championship in Bangor, Ireland in March over 90 seconds clear of rivals Bingley Harriers.   Bobby in fourth place was clocked at 40:35, Brian at 42:06 was fifth and Pete sixth in 42:10.    The National Championships had been held only six days earlier over a testing course in Bellahouston Park and the closeness of the two races meant that Bobby was possibly denied the chance of a British medal.   At Sutton  Park, they kept the running order established the year before with Pete starting off for the team and being third at the end of a competitive first stage in 17:36 ahead of the two main challengers Bingley Harriers and Aldershot, Farnham & District.    Brian put the team into a narrow lead with 17:50 and Bobby opening up the gap to one of 36 seconds in a fine time of 17:09.   The team time of 52:35 is still (in 2009) a course record.   Bobby added individual gold to team gold once again.

.  Later in June at Horwich in the 5K Championship, Bobby was unlucky not to win this one just losing out in a three man tussle up the long finishing hill to be third over 60 in 17:59, Pete fifth in 18:29 and Brian three places back in 18:48.   The victory was by 12 points from Bingley.   Came September and it was the Road 10K in Glasgow where Bobby again led the team home with 37:51 in bronze medal position followed by Brian in 38:49 and Pete in 39:04.    At Bishop Stortford in November for the 10 miles championship the team further enhanced their already considerable reputation over a trail that was mainly off road and went through farmyards, grassy fields and one stretch of about two miles over broken concrete.   The finishing order had Bobby in third place after seriously straining a calf muscle on the concrete with 63:32, Brian fifth in 65:55 and Pete sixth in 67:71.  

There were only (!) four victories for the amigos in 2006.   In March the Championships were held in Bournemouth where Bobby was finished in 30:23, Brian in 31:20 and Pete in 32:05.   Pete led the team off again at Sutton Park against 39 other club teams and came home neck and neck with Bingley Harriers in 18:41, Brian dropped three seconds to Bingley with a time of 18:13.   Bobby had a real ding dong battle with the Bingley top runner and took the club into the lead on the last stage with 17:33 for the narrowest of victories – only two seconds ahead of Bingley.   This gave him second fastest time of the day with the fastest being recorded by a man without a team: the single Hallamshire runner turned in a creditable 17:17.    However it was another team title.    If it was June it had to be Horwich and Bobby was fourth in 18:10, Brian eighth in 19:17 and Pete ninth in 19:18.   The 10K Road Race in September was held at Swansea and the team was first in 2 hours 04 minutes and 51 seconds made up of Brian’s 39:45, Bobby who was carrying an injury this time ran 42:22 and Pete came home in 42:44.  

 

In 2007 they were first at Horwich with 56:31 to Bingley’s 7:32. Bobby ran 18:41, Pete 18:53 and Brian 18:57 with Bobby picking up bronze for third fastest time of the day.  They were first again in the Cross Country Relays at Bathgate where they led from start to finish with Pete clocking 14:57 and handed over a 19 seconds lead, Brian 15:27 to maintain the lead but the chasing bunch pulled in to within 3 seconds but Bobby 14:38 for the fastest time of the day and a 30 second win.   Individually Bobby won gold and Pete won bronze.  And finally for 2007 they were also second at Sutton Park.   Pete ran first and was placed fifth in 18:57, Brian picked up to fourth with 18:16 and Bobby ran an excellent 17:54 on the last stage to be second team and have third fastest leg.

 

Then in 2008 when they were at the very top of the M60 age group with lots of new opposition in the form of young men of 60 and 61 challenging and snapping at their heels they had their last success at Horwich.   Pete was quickest this time with 18:47 to Brian’s 19:05 and Bobby’s 19:19.   Pete was not only fastest club runner but took gold for the best M65 time of the day. The margin of victory over Bingley this time was 52 seconds.    Pete had just turned 65 and it seemed to spark a fine vein of form.   His 18:09 on the first stage of the Road Relays at Sutton Park a couple of weeks earlier was the team’s fastest, Brian was timed at 18:14 and Bobby at 18:13.    They followed up with fourth in the Cross Country at Banbury where Pete (now in the M65 class) was again top man in 36:12 and silver medallist, Bobby was three seconds adrift and Brian ran 38:02.  

 

For almost all of their time in the M60 age group they had been unbeatable as a team and had all at one time or another picked up individual medals of one colour or another.    It was a superb record of success.  It might not yet be over – see Pete’s brilliant M65 form – but for now in 2009,  there are two of my favourite quotes that I will put in here:

 

“You can’t say you want to be a ski-er and never leave Maryhill: you have to go where the snow is.”                                                                                                  

 And

“You guys will go 200 miles to get out of a good race: I’ll go 200 miles to get into a good race!” (Ian Stewart talking to some Scottish cross country runners of the 1970’s).

 

The amigos exemplified both of these: they did go where the ‘snow’ (ie the competition) was.   They went to all the major championships.   The club helped out financially at some points but they had always put their own money where their mouth was and always paid for the travel and entries up front.   As for the Ian Stewart line, well they often went further than 200 miles to get into a good race.   If runners like everybody else need a challenge to succeed, then they met the challenge and how they succeeded!    The record is shown below.

 

Year Event Venue Team Position
2004 Cross Country Championships Durham 2nd
  Road Relay Championships Sutton 3rd
2005 Cross Country Relays Norwich 1st
  Cross Country Championships Bangor 1st
  Road Relay Championship Sutton 1st
  5K Championships Horwich 1st
  10K Championships Strathclyde Park 1st
  10 Miles Championships Bishop Stortford 1st
2006 Cross Country Championships Bournemouth 1st
  Road Relay Championship Sutton 1st
  5K Championship Horwich 1st
  10K Championship Swansea 1st
2007 Cross Country Relays Bathgate 1st
  Road Relay Championship Sutton 2nd
  5K Championship Horwich 1st
2008 5K Championship Horwich 1st
  Road Relay Championship Sutton 4th

 

A Closer Look At Bobby’s Scottish Cross Country Championship Record

 

Year

Venue

Place Age Year Venue Place Age
1986 Bishopbriggs 22nd 42 1998 Troon 5th 54
1987 Musselburgh 19th 43 1999   * 55
1988 Dalmuir 4th 44 2000 Cumnock 1st 56
1989 Aberdeen 3rd 45 2001 Aberdeen * 57
1990 Dumfries 3rd 46 2002 Bellahouston 2nd 58
1991 Linlithgow 3rd 47 2003 Forres 3rd 59
1992 Troon 3rd 48 2004 Coupar Angus 1st 60
1993 St Andrews 4th 49 2005 Bellahouston 1st 61
1994 Troon 3rd 50 2006 Forres 3rd 62
1995 Hawick 2nd 51 2007 Bathgate 5th 63
1996 New Elgin 2nd 52 2008 Irvine 3rd 64
1997 Edinburgh * 53        

 

 

  • indicates race missed through injury or illness.

 

 

The team finishing first by 2 seconds in the relays at Sutton in 2006

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Down Under 2009

 

It’s not for nothing that the trio is known as ‘The Three Amigos’.   They spend a lot of time in each other’s company and this was exemplified in spades when they went off on holiday together at the start of 2009 – no wives, no family, just the three of them.  No big deal, you might think, but when you say …’.to Australia and New Zealand for six weeks!’   it is a bit different.    The families didn’t mind, they had relatives in both countries so off they went.  

 

They flew out of Glasgow with Emirates on 16th January and flew via Dubai and Bangkok to Sydney arriving on the 18th.   Bobby reckons that the films, the food and the complimentary drinks made the 22 hour flight pass quickly.   They stayed for four nights at the Wynyard Travelodge near the Harbour.   What did they do?   Well a sail in the Harbour, took the Ferry to Manley Bridge, tackled the Sydney Harbour Bridge climb up to 440 feet (twice the height of the Opera House) on a superb sunny day, visited Bondi Beach for a beer and a paddle, visited the Wildlife Sanctuary and Aquarium at Darling Harbour and a trip up the Sydney Tower for great views of Sydney.   On the food front, lattes and muffins on a regular basis as well as ‘great steaks and beer’.

 

On 22nd January they flew to Auckland in New Zealand, picked up a hire car and drove south to visit Bobby’s sister Betty Flynn and husband Bobby (former Clydesdale Harriers) in Taupo in the centre of North Island where they spent a week.   They had a day out climbing Ruapehe where a volcanic eruption in 1995 dislocated ski-ing and which featured in ‘The Lord of the Rings’ as Mount Doom.   They spent a day in the thermal area of Rotorua and the Hangi (a Maori welcome and dance).   They visited Pete’s niece in Nelson on the East Coast and got involved in jet boating, white water rafting and Pete got into Bungy jumping.  

 

Then it was down to Wellington, capital of NZ and stayed there for two nights fitting in sight seeing  – the Botanic Gardens and Te Papa Natural History Museum, a sail in Eric McMahon’s daughter’s yacht (Eric was a Harrier as well!) followed by barbecue and beer.   They took the Interislander Ferry to Picton in South Island across the Queen Charlotte Sound.   Then it was a four hour drive to Christchurch via Kaikoura for two nights. Bobby describes Christchurch as a very ‘English’ town like Oxford or Stratford on Avon.    Dunedin, further south, is very Scottish town and even has a statue of Robert Burns in the Square (which is called the Octagon!).    From there the intrepid Harriers headed for Omerama in central South Island for two nights.   Pete fancied helibiking so they set off early for Twizel.   They take you and the bikes up a mountain on a helicopter and you cycle down the mountain and twenty miles back to Twizel enjoying Lord of the Rings commentary.   Next day they drove to Queenstown which Bobby describes as the most beautiful town in NZ and described as the adventure capital of the country.   It’s the world’s original bungy jump from a bridge and also has jet boating, paragliding, ski-ing and horse riding.  

 

They then went to Te Anau where they sailed on Milford Sound.   The bus driver gave the commentary on the geology and history of the area including the construction of the mile long Homer Tunnel through the impassable mountain range to access the fjord area in the south west corner of NZ.   The sail began with an elaborate buffet and continued with explanations of rock formations, vegetation and seal colonies.   Milford Sound, which was dry for their sail, is the second wettest place on earth raining two days out of three throughout the year and the surrounding cliffs had the dark brooding look of Glencoe.   It made Bobby think that Glasgow isn’t so bad after all.    After Te Anau they returned to Queenstown for a three night stay.   Many places have Scottish names – eg there’s a River Clyde and a Bannockburn – and they went up Ben Lomond on the gondola the better to appreciate the stunning views out over Lake Wakatipu with the peaks of the Remarkables (a range of mountains) in the background and the steamship MVS Earnshaw making its way down the Lake.  

 

 

 

FOOTNOTE/ACKNOWLEDGEMENT : All member profile articles, photographs, data, statistics, results and history provided by Brian McAusland.