The boom was primarily a 'jogging' movement in which running was generally limited to personal physical activity and often pursued alone for recreation and fitness. Elite athletes and events contributed to the growing popularity and recognition of the sport. Finnish athlete
Lasse Virén recaptured the image of the "
Flying Finns". American runners such as
Bill Rodgers and
Craig Virgin inspired the public. New elite teams formed, notably
Athletics West in the United States. The British trio
Sebastian Coe,
Steve Cram, and
Steve Ovett dominated
middle-distance running in the late 1970s and 1980s. Many new
road racing events evolved in the United States offering public participation. As technology improved, television coverage of major races eventually included: •
Bay to Breakers •
Boston Marathon •
Chicago Marathon •
Los Angeles Marathon •
New York Marathon Women were just beginning to become accepted as athletes. In the United States,
Title IX, mandating gender equality, was passed in the United States in 1972, opening up scholastic athletic opportunities for women. Many academic institutions used running sports like
cross country and
track and field for women to help numerically offset the number of players on their economically lucrative
football teams. Road running and marathoning became a sport at which they could excel. Female pioneers in the United States—including
Kathrine Switzer,
Jacqueline Hansen and
Miki Gorman—led other women to believe they could run seriously.
Mary Decker,
Francie Larrieu and
Norway's
Grete Waitz were all part of a phenomenon that culminated in
Joan Benoit's
1984 Olympic Marathon victory, which itself inspired more women to run. It is estimated that 25 million Americans took up some aspect of running in the 1970s and 1980s, While the boom attracted women and individuals in minority communities, studies from the time showed that participants in running races were most commonly university-educated men in
white-collar occupations. Participation in running in the UK grew rapidly after Olympians
Chris Brasher and
John Disley founded the
London Marathon and
Brendan Foster started the
Great North Run both in 1981. ==Media in the United States==