BOSTON, MA - When Tirunesh Dibaba ran 14:32.93 for 5000m
at last year's Reebok Boston Indoor Games, trimming over six seconds
from the World indoor record in the process, it was only her third-ever
race on an indoor track. The diminutive Ethiopian had been so
overlooked, she was unsure if she would be selected for Ethiopia's
World Cross Country Championships team. Since then, of course,
Dibaba has won a World Cross double and a World Championships
5000m/10,000m double, making her the highest-ranked female distance
runner in the IAAF World Rankings, and only eight points behind overall
leader Yelena Isinbayeva.Dibaba's 2006 season has so far been less successful, as after a
nightmare of a journey to Britain, she failed to repeat her Edinburgh
Cross Country win earlier this month. However, she returns to Boston
this Saturday evening (28 January) to run the 5000m, again with her
sister Ejegayehu, the 2004 Olympic Silver medalist at 10,000m.
Nelson, Williams and Jackson...
Dibaba is one of four individual World champions from Helsinki who will
compete at the 2006 Reebok Boston Indoor Games at the Reggie Lewis
Track and Athletic Center. Adam Nelson, Lauryn Williams and
Bershawn Jackson are also scheduled to compete.
Nelson, who won here last year as well, will be throwing the shot with
Helsinki teammates John Godina and Christian Cantwell. Joining the
trio is Reese Hoffa, currently ranked third in the world, meaning the
world's second- (Nelson), third- (Hoffa) and fourth-ranked (Cantwell)
putters will be throwing in Boston.
First time indoors as a professional
Williams, the World Champion at 100m, will sprint 60m against three
other athletes with Helsinki gold medals: Angela Daigle-Bowen, Muna
Lee and Lisa Barber, who with Williams won the 4x100m relay for the
USA. Williams passed on the 2005 indoor season, so Boston will mark
her first indoor meet as a professional.
Jackson, the surprise winner of the 400m Hurdles in Helsinki, will race
600m against a mixed field of middle-distance runners (former U.S.
champion Jonathon Johnson,) other hurdlers (2003 World
Championships 400m Hurdles silver medalist Joey Woody) and 400m
sprinters (Andrew Rock, Alleyne Francique.) The three-lap race is nearly
impossible to predict, being outside everyone's specialties.
Defar goes for 3000m motivated by close record miss
Olympic gold medalist Meseret Defar of Ethiopia returns to Boston once
again in the 3000m, and just as she did in 2005, Sentayehu Ejigu will
join her. Last year, this race produced the second-fastest indoor 3000m
in history as Defar missed the World record by less than a tick of the
clock. Had she not been caught behind lapped runners in the final laps,
Defar might have made up the time, and it's unlikely she has forgotten
how close it was.
Mottram prepares for Ethiopian onslaught at Two Miles
Even with these illustrious names coming to compete, one of the most
anticipated events will be the Men's Two Mile run, which meet
organisers are calling "the greatest 2-mile lineup ever assembled in this
country."
The Two Mile headliner is Australian Craig Mottram, third at 5000m at
the Helsinki World Championships. Mottram, whose versatility in 2005
extended to wins at 10km and one mile on the streets of New York, has
been training at altitude to prepare for the Commonwealth Games in late
March. In Boston, Mottram will face a quartet of Ethiopians, starting with
Sileshi Sihine and Gebre Gebremariam, who at global level have taken
second places behind Keninisa Bekele on the track (Sihine) and cross
country (Gebremariam.) World Indoor bronze medallist Markos Geneti
and last year's second fastest 10,000m runner Abebe Dinkessa should
also be part of the lead pack.
All five will be checking their shoulders for Irishman Alistair Cragg,
European indoor champion at 3000m last year. Cragg's defeat of Bekele
at this meet last year, together with his upset of Noah Ngeny at 3000m in
2003, make him impossible to leave out of any race prediction.
Finally, World Athletic Final winner and IAAF World Ranked number one
at the women's 400m, Sanya Richards, will compete in the 400m, and
2003 World Indoor 800m champion David Krummenacker will contest
the men's 1000m.