BOSTON, MA - The world's oldest indoor track championship,
the USA Indoor Track & Field Championships, will return to the Reggie
Lewis Track and Athletic Center at Roxbury Community College for the
next three years, USATF announced Tuesday.The announcement was made at the Reggie Lewis Center by USATF
CEO Craig Masback. Joining him were Massachusetts Governor Mitt
Romney, Reggie Lewis Center Director Keith McDermott and 2004 USA
Indoor 800-meter and 1,500-meter champion Jen Toomey of Salem,
Mass.
Coming on the heels of the successful 2003 and 2004 USA Indoor
Championships at the facility, the 2005 edition of the Championships
will be held February 25-27 at the Reggie Lewis Center and will be the
grand finale of USA Track & Field's 2005 Visa Tour. The meet will return
in 2006 and 2007, with Team USA's roster for the World Indoor
Championships being selected at the 2006 meet.
"All of us at USA Track & Field are happy to return to Boston and the
Reggie Lewis Center, which has served as an outstanding host the last
two years for athletes and fans alike," said USATF CEO Craig Masback.
"This city enjoys a rich history in our sport that few can match, with
knowledgeable fans and a tremendous support structure from the city
and the state. We thank Roxbury Community College, the city of Boston
and Commonwealth of Massachusetts for welcoming us once again."
"With back-to-back sellouts and enthusiastic participation from local
volunteers, the USA Track & Field Indoor Championship has become
one of the highlights of Massachusetts sports," said Governor Mitt
Romney. "The Reggie Lewis Track and Athletic Center at Roxbury
Community College is the ideal place to continue this tradition, and I
congratulate USA Track & Field on a great choice."
"The City of Boston is proud to welcome our great Olympians and world-
class track and field athletes for another three years," Boston Mayor
Thomas Menino said in a statement. "The USA Indoor Track & Field
Championships is an important part of the incredibly rich scene that
makes Boston so special to sports fans from this city, New England and
around the country."
First held in New York in 1888, the USA Indoor Track & Field
Championships are the concluding event of USA Track & Field's Visa
Tour. More than 600 of the world's finest track & field athletes compete
each year at the Championships.
Entering its seventh year, the Visa Tour provides America's best athletes
the opportunity to compete in the United States and earn substantial
prize money in front of a nationally televised audience. Live crowds at
Visa Tour meets typically have increased every year since the inaugural
1999 season, with TV ratings rising as much as 25 percent in any given
year for individual broadcasts.
The 4,000-spectator capacity Reggie Lewis Center has been the site of
16 American or world records since it was built in 1995. It has hosted an
impressive list of competitions, including the adidas Boston Indoor
Games, NCAA Division II Men's and Women's Championships, the
National Scholastic Championships, USA Masters Indoor
Championships, and hundreds of other high school and college track
and field meets on its world-class, Mondo Super X banked 200m track.
"To have the championships return to the Reggie Lewis Center for
another three years is a tribute to great working relationship that we
have established with USATF the past two years, and the great
performances that this world's famous facility has earned," said Reggie
Lewis Center Director Keith McDermott.
Tickets for the 2005 USA Indoor Track & Field Championships go on
sale December 1 and are available by calling the Reggie Lewis Center
at 617-541-2451 or by visiting www.bostontrackandfield.org. (The Web
site will be live December 1.)
USA Indoor Track & Field Championships Quick Facts
What: 2005-2007 USA Indoor Track & Field Championships
When: 2005 Championships held February 25-27, 2005
Where: Reggie Lewis Track & Athletic Center at Roxbury Community
College
Who: America's finest track and field athletes Hosted By: USA Track &
Field, the Reggie Lewis Track & Athletic Center, the Massachusetts
Sports Commission and USATF New England