If momentum has a strong say in things, then pole vaulter Derek Miles
might have the upper hand as he resumes competition tonight in
Stockholm's GE Galan.After tying for fourth at his season opener at the Pole Vault Summit in
Reno with a modest 5.60 effort, a competition he had won the previous
three years, he took top honors at an invitational in Vermillion, South
Dakota on January 31, jumping 5.80, an effort just shy of his 5.82
personal best from 2002. The following weekend, he won the Millrose
Games with a 5.70, but said afterwards that his winning effort was not
indicative of his early season shape.
"I'm running better than I was at the Olympics," he said. "I feel stronger
and it's still fairly early in the season."
At Saturday,s Zepter Pole Vault Stars meeting in Donetsk, Ukraine,
traditionally the finest gathering of international pole vault talent each
indoor season, the 32-year-old --the second oldest entrant in the field--
did his Vermillion effort one better with a first attempt clearance at a
world-leading 5.85, the highest he,s ever jumped indoors or out. He
described the win at Sergey Bubka,s annual pole vault festival the finest
of his career.
"I,ve come here three years, and this is obviously the highest I,ve every
jumped in my life, and to do that here with the crowd and the excitement
was just an amazing experience," said Miles. Pleased, but reserved,
Miles indicated that better things may come.
"I think it,s a confidence builder. In the next couple weeks, my main goal
or objective is to
jump higher obviously. But to come here and jump a personal record
was just an amazing experience."
While overshadowed last season by his compatriots, most notably
Olympic gold and silver medallists Tim Mack and Toby Stevenson, Miles
was part of a strong American contingent that dominated the top end of
the yearly performance list. Of the 44 vaults of 5.80 or higher in 2004, all
but 12 were by Americans.
"The Americans have been jumping very well recently, six meters, with
Jeff [Hartwig] and Toby [Stevenson] and Brad [Walker] also, he,s been
jumping really well," Miles said, referring to his fellow-countrymen that
he beat in Donetsk. "And I feel like I,m a little behind in the race, so I
want to catch up and jump with these guys."
While his PB was lagging slightly behind, Miles is no stranger to major
competitions. He was in the Athens final with the podium duo, where he
finished seventh. He preceded that with a third place finish at the
Olympic Trials to earn his ticket to Athens, where, as a native of
Sacramento, he competed in a stadium where he jumped as a high
schooler. The previous year, he was on both the U.S. World
Championship squads, finishing fifth in Birmingham, and tying for sixth
in Paris. But before he began making his presence felt on the national
and international scene, he took the long road, one that took him from
Sacramento, then to Vermillion, then to American vault guru Earl Bell in
Jonesboro, Arkansas.
Miles graduated from the University of South Dakota in 1996 with a
5.38m best, earning four NCAA division II All-American honors. He
broke through the 18-foot (5.50m) barrier the following year, but
struggled the next two seasons, reaching bests of just 5.35m. Not yet
ready to throw in the towel, Miles began making a twice-monthly 12-
hour one-way trek from Vermillion to Jonesboro to train under Bell, a
three-time Olympian and former world record holder. Firmly committed,
he moved there permanently less than two years later.
With world class vaulters such as Hartwig, Chad Harting and Tye
Harvey as training partners, Miles, improvement was immediate and
dramatic.
"When you,re given that type of environment," Miles said, "your intensity,
your motivation, everything just goes up a notch. And you combine that
with a person who has so much experience in the pole vault, who has
been on three Olympics teams, won a medal, traveled the world, and
figured out how to travel the world and still stay fit, and all his knowledge
of the sport, it,s just an overwhelming atmosphere."
Firmly under Bell,s wing, Miles improved to 5.65 in 2000, and tied for
third at the US Olympic trials. Though he lost a spot on the Sydney
squad after a jump-off with Harting, Miles said he easily met any
expectations he might have had. "Just making the finals made it a
tremendous success," he said. "I went into it as a complete rookie. I had
no pressure about having to make the team. Realistically, the guys I was
jumping against were all better than me. The gist of the Olympics is that
we want to send the best we have to offer." In 2000, he readily admits, "I
was not among the best three."
His status in the US vaulting scene has since changed. He reached 5.82
in both 2001 and 2002, and in 2003, won his first indoor national title, to
punch his ticket to Birmingham. Outdoors, he finished second at the
national championship, and grabbed his first Golden League honor with
his win on the countback at the Gaz de France in Paris with a 5.76
clearance. Last year, he reached a best of 5.81 for the second year in a
row, and capped his season with a runner-up finish at Berlin,s ISTAF
and third at the World Athletics Final.
Remarkably, Miles has balanced his full-time athletic career with a full-
time position as the Associate Director for Advisement Services at
Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, a job, he said, that is not only a
means to provide financial stability for a pole vaulter who is still on his
way up. "There are lots of things in life that are important," he said of his
job as a student adviser. "It,s nice to do something that can make a
difference." As a full-time athlete, there are drawbacks. "Sometimes it,s
tough. It,s a balancing act. It,s a long day. I work eight to four then train at
4:30. Sometimes I don,t get home until nine or 9:30." A positive, he
points out, is that with two full-time jobs, he is not wholly consumed by
one or
the other.
Now, after upping a nearly-three year old personal best, Miles is poised
for even better things on the pole vault runway.
In Donetsk, he likened his 5.85 to a "kind of a personal victory over the
bar." With that battle won, others will follow, and Miles appears ready to
wage another.
"With more confidence over the next couple weeks, I can jump even
higher. I know I can still jump 5.90, it,s just a matter of staying healthy
and feeling strong. I,m hoping that in the next couple weeks I can get
even stronger and faster."