NEW YORK, NY - With just a year to go before its centennial
running, the 99th annual Millrose Games is set for Feb. 3 in Madison
Square Garden. Among the headliners on the second stop of the 2006
Visa Championship series will be world- champion sprinter Lauryn
Williams in the 60-meter dash and Bernard Lagat, the two-time Olympic
medalist, who will defend his record-setting title in the Wanamaker Mile.The 2006 Millrose Games will be presented in a collaboration between
USA Track & Field and Global Athletics & Marketing, Inc., which also
owns or manages three other track events in USATF's Visa
Championship Series. Now in its second year, the Visa Championship
Series is USATF's elite series of nationally-televised competitions,
composed of a season-long battle for individual performance points and
the crowning of two Visa Champions.
"Millrose is the most historic indoor track meet in the world," said Craig
Masback, CEO of USA Track & Field. "There is nothing else like it, and
we are proud to join with Global Athletics & Marketing in propelling
Millrose toward its 100th anniversary in 2007 with a tremendous 99th
edition, featuring the sport's top athletes. The early commitments of
Americans Bernard Lagat and Lauryn Williams certainly get us off to a
flying start."
In his 2005 Wanamaker Mile victory, Lagat broke the legendary Eamonn
Coghlan's 24-year-old Millrose record just months after earning a 2004
silver medal at 1,500 meters in Athens. One of the most accomplished
middle-distance runners of his generation, Lagat was the 2000 Olympic
bronze medalist at 1,500 meters; was runner-up at the 2001
World Championships, and won the 2004 World Indoor title at 3,000
meters, all whilecompeting for his native Kenya. Now an American
citizen, Lagat in 2005 broke the American record over 1,500 meters.
Williams, meanwhile, is the 2005 World Champion at 100 meters, and
also earned Helsinki gold in the 4x100m relay. The 22-year-old out of
the University of Miami took the 2004 NCAA title at 100 meters before
notching a silver medal in Athens later that summer, enchanting U.S.
fans and returning home as the newest star in American sprinting.
Steeped in history, the Millrose Games began in 1908 at a local armory
the same year its parent, the Millrose Athletic Association, was formed
as a recreational club by the employees of the John Wanamaker
Department Store. "Millrose" was the name of the country home of
Rodman Wanamaker, son of the founder, and the famed Wanamaker
Mile has long been the cornerstone of the event. The Millrose Games is
the oldest continuing sporting event held in Madison Square Garden,
where it moved in 1914.
Tickets for the 2006 Millrose Games are on sale through Ticketmaster by
phone (212-307-7171); via internet at www.ticketmaster.com; at a
Ticketmaster outlet near you; or by visiting the Madison Square Garden
ticket office. Information on the event can be found at www.Millrose-Games.com
. The Millrose Games will be broadcast on ESPN2 on Feb. 5 from 6-
7:30 p.m.