Reigning women's 200m world champion Allyson Felix will
focus on the 200meters at the World Championships in
Osaka, choosing to forgo the 100m.Mechelle Lewis (Fort
Washington, Md.) will assume her 100m spot on theroster,
where she is joined by 2003 world champion Torri Edwards,
2005world champion Lauryn Williams and USA Outdoor
third-place finisherCarmelita Jeter.Felix qualified to compete
in both the 100 and 200 meters in Osaka bywinning the 200
(22.34) and placing fourth in the 100 (11.24) at the2007
AT&T USA Outdoor Track & Field Championships. After
arriving inJapan, she decided to focus her efforts on her
specialty event, the 200,as well as Team USA relays.The
2007 Pan Am Games silver medalist in the 100, Lewis
placed fifth atthe AT&T USA Outdoor Championships in
11.25, just .01 behind Felix. Shehas a best time this year of
11.13, run in the first round of the USAChampionships. The
2002 graduate of University of South Carolina is aformer
NCAA All-American and was the 2002 NCAA woman of the
year fromthat state.Reese's Rubik Romance
In addition to owning the world's top shot put in 2007,
reigning world indoor champion Reese Hoffa evidently has
other mad skills in his repertoire.
The bio on Hoffa's web site, www.reesehoffa.com,
describes some of Hoffa's many hobbies. Among them: "He
loves any sort of puzzle and his specialty is solving Rubik's
cube (he's lightning fast ... see the video
http://www.reesehoffa.com/ASF_0001.ASF of him solving
the Rubik's cube in 55 seconds).
Hoffa's Rubik's mastery has earned him admiration from
his teammates in Osaka, who now greet him and cheer for
him with "RUBIK!"
Hoffa's bio also notes that he "likes almost anything to eat,
especially his mom's
lasagna, a good New York strip steak and chicken fettuccini
Alfredo." No mention of the gigantic turkey leg Hoffa
dramatically consumed after winning the 2007 USA Outdoor
title.
Team USA coaches, athletes meet the media in Osaka
Team USA head coaches Pat Henry and Amy Deem and
athletes Bryan Clay, Allyson Felix, Sanya Richards, Michelle
Perry, and Wallace Spearmon appeared at a Team USA
press conference Thursday in Osaka.
Excerpts from Thursday's media event follow:
PAT HENRY (Team USA Men's Head Coach)
Q: What's the mission of the Team USA coaching staff?
A: As coaches here with this group, our main goal is to get
people to feel comfortable with the environment and give
them every opportunity to be successful. The coaches have
worked very hard with them up to this point, and our job is to
try to organize some things for them to help them be
successful.
Q: How are the facilities, transportation and logistics
working out thus far?
A: The facilities have been very good. We've have a very nice
hotel and this is a very gracious society and these people
have been very nice.
Q: You had a very successful training camp prior to coming
to Osaka, could you talk about that?
A: We did. I think the acclimation period here is pretty good.
It takes about three or four days and these people have all
been here and it's been a good time for that to happen. We
have no major injuries, we have lots of little things but no
major hurts, so I think they're excited about things.
Q: Team USA won 25 medals in 2005 in Helsinki, do you
think this team is capable of matching or surpassing that
total?
A: We're going to try to do everything we can to put our
athletes in a position to be successful. I don't think that you
sit down and count medals.
AMY DEEM (Team USA Women's Head Coach)
Q: What are your expectations of the athletes you'll be
leading here in Osaka?
A: I'm very excited about being here. I think we have a great
team and I think our athletes are ready to compete well.
Although we're a young team we have quite a bit of
experience and I think that will help us to be successful.
Being in the village, especially since we moved from the
training camp, you can see the excitement, and I think it's
going to be a great championships for the women.
Q: Do you look for many of the younger members of the
squad to learn things from the veterans that can help them
be successful?
A: I've watched them the way they've handled themselves all
summer at different competitions and you can't tell them that
they haven't been here before. I understand that the World
Championships is a different place, but if you put an athlete
in Paris in a filled stadium on their first time over and they
compete well I think that shows that they're ready to
compete at this level. I've seen nothing in their preparation
that shows us that they are not ready to accept the challenge
and perform well here.
Q: What are your goals in preparing this team to compete
well in Osaka?
A: I think Pat and I have worked very closely in making the
environment conducive for success and trying to perceive
the problems that may arise for the athletes and really
putting them in a situation that allows them to have
success. The more comfortable and familiar they are with
their surroundings and the fewer distractions there are, the
better the environment is for them to be successful so they
can focus on what they have to do and perform well.
BRYAN CLAY (Reigning World Decathlon Champion)
Q: With all your injury problems the last couple years, are
you coming into this World Championships a bit under the
radar despite entering as the reigning world champion?
A: I've been the underdog many times. I don't think I was
picked to win a medal this year and I'm not sure why. Track
& Field News didn't even have me in the medal count. So for
me this is usually the position that I'm in and it was the
same in Athens, and I don't think there were many who
thought I'd do well in Helsinki either. It's a familiar position
for me and where I like to be. I like to know that I'm the
underdog and then go out and show everybody that I can do
well.
Q: How do you expect to do here?
A: All of my throws have been going very well and technically
I've been doing very well, so I expect to be on American
record pace throughout the meet, but more importantly for
me I expect to be ahead, or at my personal best, and how far
ahead I don't know, that will depend on the conditions and
how the competition is going. All in all, with no mistakes, I
think it's going to be a very good competition.
Q: Are you concerned about the weather playing havoc with
the technical aspects of your competition?
A: You always worry about the weather when you're a
decathlete because you're out there for so long, but you just
keep it in the back of your mind that everybody is competing
in the same conditions and you know it'll come down to your
mental toughness and how much you want it. The crowd will
play a big role and if they can help us to get excited you're
going to see very good performances.
ALLYSON FELIX (Reigning World 200m Women's
Champion, Olympic silver medalist)
Q: How are you feeling heading into the Championships?
A: I feel really good. Everything is going according to
schedule. I feel so blessed just to be healthy and I want to
take advantage of it because I feel really good.
Q: What are your anticipations here?
A: I'm kind of anxious to get on the track and get started
instead of just waiting around to get going.
Q: Are you getting tired of just practicing all the time?
A: Oh yeah, but you kind of expect it and you just have to wait
it out until it's time to compete.
SANYA RICHARDS (2006 IAAF World Athlete of the Year)
Q: How are you feeling with the Championships about to
begin?
A: I'm feeling really good. I'm really looking forward to the
200 and really running well there, and I'm excited about the
track meet.
Q: Have you gotten over the disappointment of not
competing in the 400 meters?
A: Oh yeah. I had to get over that really quickly when I had to
step back on the track to make the team in the 200. I'm
definitely over that and I believe everything happens for a
reason. I want to be known as a complete sprinter and
adding the 200 to my forte is exactly want I wanted to do. I
would've love to have been able to win the 400 especially
here at the World Championships, but I have a chance to
win the 200 and of course hopefully, next year everything will
go according to plan and I'll be an Olympic champion at 400.
Q: Who will be your toughest competition here in the 200?
A: No doubt Allyson Felix and Veronica Campbell. I think
Torri Edwards will run really well too, but I think Allyson will
be the favorite going in, she really knows the 200 and she's
the defending world champion, so I think she'll be the
toughest competition, but I think I'm prepared to run with her.
MICHELLE PERRY (Reigning World 100m hurdles
Women's Champion)
Q: How is your health?
A: I'm healthy and looking forward to the 27th, 28th and 29th
(of August when she will compete) so everything is on pace.
Q: Are you getting anxious to compete?
A: No, I'm just focusing on practice day to day, and taking it
one day at a time.
Q: Being the defending world champion, is there extra
pressure on you now?
A: I definitely have a target on my back because everybody
wants to be the world champion. I guess it's pressure if you
allow it to be, but I just simply go out there and do what I
have to do to keep the success that I do have. You don't
worry about everyone, but you are aware of who has the
potential of taking it from you.
WALLACE SPEARMON (2005 World Outdoor
Championships 200m silver medalist, 2006 World Cup
Champion)
Q: After winning the silver medal at the World
Championships in Helsinki, would it be wrong to assume
that you have even more on your mind here in Osaka?
A: In 2007 I'm shooting for nothing less than gold. That's my
main focus this year.
Q: Could you talk about your season up to this point?
A: In the beginning of the season I ran a few indoor meets
going into outdoors, and everything's been going well. I'm
staying healthy and everything's been focused on USA's and
towards the World Championships. Now it's time to
perform.
Q: There's so much depth in the 200 meters these days
than perhaps ever before, does that keep you motivated to
be the best you can be?
A: We have a group of young guys who all want to be the
best. None of us like to lose and all of us like to win. Two of
the guys are at home right now, Xavier (Carter) and Walter
Dix, but myself, Tyson (Gay) and Usain Bolt (of Jamaica) are
all here and it'll be a great competition.
Q: Is an American sweep possible in the 200 meters here?
A: We have myself, Tyson and Rodney Martin, and we have a
great chance of repeating. We can't do a one through four
like we did in 2005, but one through three is very possible.
Fans can watch Team USA on national television
broadcasts on NBC and Versus, or online via live, daily
webcast at www.wcsn.com. For complete TV listings, visit
http://www.usatf.org/events/2007/IAAFWorldOutdoorChampi
onships/TVSchedule.asp
For more information on Team USA at the World Outdoor
Championships, visit
www.usatf.org/events/2007/IAAFWorldOutdoorChampionshi
ps/