Two National Records in Three MonthsBy Bob Ramsak
(c) 2007 TRACK PROFILE Report, all rights reserved
After her largely solo 14:44.80 North American record in the
5000 meters last weekend at the Mt. SAC Relays, Shalane
Flanagan is certainly pleased. Not so much for the second
national record she has set in her last three races on the
track -though those are a major bonus-- but more so for the
simple fact that she,s actually fit enough to even produce the
performances that have placed her firmly on the doorstep to
the world,s fastest.
"The kind of state I was in last year was pretty pathetic," the
25-year-old recalled. "I was down and in pain, and if
somebody told me that I'd break the American record in a
year I'd have laughed."
On Thursday, Flanagan celebrated the first anniversary of a
surgery to remove a bone in her foot. "I was just born with
this extra bone near my navicular, and it was starting to tear
on my tendon. I could barely push off for a year and could
barely use my big toe. It was flat-footed running, pretty
much."
The pain began soon after the 2004 Olympics, where she
competed in the first round, and steadily grew worse from
then on. She competed on a handful of occasions the
following year, winning her first national title in the 5000 and
qualifying for the World Championships, but with the pain
persisting, surgery last year became the only option.
Flanagan, a 15-time NCAA All-American while a student at
the University of North Carolina, described her
two-and-a-half to three month recovery period as a "fairly
quick" one, despite outward appearances.
"After surgery I would look at my foot, and it was so
mangled, I wondered, How am I going to be able to walk?,
I thought I might never be able to run indoors or cross
country again, just because of the torque."
But with plenty of therapy and patience, Flanagan steadily
resumed training, and seven months later returned to
competition with a victory over a hilly 4.748 mile course at
the Manchester Road Race in Massachusetts. Yet that
victory on Thanksgiving Day was barely an indication of the
form she would display at January,s Reebok Boston Indoor
Games in her first track race since the 2005 World
Championships.
In Boston, Flanagan surprised the crowd as she chased
Ethiopian Meseret Defar until the final two laps en route to a
runner-up 8:33.25 performance to chop nearly six seconds
from the previous U.S. indoor 3000m record. A month later
came an easy U.S. indoor title over the same distance,
followed by a strong runner-up finish to Deena Kastor at the
national cross country championships.
Then came her shocker last weekend, which lopped more
than 20 seconds from her previous personal best that dated
back to 2004, and well inside the previous national standard
of 14:45.35 set by Regina Jacobs at the 2000 Olympic
Trials.
"I had been training pretty hard, and to have it translate into a
race is pretty nice," Flanagan said. "Before the race, my
coach said I was capable of running anywhere from 14:35 to
15 flat. We knew that if the weather was good, we had a
chance, but it is very early in the season."
Assisted by training partner Erin Donahue for the initial part
of the race, Flanagan chose to go it alone before reaching
the end of the second kilometer.
"To have it all work out was pretty nice. I thought I was going
to be real close (to the record), and I usually feel I thrive off of
competition. So to run fast by myself was great."
In a strong competitive race, Flanagan believes, she could
probably go significantly faster. "I like to think that by the end
of the summer when I'm running with some of the top
women, I'll be able to run about 10 seconds faster. That
effort felt very comfortable until the last 1000."
While she's fully aware that she needs experience in fast
races, Flanagan said she's going to take a cautious road,
keeping her racing to a minimum. Her next outing will come
at the North Carolina Elite Meet on 11 May in Chapel Hill,
primarily to return the favor and assist Donahue to a fast
performance. She may contest the 1500 at the Prefontaine
Classic on 10 June --"that race usually brings together an
eclectic group"-- but her next 5000 won,t come until the
U.S. Championships in late June. After that, she,s planning
just one more outing over the longer distance prior to the
World Championships in Osaka.
"With the 5k, I don't believe you can run too many in one
year," Flanagan said. "I'm recovering from my last race,
and it makes me realize that if you want to run quality 5ks,
you can't push too many upon yourself. Given that I'm a year
off my surgery, I don't want to push things too much. I want
to be selective about my races."
Flanagan took "kind of a break" after her Mt. SAC run, but it
wasn,t all rest and relaxation. She traded a few days of
work-outs to unpack from a move back to North Carolina, a
chore Flanagan said "was pretty physical." After a year in
Portland, Oregon, Flanagan and her husband Steve
Edwards chose to return to more familiar surroundings.
"We consider Carolina home, and we were both a little
homesick," she admitted. But her relocation also had a
practical implication. Her coach, John Cook, is based in
Florida, making that relationship a little more convenient.
As for this summer,s World Championships in Osaka,
Flanagan has a realistic outlook.
"I tell my coach all the time I just want him to put me in
contention. My ideal situation would be to hang with the
Africans for as long as possible and just be in contention."