INDIANAPOLIS -- The USA Track & Field Foundation Board
of Directors awarded 11 elite travel grants to elite athletes at
its summer meeting in Eugene, Oregon, USATF Foundation
Director Tom Jackovic announced Wednesday. These grants assist athletes with travel expenses to prime
meets as they pursue qualifying standards for the Olympic
Trials, Olympics and World Championships in distance
events (1,500m through marathon).
Athletes receiving the grants include middle distance
runners James Carney, Kyle King, Thomas Morgan, Jason
Jabaut, Stephen Haas, Miesha Marzell, Molly Huddle and
Renee Metivier-Baillie. Steeplechasers Desiraye Osburn,
Liz Wort, and Michael Spence also will receive USATF
Foundation Grants.
In the last two years James Carney has become a
promising 10,000m runner, placing fourth in the event at the
2006 AT&T USA Outdoor Championships. In 2006 Kyle King
lowered his 1,500m personal best on four occasions and
set personal bests in the 3,000 meters three times while
qualifying for the AT&T USA Indoor and Outdoor
Championships.
A Kentucky grad, Thomas Morgan is a two-time finalist in the
steeplechase at the NCAA Championships and has
competed three times in the USA Outdoor Championships.
The 2001 IC4A men's 1,500m champion as a freshman at
Villanova, Jason Jabaut also second in that event that year
at the USA Junior Championships. His best finish at the
USA Outdoor Championships came in 2005 when he
placed 11th.
A recent graduate of Indiana University, Stephen Haas was
the Big 10 Conference 5,000m champion in 2006 and was
an All-American in that event.
The 1996 NCAA women's outdoor 1,500m champion while
a student at Georgetown, Miesha Marzell is a two-time
ECAC champion at 800 meters and the 1994 U.S. Junior
champion at 1,500.
As a sophomore at the University of Notre Dame, Molly
Huddle won the women's 5,000m Big East Conference title,
placed third at the 2004 NCAA Outdoor Championships and
finished an seventh that summer at the Olympic Trials. The
2003 U.S. Junior 3,000m champion, Huddle ended her
collegiate career with three Big East 5,000m outdoor
crowns and the 2006 10,000m conference title.
Renee Metivier-Baillie finished fourth in the 5,000 meters at
the 2005 NCAA Outdoor Championships as a senior at the
University of Colorado and placed 10th in that event at the
2006 AT&T USA Outdoor Championships. An 11-time
All-American as a collegian, Metivier Baillie was a two-time
NCAA Cross Country runner-up and a three-time member of
the U.S. World Cross Country Championships team.
A two-time Missouri Valley Conference women's 1,500m
champion while at Wichita State University, Desiraye
Osburn capped off her senior year in 2006 with a
fourth-place finish at the NCAA Outdoor Championships,
and by finishing 14th at the AT&T USA Outdoor
Championships in Indianapolis.
Now a senior at Duke University, Liz Wort earned
All-American honors as a junior with her fourth-place finish
at the 2006 NCAA Cross Country Championships. In 2005,
she won the Atlantic Coast Conference title and placed
fourth at the NCAA Championships in the 3,000m
steeplechase. Last year she placed seventh in that event at
the AT&T USA Outdoor Championships.
Michael Spence placed seventh in the steeplechase at the
2006 AT&T USA Outdoor Championships and ended the
season ranked #7 in the country by Track & Field News.
The USATF Foundation provides a means to attract and
guide funds to new and innovative track and field programs
with an emphasis on providing opportunities for youth
athletes, emerging elite athletes and anti-doping education.
The Foundation depends on donations from its board of
directors and from generous fans of track & field.
The Foundation assists people of all ages, all walks of life,
and all ability levels in finding enjoyment and
accomplishment and achieving fitness through our inclusive
sport.
For more information on USA Track & Field and the USATF
Foundation, visit
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