| 
AT&T Outdoor Championships, June 21-24, 2007, a synopsis
by Larry Eder July 2007
This year's AT&T USA Outdoor championships gave track
fans and sports
fans alike something to savor. The event, held in
Indianapolis this
year ( June 21-24) at the IUPI Track & Field Faciltiy,
determined
positions on the world championship team for Osaka,
Japan, to be held
August 25-Sept 2. The U.S. team, strengthened by some
new talent and a
bevy of past champions, will be out in force in Osaka!The first day of the meet, June 21, gave sports fans a shot at
watching the sprints, throws and distances, and no one
dissappointed.
Breux Greer, arguably the best javelin thrower in the world,
set a new
American record on his second throw, of 299-6 or 91.29
meters, the
farthest throw in the world this year! In the distance events,
Abdi
Abdirahman, who had dropped out at 8k last year in the
10,000 meters,
traded the lead with Ryan Hall, Dathan Ritzenhein and
Galen Rupp. Abdi
made his move at 9k and went on to win, unopposed in
28;13.11. Second
place was much more of a race, as Galen Rupp, who had
dropped off the
pace, caught a fading Dathan Ritzenhein near the finishline,
taking
second in 28:23.31to Dathan's 28:31.88, with Ryan Hall, just
off his
marathon debut at Flora London, fading to seventh. Deena
Kastor made
it clear that she was going to Osaka, Japan, leading from
the start to
the finish with a fine 31:57. Kellie Goucher won a spirited
battle for
second with her fine 32:33.80 and Katie McGregor took third
in
32:44.69. Also on this fine Thursday night, NCAA winner
Walter Dix ran
10.08, to which Tyson Gay answered with a leading qualifier
in 9.98.
Torri Edwards qualified in 11.01 on the women's side, with
Lisa Barber
leading with a 10.95 for 100 meters. Friday, June 22, 2007 was a great day of sport! Tyson Gay
lead Trindon
Holliday and Walter Dix over 100 meters: Gay won in 9.84,
the new
stadium record and the largest margin of victory since
electronic
timing was instituted in 1975! On the women's side, Torri
Edwards, the
2003 champion, won here in 11.01, with Lauryn Williams in
second in
11.16, the 2005 Helsinki winner, with Carmalite Jeter in third
in
11.17. Allyson Felix, who took fourth, gets to go to Osaka, as
Lauryn
Williams, the winner of the 100 meter from Helsiniki and
defending
winners get a bye into the world championships! In the 5,000 meters, two, very different, fascinating races.
The men's
race was run at 13:40 pace, keeping the pack together. At
4k, Matt
Tegankamp ran a 58 second 400 meters, then a second 58
second four
hundred meters, before the field woke up. Actually, it was
Adam
Goucher that woke up the field, as he charged from sixth to
fourth, to
third, and fought Bernard Lagat for second place. Lagat
woke up and
caught Tegankamp just before the finish, in 13:30.73, with
Matt
Tegankamp taking second for the second year in the row in
13:31.31,
barely holding off Adam Goucher in 13:31.50 for third. In the women's 5,000 meters, Shalane Flanagan, who set
the new
American record for 5,000 at Mt. SAC in April, took off after a
few
laps and ran 14:51.75. A following pack of Michelle Sikes,
the NCAA
winner, Jenn Rhines, coming off six personal bests on the
track this
season and Lauren Fleshman, featured in the new Nike
advertising
campaign, duked it out until 4k, when Fleshman stopped
running!
Twenty seconds later, she took off in mad pursuit of Rhines
and Sikes,
who were running along at 15:10 pace. Jenn Rhines held off
Michelle
Sikes, with Rhines running 15:08.53 for second, Sikes
running
15:09.28--just missing the IAAF 'A'
Standard of 15:08.70. Lauren Fleshman ran 15:24, after
having stopped
at 4,000 meters! In the junior men's 5,000 meters, Kenny Klotz of Oregon had
taken the
lead with 600 meters to go, only to be beat in the last 200
meters, by
Elliot Heath of Minnesota. The next day I heard Kenny's dad
say how
proud he was of his son Kenny, but how he had just wanted
his boy to
win his first title. Saturday, June 23 started off rainy and gray, perhaps an
ominous sign
of things to come? First, Christian Cantwell, the man with
four of the
six farthest throws in the world, finished fifth in the shot, with
a
thow of 65 feet-11. The best throw of the day was Reese
Hoffa, who hit
70 feet, 5 .25 inches. In fact, Reese was so good on
Saturday that any
of his six throws would have won the competition. In second
was Dan Taylor, who has emerged on the scene in the past
two years,
with a throw of 68-11. Adam Nelson, the Olympic and World
champ silver
medalist, was third today, with a sore hamstring, throwing
67-4.25. In the women's 400 meters, the odds on favorite was Sanya
Richards,
but as Sanya came off the final turn, it was Dee Dee Trotter
who was
in control, winning in a personal best of 49.64, the fastest
time of
the year. Running in second was Natasha Hastings, the
NCAA champion,
who set a collegiate record with her fine 49.81. In third, in
50.24,
was Mary Winebrg in 50.24. The men's 400 meters was a showdown between pure long
sprinter, La
Shawn Merritt, and 2000 Olympic gold medalist Angelo
Taylor at the 400
meter hurdles and 2002 US champ at 400 meters. Taylor
had run 44.52
this year. This was the race of the day as Taylor used first a
lunge,
then a lean at the tape to win with the world leading time of
44.05
with Merrit in second in 44.06. Lionel Larry, the NCAA runner
up ran a
superb 44.84 for third. The 400 meter hurdles, a race that combines the agility of a
hurdler
and the endurance of a middle distance runner did not
disappoint as
James Carter, the 2005 Helsinki silver medalist held off a
late
charging Kerron Clement, 47.80 to 47.82. Clement, a 400
meter
runner/400 hurdler is one of the most talented long
sprinters in the
world. Clement used a different tactic here, coming from
behind. His
hurdling, especially over the painful last two hurdles, has to
improve
and this man will not only win US championships but set a
new world
record. Clement is that good! In the two junior 1,500 meters, new stars were emerging.
On the
women's side, 15 year old Jordan Hasay, running with high
school
seniors and college freshman, made a bold run with 700
meters to go,
and broke Michelle Taura, to run 4:16.98! That broke the 25
year old
sophomore record for 1,500 meters! In the mens' junior
race, AJ
Acosta, an Oregon freshman, and Matt Centrowitz, Jr, came
down to a
photo finish, where Acosta outleaned Centrowitz, the soon
to be Oregon
freshman, in 3:49.54! The women's distance races, the steeplechase and the
1,500 meters,
were thrillers as well. In the women's steeplechase, it came
down to
the final barrier, and Jennifer Barringer of the University of
Colorado, took the lead after the final barrier and broke the
meet
record, running 9:34.64, the second fastest ever by an
American! Anna
Willard was just behind Barringer, running 9:34.71 to take
second, and
Lindsay Allen finished third in 9:40.74. In the 1,500, it came
down,
as always to the kick. Christin Wurth-Thomas took the lead
with 300
meters to go, only to be caught by Treniere Clement, with
Clement
taking her third 1,500 meter title in 4:07:04. Wurth-Thomas
held on to
second with 4:07.86 and Erin Donahue got the nod for third
over
Tiffany McWilliams. (Donahue has to get the A standard of
4:06.50 yet
for her to go to Osaka.) Saturday also saw Tom Pappas,
2003 World
Champion, back from shoulder surgery, take the decathlon
with a score
of 8372. Hyleas Fountain won the women's heptathlon with
a score of
6090. Saturday night, the junior 10,000 meters was run and Kenny
Klotz,
second in the 5,000 meters from the night before, was
running to help
a teammate. Well the teammate faltered, and Kenny took
the lead and
went to to win his first US title, in 30:51. Patience is
rewarded. Sunday June 24, 2006 was an appropriate end for the AT&T
USA outdoor
championships. The weather started out with pounding rain
as the
women's pole vaulters warmed up. Even in those trying
conditions,
American record holder Jenn Stuczynski won, clearing 4.45
m or
14-17.25 and making the team to Osaka. Also joining the
pole vault
squad will be Nikole McEwen and Lacy Janson. The men's 800 meters was all Khadevis Robinson.
Khadevis lead from the
start, hitting the 400 meters in 51.9 and not stopping,
running a fine
1:44.37. While Nick Symmonds has relied on his kick all
season, but it
did not get him the prize this time, as Symmonds finished
second in
1:45.17. USC's Duana Solomon ran 1:46.59 for third place.
In the
women's 800 meters, high school phenom Chanelle Price
led the pack
through 57.9 for the opening 400 meters. After that, it was
Hazel
Clark, Alice Schmidt and Alysia Johnson, the NCAA indoor
and outdoor
champion. Johnson took the lead with 300 meters to go and
Clark was on
her shoulder, with Clark going past with 30 meters to go.
But, in the
end it was Alysia Johnson, who took the lead just before the
finish as
Johnson won in 1:59.47 to Clark's 1:59.60. In third, Alice
Schmidt ran
1:59.63. The final big upset of the weekend was the men's
steeplechase. Max
King did the early leading duties, with the pack of Joshua
McAdams,
Daniel Lincoln, Thomas Brooks and Aron Aguayo in pursuit.
With 600
meters to go, Daniel Lincoln, who broke the American
record for the
steeple last year, took the lead. Lincoln is a little short of
racing
this year, having spent the year as a full time medical
student.
Joshua McAdams took the lead with 250 meters to go and
McAdams went on
to win in 8:24.46. The battle for second and third was epic,
as Aaron
Aguayo dropped behind Lincoln and made a move on the
inside of the
barrier, to pass Lincoln for second with Thomas Brooks
following him
for third! Lincoln was caught by Familgietti for fourth and an
exhausted Daniel Lincoln ended up in fifth place with three
new
steeplers in the top three positions! Problem is, Aguayo and
Brooks do
not have A standards (8;24.6), so Fam and Lincoln may
have a shot at
going to Osaka. The women's 200 meters saw Allyson Felix and Sanya
Richards running
hard, with Felix showing why she is the queen of the half lap
with her
win in 22.32 here. Sanya Richards, who did not make the
400 meters,
her best event, made the team to Osaka with her second
place in the
200 meters. In third was Torri Edwards. In the men's 1,500 meters, a new Alan Webb showed his
new skills.
Taking the field through 57.56 at 400 meters and 1;56.23 at
800
meters. Bernard Lagat took over after 800 meters with
Webb, Chris
Lukesic, Leonel Manzano and Said Ahmed on his shoulder.
Lagat lead
through 2:53.8 for 1200 meters when Chris Lukesic made
a move, but
could get no farther than third. Then it was Leonel Manzano,
who
sprinted past Lukesic and hurled himself past a tiring Lagat
for
second. In the final 30 meters, Alan Webb, in the thick of this
battle, made a strong move to take over first place and he
did,
running a fine 3;34.82, breaking Steve Scott's meet record
from way
back in 1982! The final event of the meet was the men's 200 meters.
Tyson Gay got
out of the blocks well, and was clearly in the lead at the top
of the
turn, as he blazed the final straight, running 19.62 for the
number
two time EVER, and breaking the meet record of one
Michael Johnson's
19.66 from the 1996 U.S. champs. Wallace Spearmon, the
training
partner of Tyson Gay, opened up on the final straighaway to
take
second in 19.89, and Rodney Martin took third in 20.18, with
Jeremy
Wariner in fourth in 20.35. In the final analysis, the AT&T Outdoor champs was a like a
great
opera: high points, low points and lots of heroics.
About American Track & Field |
About Running Network |
Privacy Policy |
Copyright |
Contact Us |
Advertise With Us |
|
|