ST. ETIENNE, FRANCE - In preparation for the 2005 World
Cross Country Championships this weekend in Saint-Entienne/Saint
Galmier, France, members of Team USA's squad selected team
captains Thursday during a breakfast meeting.Athletes earned their places on the Team USA roster at the 2005 USA
Cross Country Championships held February 12-13 in Vancouver,
Washington.
2004 Olympic Women's Marathon Trials winner Colleen De Reuck was
selected as the women's long course captain by her peers on Thursday.
The reigning two-time U.S. women's cross country long course
champion, De Reuck won the individual bronze medal at the 2002
World Cross Country Championships in Dublin, Ireland in helping the
U.S. squad win the team silver medal. De Reuck also placed eighth in
the long course race at the 2003 World Championships as Team USA
took home the team bronze medal.
2004 Olympic Women's Marathon Trials fourth-place finisher Blake
Russell was named the women's short course captain. The 2003 Twin
Cities Marathon champion in her debut at that distance, Russell won the
Pan Am Games 5,000m bronze medal in 1999.
Fresh off her victory at the inaugural NACAC Cross Country
Championships March 6 in Clermont, Florida, Jenny Barringer was
named the captain of this year's U.S. women's junior team. Barringer is
making her second appearance at the World Cross Country
Championships after placing 35th in the junior race last year in
Brussels, Belgium.
Following a commanding victory in the men's long course race at the
U.S. Championships last month in Vancouver, 2004 Olympian Dathan
Ritzenhein was named this year's Team USA men's long course
captain. The 2003 NCAA Division I Cross Country Champion from the
University of Colorado, Ritzenhein jumped on the world stage on
January 9 with his surprising victory at the 2005 Reebok Cross Country
Challenge in Belfast, Ireland, against a strong international field.
2000 Olympian Adam Goucher of Portland, Oregon, who remains the
only man to win both the long and short-course national titles in the
same year in 2000, was selected as Team USA's men's short-course
captain. Goucher finished second at this year's national championships
at the four-kilometer distance.
Goucher's Nike Oregon Project teammate Galen Rupp was picked by
his fellow junior men as their team captain. Rupp, a graduate of
Portland's Central Catholic HS, set the American high school record in
the 5000 meters last summer and enters this meet as the U.S. national
junior cross country champion.
Turner returns to France
Former Brigham Young University standout Laura Turner toed the line in
the women's 8 km race at the 2005 USA Cross Country Championships
with a special motivation to make this year's World Cross Country
Championships team. "Three years ago I served a mission here for the
Church of Jesus Christ of Later Day Saints, so I know a lot of people
from here and I love France," she said. "I love the people and I love the
food, and I love everything about it."
Turner used her desire to return to France as a motivating factor in her
eighth-place finish at last month's Nationals that earned her a spot on
the Team USA roster. "It was a huge aspect," she said. "I love having
things to run for as opposed to just racing to race. When you have a lot
of things to motivate you it helps you do better. Emotionally when I'm into
the race it helps me run better. I was just ecstatic to make the team and I
couldn't have been happier. I got very emotional when I found out I
made the team and it makes me really want to do well here."
Turner, who speaks French fluently, will have a large homegrown
contingent of fans supporting her during her race on Saturday. "I never
imagined that my friends here would be able to see me race," she said.
"For this to happen at the World Championships is amazing. I've spoken
to many of them and they can't believe this is happening, and they're all
going to be there cheering and that will motivate me to run faster. It'll be
fun to hear people cheering for me in French."
For more information on the 2005 World Cross Country Championships,
visit www.iaaf.org.