Archive for the Team USA Category

“Preparing for the Best” with Ian Dobson

Growing up in Klamath Falls, Oregon, Ian Dobson’s decision to land in Eugene as a member of the Oregon Track Club was an easy one.  He was first drawn out of the state for college, where he had an amazing career for Stanford.  He was an All-American nine times and made his first US National team his senior year in the 5k.  He continued running and made the 2008 Olympic Team while a member of the Mammoth Track Club.  It was here that he met his future wife, NC State Alum, Julia Lucas. Together they made the decision to leave California and head north. Their journey brought them to Eugene where they have become not only distinguished members of the Oregon Track Club, but also valued members of the community.  They coach a running group open to the public every Thursday night and actively participate in club and neighborhood events whenever their schedule allows.

What is your best track memory from past meets at Hayward Field? And what was your highest finish here?
ID:
Finishing 3rd at the 2008 Olympic Trials.  It was fun in part because it was somewhat unexpected success.  People like Bobby Curtis, Chris Solinsky, Bolota Asmerom, and Jonathon Riley were all in the race and running really well at the time. It was fun having a lot of local supporters, having grown up in Oregon.  I had run at Hayward Field several times through high school but it never seemed to go well there.  I was happy to finally break through that streak.

What most impressed you about the Trials in 2008?
ID: How much the entire town changes for Track and Field- all the billboards, the festival…Eugene is unique in that it is the perfect size to be completely transformed for a few weeks by the energy of the meet.  I don’t think any other town could pull it off like that.

As an athlete, what do you foresee to be the biggest hassle/challenge in your experience in Eugene this summer?
ID: I worry about people (friends and family) coming into town at the last minute and asking to stay with us because everything is booked or too expensive. I don’t like not being able to help them out but I want them to know that this is business for me.

I also hope that local restaurants and businesses will respond to the crowds and schedule.  I remember in 2008 after the meet, everyone would want to hang out and socialize when they were finished competing and there were a few places that stayed open (Villard Pub, no longer there) and had special hours so that people could do that.  It was a lot of fun!

Aside from your competition, what are you looking forward to most about the Trials this summer?
ID: The weight off.  So much energy and focus over the course of the last few years has gone into this one event.  There are so many different ways it could go, when it is done, no matter the outcome, we will know and be able to plan the next step.

Do you think you will have an advantage living and training in Eugene with OTC? In what way?
ID: It will be nice to not have to rely on coaches and staff for transportation around town, to the race, etc.  We will be able to warmup like a regular workout.  There will just be more ‘controls’ for us than if we had to go away.  And having the Oregon support and the community connections there cheering us on will be great.

Do you have anything/anywhere specific in Eugene that you would recommend others runners and spectators check out when they visit this summer? (restaurants, entertainment venues, parks, etc?)
ID: You should definitely go to Hideaway Bakery in town near Amazon Rexius.  If you don’t mind exploring outside of town a little, check out the McKenzie River Trail.  We also love the restaurant PRI (Pizza Research Institute).

 

Picture courtesy of Shamrockshuffle.com

Picture courtesy of Shamrockshuffle.com

Julia Lucas, as she crosses the finish line after her most recent victory at the Shamrock Shuffle in Chicago.

 

‘Preparing for the Best’ with Ryan Whiting

(March 8, 2012 - Photo by Ian Walton/Getty Images Europe)

In an event that the USA has dominated for several years now, one would think it would be difficult for a young newcomer to crack into the rankings.  Ryan Whiting proved it could be done.  Against the likes of fellow Americans Adam Nelson, Reese Hoffa, and Christian Cantwell, Whiting has risen the bar amidst a world-class field. Competing for Arizona State, he graduated with two NCAA Indoor Shot Put titles and one NCAA Outdoor victory.  He was an All-American eight times in the shot-put and discus and set a collegiate indoor shot put record (21.73 meters / 71 feet, 3 ½ inches).  Since graduating from college with a degree in engineering, Whiting has gotten married and moved back to Pennsylvania, where he grew up.  He resides near Penn State University in order to attend grad school and continue to train.  His most recent accomplishment has been winning the IAAF World Indoor title with a best mark of 22.00 meters (72-2 ½).  He is no stranger to the rings of Hayward Field and, like so many other athletes, is looking forward to coming back to TrackTown USA for the Olympic Trials this summer.

 

What is your best track memory from past meets at Hayward Field and Eugene or your highest finish here?

I would say my fondest memory of Hayward Field was making my first outdoor World Championship Team last year.  My highest finish in Eugene was at the 2010 NCAA Championships, where I topped off my collegiate career by winning my first discus title and my fifth shot put title — coming 3 centimeters from the collegiate record.

What most impressed you about the U.S. Olympic Trials in 2008?

It is always amazing to me how welcoming the people of Eugene are for track meets.  At the Trials the locals were wonderful and managed to fill the stadium every day!

Are there any changes from previous meets at Hayward that you hope to see for the Trials?

The only thing I want to change from my last Trials experience at Hayward is to be one of the three who leave after the competition with a ticket to the Olympics.

As an athlete, what do you foresee to be the biggest challenge in your experience in Eugene this summer?

In U.S. shot putting, there is no sure thing. We easily have the most competitive field of any event to be contested this summer.  It will be a challenge, but right now my ONLY goal is to make the 2012 Olympic team.

Aside from your competition, what are you looking forward to most about the Trials this summer?

Track Town Pizza.

Being that the Shot Put gets a lot of attention at meets all over the world, how does competing at Hayward compare to other places in terms of fan support/enthusiasm?

Shot put is definitely one of the up and coming events in track and field.  I have always loved competing at Hayward, it is easily one of the most supportive crowds I have encountered!

Are you planning on getting here early or staying after your event to watch the meet and hang out at the festival?

I am planning on getting to Eugene about 4-5 days before the meet to train and get used to the small time change.  Unfortunately right when I am done competing I will be leaving and (hopefully) going home to begin my preparation for London.

Do you have anything specific you like to do when you come to Eugene for meets (favorite restaurants/bars, etc.)

I love Track Town Pizza. That all-you-can-eat pizza for lunch is a tough deal to beat for a shot putter.  I also used to always go to Villard St. Pub, but last time I was there it was gone.

Have you heard anything about the London Pub, the SuperBlock exhibits/vendors, the live performances, etc. being planned for the meet?

As of yet I have not heard of any of that.  It is my fault as I am pretty single-minded in my goal of making the team at this point.

 

 

March 8, 2012 - Photo by Ian Walton/Getty Images Europe

‘Preparing for the Best’ with Hyleas Fountain

Hyleas FountainHeptathlete Hyleas Fountain’s exciting string of performances was arguably one of the greatest shows at the 2008 Olympic Trials. On her way to a lifetime-best score of 6,667 points, Fountain soared through the first four events with three personal bests, three records, and three individual wins!  After setting the stage and attracting the full attention of the fans, she breezed through the second day to an easy win.  With Jackie Joyner-Kersee being the only other American to earn an Olympic medal in the event, a few months later Fountain again proved she was something special by winning silver at the Olympic Games in Beijing.  Over her career, she has been the USA National Champion three times, the USA Indoor Champion once, and the NCAA Champion four times (indoor and outdoor long jump, pentathlon, and heptathlon).  This year she returns to Eugene ready for another summer of spectacular performances and excited for the support and energy of TrackTown USA!

What is your best track memory from past meets at Hayward Field and Eugene?

Winning my first Olympic Trials and making my first Olympic Team.

What most impressed you about the Trials in 2008?

The thing that impressed me the most was the amount of people that attended the meet. I think this was because of the way they advertised the meet. It’s also good to see people who love our Sport the way TrackTown people do.

Are there any changes from previous meets at Hayward that you hope to see for the Trials?

Not really. I thought it was very organized and run well.

Aside from your competition, what are you looking forward to most about the Trials this summer?

I’m really looking forward to the energy of the crowd. I really love the energy they bring to the track and I love to feed off that.

Are you planning on getting here early or staying after your event?

I will arrive a few days before my event.

TrackTown Thursday | Let the 2012 Events Begin!


We only needed two weeks of 2012 to begin what will be a great year for Track and Field. Most notably is the U.S. Olympic Trials – Marathon to be held in Houston this Saturday.  The men will take off from the line at 8:00 a.m. local race time and the women will follow shortly at 8:15. You can watch Oregon Track Club Elite athletes (based in Portland) like Shalane Flanagan and Kara Goucher race on NBC from 12:00 p.m. PST (3:00 EST) – 2:00 PST (5:00 EST).

Here are some Marathon Trials links:

The Official U.S Olympic Team Trials – Marathon Houston – Houston 2012

Follow Houston 2012 on Twitter @HoustonMarathon

RunnerSpace Coverage of the 2012 Marathon Trials – Watch video interviews and more.

FloTrack Coverage of the 2012 Marathon Trials - Mile to Mile Updates for Men | Women

The Indoor season is also underway and the University of Oregon is heading out of TrackTown USA to compete in a couple different areas.  Part of the team is headed out to Nampa, Idaho for Blue and Orange Opener at the Idaho Center hosted by Boise St.  Others will be in Seattle for the University of Washington Indoor Preview.

GoDucks.com Weekly Release 1/11/12

FloTrack’s coverage of the 2012 UW Indoor Preview

RunnerSpace’s coverage of the 2012 UW Indoor Preview

TrackTown Thursday | 12 Days of TrackTown

On the 12th Day of TrackTown, My True Love Gave to Me:

12 Olympic Medals – (Well actually 13) By 10 former Oregon Track and Field Athletes. Watch the video of Joaquim Cruz’s gold medal 800-meter race in the 1984 Olympics.

11 NCAA Championships – Hosted at Hayward Field (’62, ’64, ’72, ’78, ’84, ’88, ’91, ’96, 2001, 2010 & scheduled to host in 2013).

10 Dec Events – 2012 will be the 100th year of the modern decathlon. The two-day contest will also kick-off the Olympic Trials.

9 Days of Running…………and Jumping……….and Throwing at TrackTown12. Starting with Hammer time on June 21st and ending July 1 with the Men’s 200m Final.

8 Lanes on the Track.

7 -9 and 1/4 – Oregon Track Club Elite Athlete Jesse Williams’ Personal Best and Hayward Field Record. Set at the 2011 USA Championships in TrackTown.

6 Outdoor Titles -  The UO Men have five and the UO Women have one.  Also, the men have one indoor and six cross country titles,  while the women have two of each.

5 OLYMPIC RINGS – And the number of Olympic Trials hosted in TrackTown (1972, 1976, 1980, 2008, 2012).

 

 

 

 

Sub 4 Minute Miles – The Pre Classic has seen more Sub 4 minute Miles than any other American invitational track meet. Click Here to see the full list.

3 Coach Bills (Hayward, Bowerman, Dellinger).

 

2 Bowerman Winners (Galen Rupp ’09 & Ashton Eaton ’10).

And a Historic Hayward Field.

 

Happy Holidays from TrackTown USA. See you in 2012!


TrackTown Thursday — Bowerman Award winners announced in San Antonio

Wednesday evening at the USTFCCCA conference in San Antonio, Florida State’s Ngoni Makusha and Texas A&M’s Jessica Beard were crowned 2011 winners of the Bowerman Award.

The night’s emcee Lewis Johnson invoked the spirit of the award’s namesake — legendary University of Oregon coach Bill Bowerman — and Hayward Field in his closing comments: “Back in his day, Bowerman coached many great collegiate athletes, and over 30 athletes to the Olympic stage; and it’s only fitting that his likeness will be there at Hayward Field in June of 2012 to watch over the Olympic Trials, and approve America’s team that will head to London for the summer Games. … Congratulations to our six finalists and the winners Jessica Beard and Ngoni Makusha, Bowerman would have been proud of all of you tonight.”

Watch the full replay here.

Watch more video of Bowerman Awards & USTFCCCA Convention on flotrack.org

The Bowerman Award is in its third year of existence. Past winners were Ashton Eaton and Queen Harrison in 2010, and Galen Rupp and Jenny Simpson in 2009.

In other news, the excitement is continuing to build for the U.S. Marathon Trials, which will take place in Houston on January 14, 2012.

Ryan Hall and Desiree Davila have predicted record-breaking times.

TrackTown Thursday – 10 Things to Be Thankful For in TrackTown USA

As we embark on the final seven months until the U.S. Olympic Trials begin here in Eugene — and with the Thanksgiving holiday upon us — we thought it was a perfect day to dedicate the TrackTown Thursday blog to what we’re most thankful for here in TrackTown:

1. The Trails – From Pre’s Trail to the Ridgeline and beyond (the city limits that is), there are just too many great running trails in TrackTown to count – which is why we’ll let this link give you all the great details.

 

2. Hayward Field – It is hallowed ground in the sport of track and field. Just one meet at Hayward has converted many a non-believer into a die-hard track and field fan. Here’s a little glimpse at some recent “good times” at Hayward.

3. The University of Oregon Track and Field Team – What can we say, in TrackTown USA, we love our Ducks!

4. Record-Breakers – From the legendary Prefontaine, to those who came before him, and those who have come since — at events like the annual Prefontaine Classic — record-breakers tend to be as prolific as the rain here in TrackTown USA.

5. The Oregon Track Club – Attend a week-night run, compete in one of the OTC’s summertime All-Comers meets, run the Butte to Butte, or volunteer to work at a Hayward Field meet, and you’ll see just how valuable the OTC is to TrackTown USA.

6. OTC Elite – This group of elite athletes deserves its own number. Eight of them competed at the 2011 World Championships in Daegu. Five were finalists, two were silver medalists (Sally Kipyego and Ashton Eaton), and one (the high-flying Jesse Williams) brought home gold.

 

7. The Starting Block – This is a fun and popular interactive Kids Zone at Hayward Field, which gives kids of all ages an opportunity to high jump, long jump, shot put, etc. Building track athletes (or fans), one kid at a time.

 

 

 

 

 

8. Future Events – Speaking of kids, in July of 2014, the world’s best junior athletes (under 20) will arrive in TrackTown for the IAAF World Junior Championships, bringing an IAAF event to the U.S. for the first time since 1992.

9. Team USA Athletes – Without them, and all the hard work they put into becoming the best in the world, Hayward Field would be a ghost town every June. Get to know Andrew Wheating, Angelo TaylorAshton Eaton and Allyson Felix in our TrackTown Spotlight video series.

 

10. The Olympic Trials – The biggest team trials in the world will take place at Hayward Field, June 22-July 1. It sold out in 2008 and it’s on its way to doing so in 2012! And what better holiday gift to buy that track fan in your life than a pair of tickets to the Trials.

Happy Thanksgiving from TrackTown USA! We hope to see you here in June!

TrackTown Spotlight: Angelo Taylor

Meet one of the greatest athletes in the World – Hurdler/Sprinter Angelo Taylor- Three Time Olympic Gold Medalist.

Angelo Taylor is the gold medalist in 400 meter hurdles from the 2000 and 2008 Olympics Games. He also was a part of the gold medal winning 4×400 meter relay team in 2008 Olympics. In this short video, you get to see Angelo “off the track” and hear why he loves TrackTown USA, when he knew he wanted to be an Olympian and things that are important to him off the track.

Monday Matters — A note to Lauren Fleshman

Dear Lauren Fleshman,

It sounds like it’s been a whirlwind (or perhaps a tornado) of crazy amounts of training and injury-scares and blogging and interviews and Picky Bar-making for you — ever since you announced your intention to debut at the 26.2 distance in the Big Apple.

That was less than 3 months ago — August 10th, to be exact. You were in London at the time, fresh off that exhilarating 5k win at Crystal Palace, when you kicked it home to the second fastest time of your life. That was a great race! And so was your seventh-place finish a month later at the World Championships in Korea.

On Sunday we got to watch you become an official marathoner at the prestigious ING New York Marathon. From what you said in post-race interviews, it sounds like you may have hit the wall really hard in those last miles, but you ran 2:37 on your first go-round and were the second American female. That’s insane!

It’s about 36 hours since you finished, and we just got done reading a great article in none other than the New York Times. Wow! What can we say, Lauren? We’re proud.

So we decided to dedicate our weekly Monday Matters’ blog is to you, Lauren Fleshman. You’re a 5k runner who made a huge leap up to the marathon and survived it in impressive fashion. And more than that, you’re a great person who makes our community a better place to be (and a better place to run). We hope your husband is feeding you grapes and expensive cheese right now.

The focus and determination you’ve shown this season has been inspiring, and we can’t wait to see you race back at Hayward Field during the 2012 Olympic Trials. We’ll definitely be tuning in to your always-entertaining blog as you prepare for this next adventure.

Sincerely,

Track Town USA

Oregon athletes show up in numbers for ING NYC Marathon Events

This weekend the annual running of the ING New York City Marathon will take place on Sunday, November 5, but several elite local runners will get their start on Saturday in the NYC Road Runner Dash to the Finish Line 5k. 

OTC Elite runner Sally Kipyego will toe the line for her first race on American soil since taking silver the 10,000m this summer at the World Championships in Daegu, South Korea.

Joining Kipyego in the 5k from Oregon will be Matt Tegenkamp, Lopez Lomong, and TrackTown USA resident Chris Thompson. Other Americans dashing to the finish line are top runners Deena Kastor, Molly Huddle, Lisa Uhl and Dathan Ritzenhein.

OTC Elite stand-out Lauren Fleshman will continue her resurgent season with her marathon debut on Sunday.  Lauren displayed her usual positive outlook in an interview with ESPNW Magazine. 

“I could have done a half-marathon or, yeah, I guess I could have trained for a 10K,” Fleshman said. “But who doesn’t want to run the New York City Marathon, you know what I mean? It’s incredible. It’s so far removed from the track that it’s a totally refreshing and new experience for me. I’ve been in the sport for 16 years, I’ve had the same focus for 16 years. This is completely pulling me out of my element. And I love that about it. I love adventure. To me, that’s what this is.

Lauren’s biggest concern?  “What happens if I have to, like, go poop? I mean, what do you do? Really. Do you stop or do you just do it?”

Read the full feature on Lauren here

Other American women vying for a piece of the $800,000 prize money pie are Jen Rhines, returning to the race for the first time since 2006 and bringing with her victories in the 2011 USA Half-Marathon and 15k distances.  Molly Pritz will join Fleshman in her first appearance at the 26.2 mile race.  On the men’s side are 1999 champion Meb Keflezighi, Ed Morgan and Bobby Curtis.

Check out Letsrun.com’s previews and predictions here 

You can also Log-on to letsrun.com to see a live feed of the pre-race festivities and catch the race live on Sunday on NBC from 2pm-4pm nationwide.  See the official INGNYC Marathon website for a detailed schedule of television and on-line coverage.