tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-18075106206842195762024-02-06T21:45:31.575-08:00Shortcut to GloryHaile Tuluwamihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17051107067196613890noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1807510620684219576.post-10355781483424749142012-05-22T03:36:00.003-07:002012-07-14T05:43:29.373-07:00Ethiopia makes a serious Statement for the Middle distance Olympic titles<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #38761d;">Genzebe Dibaba, the youngest of a stunning dinasty<br /><span style="color: #38761d;"><a href="http://www.juventudrebelde.cu/multimedia/fotografia/generales/genzebe-dibaba/"><span style="color: #38761d;">http://www.juventudrebelde.cu/multimedia/fotografia/generales/genzebe-dibaba/</span></a>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';"> That cold spring morning of <st1:metricconverter productid="2008, in" w:st="on">2008, in</st1:metricconverter> <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Edinburgh</st1:place></st1:city>, Tirunesh Dibaba, in spite of her
youth one of the most decorated women in the history of athletics, had
something to prove after suffering a clear defeat against Lornah Kiplagat in
the precedent edition of the World Cross Country Champs. However, she seemed
more worried about the performance of her younger sister Genzebe, who was to
participate in the opening race of the contest. So anxious was Tirunesh, she
neglected her own warming up in order to watch her sister run. In the end,
the 17-year-old Ethiopian attacked in the decisive Haggis Knowe hill with 400m
to go, to snatch her first international title. Likewise, Tirunesh recovered
her World Cross crown in the next hour but, as she declared to journalists, she
was even more elated for the sensational victory of her sister. It was a long
way, since Cousin Derartu Tulu had opened the path for every Ethiopian woman
with the first of her three Cross Country gold medals in 1995, and previously
with her triumph at the 10.000m in Barcelona Olympic Games. The youngest member
of that prosperous lineage had to feel particularly inspired and well protected
in her blossoming time, surrounded by such accomplished family of runners. Derartu,
Eyegayehu, Tirunesh, all felt proud her heritage, the Ethiopian racing
tradition, had been preserved and transmitted so brilliantly to the newest
generation.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';"> Four years have passed since that revelation and now
Genzebe Dibaba, after her victory at the World indoor championships in <st1:city w:st="on">Istanbul</st1:city> last winter and her recent groundbreaking
demonstration at the Diamond League meeting in <st1:city w:st="on">Shanghai</st1:city>,
appears as the most solid prospect for Olympic gold in team <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Ethiopia</st1:place></st1:country-region>. The
awesome generation that shocked the athletic world in 2003 seems now virtually
exhausted, after a whole decade of holding national hopes in global challenges.
Years of injuries have taken its toll in Kenenisa Bekele, Sileshi Sihine and
Tirunesh Dibaba, all three of them struggling to regain their past form.
Likewise, the remaining ace of that marvellous poker, Meseret Defar, seems to
have lost the mental battle against current female number one, Vivian
Cheruiyot. <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:country-region w:st="on">Kenya</st1:country-region></st1:place>
is largely dominating long distance right now and their archrivals look unable
to find a valid relay. </span><a href="http://moti-athletics-5000-w.blogspot.com.es/2012/01/kenya-outckicks-ethiopia.html"><span lang="EN-GB">http://moti-athletics-5000-w.blogspot.com.es/2012/01/kenya-outckicks-ethiopia.html</span></a><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';"> <span lang="EN-GB"> Yet if Vivian Cheruiyot and Kenyan
marathoners seem unstoppable in their way to the Olympic title, in middle
distance <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:country-region w:st="on">Ethiopia</st1:country-region></st1:place>
still keep some good chances of victory.<o:p></o:p></span></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';"> Nevertheless,
contrary to their East African neighbours, the country which owns eight Olympic
titles in the 10.000m has little tradition in the 800m and the <st1:metricconverter productid="1500. In" w:st="on">1500. In</st1:metricconverter> the first Olympic
Games they took part in, back in the 1960s, both <st1:country-region w:st="on">Kenya</st1:country-region>
and <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Ethiopia</st1:place></st1:country-region>
used to line-up, besides distance runners, also sprinters, quarter milers and
hurdlers. Some of those athletes had remarkable success as the members of the
Kenyan 4x400 relay, winners in Munich 1972 and runner-up in Mexico 1968, featuring
Daniel Rudisha, father of the current 800m world record holder. On occasion of
the African Championships they hosted in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Nairobi</st1:place></st1:city>
in 2010, this country tried to recover their international presence in some of
those events. Thanks to this effort, <st1:country-region w:st="on">Kenya</st1:country-region>
is likely to qualify its 4x400m relay for <st1:city w:st="on">London</st1:city>,
after a long hiatus, and amazingly will also send Julius Yego, first national
representative ever in the Olympics in the javelin discipline, who recently
returned from a training camp in <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Finland</st1:place></st1:country-region>. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://www1.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Fantu+Magiso+IAAF+World+Indoor+Championships+KJSnVGmPVSRl.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="820" src="http://www1.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Fantu+Magiso+IAAF+World+Indoor+Championships+KJSnVGmPVSRl.jpg" width="600" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #38761d;">Fantu Magiso at the 2012 World indoor Championships in Istanbul<br />Photo: Ian Walton/ Getty Images Europe<br /><span style="color: #38761d;"><a href="http://www.zimbio.com/">http://www.zimbio.com</a></span></span></td></tr>
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<st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on"><span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';">Ethiopia</span></st1:place></st1:country-region><span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';"> is in the same way
nurturing talents in different disciplines than its classics 5000m, 10.000m and
the marathon. Yakob Jarso and Roba Gari got to break Eshetu Tura’s steeplechase
record which dated from the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games and in the last couple of
years we have also witnessed their progressive rising in the 1500m and lately
in the 800m too. Mulugeta Wondimu ran the former distance in 3:31.14 in 2004,
still the national record, but quickly moved to the roads. Notwithstanding,
Deresse Mekonnen proved, with his back-to-back world indoor titles in 2008 and
2010 and his silver medal in <st1:state w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Berlin</st1:place></st1:state>,
his country could do well in the metric mile too. Since then the number of
Ethiopians able to break 3:36 are legion: Mekonnen Gebremedhin, Henok Legesse, Demma
Daba, Dawit Wolde, Soresa Fida, Zebene Alemayehu… On the other hand, it is even
more intriguing unusual teen phenomenon Mohamed Aman, first international star
the country has known in the 800m. Aman enjoyed athletic success for the first
time when he triumphed at the Youth Olympic Games in <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Singapore</st1:place></st1:country-region> in 2010. Since then he
has experienced a meteoric rise to the senior elite, reaching the final in Daegu
and causing a shocking upset when he broke the long winning streak of David
Rudisha, under Milano rain in the last meeting of 2011. This year he has
confirmed his stunning talent clinching the gold medal last winter in Istanbul
and outdoors, after his victory at the meeting Colourful Daegu, seems the only
one able to produce a surprise at the Olympics, beating again Rudisha. <o:p></o:p></span><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; font-size: 12pt; text-indent: 35.4pt;">However, Aman is not the only teen prodigy with genuine ambitions for
the 800m in </span><st1:city style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; font-size: 12pt; text-indent: 35.4pt;" w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">London</st1:place></st1:city><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; font-size: 12pt; text-indent: 35.4pt;">. </span><a href="http://moti-athletics-800-m.blogspot.com.es/2011/08/four-races-to-remember.html" style="text-indent: 35.4pt;">http://moti-athletics-800-m.blogspot.com.es/2011/08/four-races-to-remember.html</a> <span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; font-size: 12pt; text-indent: 35.4pt;"> Leonard Kosencha beat the young Ethiopian at last World Youth Championships in </span><st1:city style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; font-size: 12pt; text-indent: 35.4pt;" w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Lille</st1:place></st1:city><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; font-size: 12pt; text-indent: 35.4pt;"> and, after setting
off the international meetings last year because of his academic duties, this
summer is determined to try to make the Olympic team. Also quickly improving is
the reigning world junior champion David Mutua. </span><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; font-size: 12pt; text-indent: 35.4pt;"> </span><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; text-indent: 35.4pt;">East African
representatives are increasingly young. </span><st1:country-region style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; text-indent: 35.4pt;" w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Ethiopia</st1:place></st1:country-region><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'; text-indent: 35.4pt;">, before the failure of
some of its foremost stars to face Kenyans in the last seasons has had no
doubts in enrolling for the Olympic marathon some inexperienced but full of
overpowering youth like Ayele Abshero, Dino Sefir and Tiki Gelana, and something
similar is expected on the track.</span><br />
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';">If <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Ethiopia</st1:place></st1:country-region> has
found an astounding 800m male athlete in teen Mohamed Aman, awesome the same is
her female counterpart Fantu Magiso. Not
long time ago it was rather unusual to find East African women in the 800m global
competitions. For the 2005 World Championships, Kenyan officials did not find
necessary to enter Janeth Jepkosgei, despite she had largely achieved the standard.
However they wisely changed mind for the next edition of the contest in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Osaka</st1:place></st1:city>, just in time to
allow her become world champion. Then, the following year, amazingly the first
two Kenyan female gold medals ever at the Olympic Games would be achieved
precisely at the 800m and 1500m by Pamela Jelimo and Nancy Jebet Langat
respectively. Now besides already classic specialists Jepkosgei and <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:city w:st="on">Jelimo</st1:city>, <st1:country-region w:st="on">Kenya</st1:country-region></st1:place>
have plenty of effervescent 800m female standouts as Eunice Sum, Cherono Koech
and Winny Chebet. Also <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Uganda</st1:place></st1:country-region>,
which lately seemed to be just another East African cradle of long distance
runners, is now remembering with Annet Negesa, a brilliant talent on the making,
their greatest legends John Akii-Bua and Davis Kamoga had endurance yet had
also speed and power. On the other hand, Fantu Magiso is the first Ethiopian half-miler
we can remember and furthermore she excelled before in the 200m and 400m. She
owns in those distances respective PBs of 23.90 and 52.09, being the former
more than 2 seconds better than the precedent national record, which plainly
speaks about the previous standards in the country in the discipline. Such
speed must be an asset for Magiso’s bright future in the 800m. Often described
as clumsy on the track, to the point she nearly collided with a photographer in
her race in the <st1:place w:st="on"><st1:placename w:st="on">Madison</st1:placename>
<st1:placename w:st="on">Square</st1:placename> <st1:placetype w:st="on">Garden</st1:placetype></st1:place>
last winter, Fantu is quickly winning experience and she should be a fearsome
contender soon. Last season she struck the 400m at the African junior
Championship, then went on to reach the semi-finals in the 800m in Daegu. This
year she narrowly missed the medals in Istanbul and recently dared to challenge no less than the reigning Olympic champion
Pamela Jelimo at the Diamond League meeting in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Doha</st1:place></st1:city>, to finish an excellent second, in a
massive national record of 1:57.90. Watch out for her in a near future! </span></div>
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<tr><td><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/vanbreack/4835704034/" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;" title="Bekele & Bogale por vanbreack, en Flickr"><img alt="Bekele & Bogale" height="800" src="http://farm5.staticflickr.com/4132/4835704034_0c00e3e64f_b.jpg" width="597" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="font-size: 13px;"><span style="color: #38761d;">Tizita Bogale and Asmerawork Bekele clash in a meeting in Huelva<br /><span style="color: #38761d;"><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/vanbreack/4835704034/">http://www.flickr.com/photos/vanbreack/4835704034/</a></span></span></td></tr>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';">Nonetheless, it may
be tough for Fantu Magiso to shine in London Olympics in an 800m contest so
loaded of scintillating stars, including Olympic champion Pamela Jelimo,
happily returned to where she used to be after some difficult seasons, the last
two world champions Caster Semenya and Mariya Savinova, and Janeth Jepkosgei, who
has been in every major championship podium since 2007. Much more up to
surprises is currently the 1500m event. In the last couple of years the
discipline has lacked a leader, a dominator. A reason is the four best athletes
of the world middle distance powerhouse, <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Russia</st1:place></st1:country-region>, were sanctioned because of
a doing offence, and same fate suffered global medallists Daniela Yordanova and
Bouchra Ghezielle. <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Russia</st1:place></st1:country-region>
has not found for the moment a valid replacement for the likes of Tomashova,
Soboleva and Fomenko, apart from Anna Alminova, who is currently injured. Besides,
even the foremost milers right now are not consistent enough: Maryam Yussuf
Jamal clinched gold at the 2007 and 2009 World championships but also
unexpectedly faded in the Olympic final when she looked the sure winner and was
not either a factor last year in Daegu. On the other hand, Olympic champion
Nancy Jebet Langat dominated in great fashion the 2010 campaign but was out of
shape in both <st1:state w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Berlin</st1:place></st1:state>
and Daegu finals. Finally the <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">United
States</st1:place></st1:country-region> seemed to have an excellent candidate
for the gold medal for last year World Champs in Morgan Uceny, winner of three
Diamond League meetings and the most regular miler during the year, but a fall
prevented her from success. Spaniard Natalia Rodríguez looked strong enough to
avenge her polemic disqualification in <st1:state w:st="on">Berlin</st1:state>
but in the end it was another <st1:country-region w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">US</st1:place></st1:country-region>
representative, Jennifer Barringer-Simpson, who surprisingly got the better of
the whole field in the homestretch. Simpson, a former steeplechase star,
changed to the middle distances looking for a new challenge, yet injuries and
inconsistency sowed doubts about her future in the event. After her sensational
victory in Daegu, the world champion followed it up with a 10<sup>th</sup> place
in Rieti and a 13<sup>th</sup> position at the Ivo Van Damme meeting, again
raising the question mark about whether she will be able to maintain her number
one status for long time. Only three athletes (Jamal, Rodríguez and Kalkidan
Gezahegne) repeated final from the previous edition in <st1:state w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Berlin</st1:place></st1:state>, which is a clear evidence of the
current inconsistency in the event. Besides, the standards have dropped: no
athlete got to run the distance under 4 minutes in 2011. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';">The female 1500
event is nowadays experiencing a crisis of leadership and results. However, the
discipline is on the rise in East African countries. Pioneers like Derartu Tulu
spread the example and now Kenyan and Ethiopian women are massively practising
sport and also entering virgin territory, embracing new disciplines. Helen
Obiri, who broke Meseret Defar’s streak at the 3000m in World indoors last
winter in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Istanbul</st1:place></st1:city>,
looks a Kenyan solid alternative to Nancy Langat and Irene Jelagat, who has not
progressed as expected after her victory at the 2006 World Junior
Championships. And this nation has another exciting prospect in Faith Kipyegon,
who last year won gold in both the 1500m World Youth championships in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Lille</st1:place></st1:city> and at the World
junior Cross Country in Punta Umbría. At only 18 years of age, Kipyegon has
already run the distance in a world class 4:03.82.</span></div>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://indoortrackandfield.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/dsc_0096.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="586" src="http://indoortrackandfield.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/dsc_0096.jpg" width="640" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #38761d;">Kalkidan Gezahegne, the world indoor champion in 2010<br /><span style="color: #38761d;"><a href="http://indoortrackandfield.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/dsc_0096.jpg">http://indoortrackandfield.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/dsc_0096.jpg</a></span></span></td></tr>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';">Nevertheless,
Ethiopian women are by far the most impressive currently among East Africans.
When Derartu Tulu, Gete Wami and Fatuma Roba were making the highlights in the
10.000 and the marathon, the lone standout of the country in the 1500m was
Kutre Dulecha. This athlete enjoyed a noteworthy athletic career in the late
1990s and early 2000s, achieving a gold medal at the 2004 World indoor
championships and a bronze outdoors in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Seville</st1:place></st1:city>
1999, besides back-to-back junior and senior global titles in Cross Country. After
her retirement, Maryam Yussuf Jamal and Gelete Burka took over, although the
former chose to represent Bahrein. Burka for one reason or another has in most
of the occasions failed to deliver to the expectations she rose when she
reached the 1500m World summer final in 2005, being a junior, and then struck
the World Cross short title the following year. Though she was bestowed the
2008 World indoor title in Valencia, after Yelena Soboleva’s disqualification,
Gelete Burka missed her greatest occasion of glory that same winter at the
World Cross in Edmonton, because of wrong tactics, and on the track, after too
many missed opportunities her moment has past too. Now is the time for her
younger compatriots. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';">Kalkidan Gezahegne,
already a finalist at the 2009 World Summer Champs, solved the animosity the
incident between Natalia Rodríguez and Gelete Burka in <st1:state w:st="on">Berlin</st1:state>
had created, beating both of them at the World indoors in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Doha</st1:place></st1:city>. That one was a highly successful winter
for Gezahegne, who also broke both the world junior at the 1500m and the mile.
However an untimely injury broke her meteoric progression. After many months
out of competition, the promising Ethiopian was back in 2011 but then, another
newcomer from her same country, Abeba Aregawi, an athlete based in Sweden, took the spotlight all over the
winter, with four astounding victories in well-known international meetings. Now
Aregawi was believed to become the brand new Ethiopian star but she also fell
injured and missed the entire summer campaign. In Daegu, Gezahegne was the high-placed
athlete of the country in a good 5<sup>th</sup> place but only one year ago she
seemed to be predestined for more. Not selected for Korea, Tizita Bogale, gold
medallist two years before at both Youth Olympic Games and World Junior
Championships, had notwithstanding progressed to a remarkable 4:03.98, during
the season. She should be also an athlete to watch out for the future.<o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua';">In 2012, all
Gezahegne, Aregawi and Bogale, as good as they are, have been overshadowed by
the stellar campaign of Genzebe Dibaba. With two world titles in Cross Country
and one on the track as a junior, Genzebe had not however deliver in her first
senior competitions in the same impressive fashion her elder sisters Eyegayehu
and Tirunesh did in the past. Being just 18, she was a good 8<sup>th</sup> in <st1:metricconverter productid="2009 in" w:st="on">2009 in</st1:metricconverter> <st1:state w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Berlin</st1:place></st1:state> at the 5000m, but another 8<sup>th</sup>
placement two years later in Daegu did not really seemed a progression by
Ethiopian standards, specially when compared to long time archrival Mercy Cherono's fifth place. This winter she concentrated her endeavours in the 1500m,
probably to improve on her speed for the 5000m campaign in the summer. However,
after her stunning results during the indoor season, she is likely to keep the
1500m as her pet event. Unbeaten throughout the winter, she culminated her
solid campaign with a sensational victory at the World Championships in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Istanbul</st1:place></st1:city>, the third Ethiopian
title in a row. Breaking the “follow the leader” family tradition of great
kickers as Derartu and Tirunesh, Genzebe made a groundbreaking display of front
running, progressively increasing the pace to romp home unchallenged. That
victory put her in the map for medal contention in <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Beijing</st1:place></st1:city>. Last week she launched her summer
season in Shanghai with a still more spectacular display of good running, for a
sensational victory over her reborn compatriot Abeba Aregawi, both dipping for
the first time under the 4-minute barrier. Thus Genzebe Dibaba broke the long
standing Kutre Dulecha’s national record of 3:58.38, lowering it to a world
class 3:57.77. That demonstration put the youngest of the Dibaba clan as firm
favourite for gold at the upcoming London Olympic Games. If Tirunesh fails to
beat Kenyan Vivian Cheruiyot, maybe Genzebe can still maintain the family at the
top, or maybe we can witness for the first time in many years how two siblings
climb to the top of a track and field podium at the Olympic Games. <o:p></o:p></span></div>
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<a href="http://www.ethiotube.net/video/18460/Genzebe-Dibaba-Wins-1500M-In-Turkey">http://www.ethiotube.net/video/18460/Genzebe-Dibaba-Wins-1500M-In-Turkey</a>
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<br /></div>Haile Tuluwamihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17051107067196613890noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1807510620684219576.post-81121853909407401452011-08-15T20:18:00.000-07:002012-04-01T20:36:30.870-07:00Who is in College now<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_N9K-TGM-fSgc_-pazfOv1QzPG6TxUMewEZPY_pID-PvW7XP6QJNfF4rYJLnHSvRXjqG7oSGjHbKVljWnr6jqRdAlP1hYzF97loITVXOA3PXhqp2rtDDzZamYiNN2kcA-rVUgGbzs1BuS/s1600/JordanHasaySheilaReid_crop_650x440+dave+einsel+ncaaphotos-com+bleacherreport-com.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" dea="true" height="432" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_N9K-TGM-fSgc_-pazfOv1QzPG6TxUMewEZPY_pID-PvW7XP6QJNfF4rYJLnHSvRXjqG7oSGjHbKVljWnr6jqRdAlP1hYzF97loITVXOA3PXhqp2rtDDzZamYiNN2kcA-rVUgGbzs1BuS/s640/JordanHasaySheilaReid_crop_650x440+dave+einsel+ncaaphotos-com+bleacherreport-com.jpg" width="640" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #38761d;">Jordan Hasay and Sheila Reid after their clash at the 2011 NCAA indoor mile</span><br />
<span style="color: #38761d;">Photo: Dave Einsel/ NCAA.com</span><br />
<a href="http://www.bleachrreport.com/"><span style="color: #38761d;">http://www.bleachrreport.com/</span></a></td></tr>
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<span closure_uid_3vhhhr="116" closure_uid_5clnok="118" closure_uid_6r7rei="117" closure_uid_81qrji="116" closure_uid_embz4o="104" closure_uid_nunmvy="116" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"> I guess this article arrives more than two months late and some of the fellows I am going to talk about have already graduated and come back home with a nice diploma under their arms. However, I missed the NCAA Track and Field championships and it took time somebody was so great to upload the races videos on the Internet. <span closure_uid_embz4o="106">Y</span>ou know I am not living in the <country-region w:st="on">USA</country-region> and that means I am not allowed to watch Universal Sports or whatever channel offers the competitions in <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">America</place></country-region>. Not even paying! As a Spanish citizen I only have the right to dispose of the poor, inadequate and expensive coverage of national channels as Canal +, which own the copyright in my country. So no one was broadcasting NCAA, Penn Relays or <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Boston</place></city> marathon, I missed them all. Indeed, which is the interest of the World Wide Web if, among all the possible options I have to restraint myself to the national channels? And, furthermore, if every company in the world is free to buy their goods and do business wherever they want, why for an individual is not so simple? So Westerners entrepreneurs can break all economical balance investing massively in <place w:st="on">Eastern Asia</place> but, on the other hand, I am not allowed to access the cheapest and best athletics broadcasting: </span><span closure_uid_embz4o="104" closure_uid_jiphxz="136" closure_uid_nunmvy="116" closure_uid_oktn64="127" lang="EN-GB" style="color: #990000; font-family: "Book Antiqua";"><u closure_uid_x4o87v="117">This is called PIRACY!!!</u></span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3vhhhr="117" closure_uid_6r7rei="118" closure_uid_bor7hj="157" closure_uid_lgjopt="117" closure_uid_x4o87v="118" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua"; font-size: 12pt;"><span closure_uid_bor7hj="159" closure_uid_x4o87v="199"> </span>Well done! I will try to explain briefly why NCAA track and field championships are so important for a foreigner. I like watching the exploits of Bolt, Isinbayeva or Bekele, though, I am also curious about the progress of the new generations of the sport. The <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">USA</place></country-region> is still globally the number one country in Athletics and there is no better display of talented up-and-coming athletes in the world like you can see in American Colleges, where besides there are also young runners from many other places in the world. If you are looking for the future track and field stars, the men and women who are going to medal in Olympics and World championships in some years time, you will find some of them here. </span> </div>
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/redd380">http://www.youtube.com/user/redd380</a></div>
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Other interesting relay races in the NCAA championships:</div>
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Men 4x400 <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DGm4T6Guv2w&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DGm4T6Guv2w&feature=related</a></div>
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Women 4x100 <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpB_qQtXCgE&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpB_qQtXCgE&feature=related</a></div>
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Men 4x100 <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERMeXGxKXBU&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERMeXGxKXBU&feature=related</a></div>
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<span closure_uid_gynhmi="164" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"><span closure_uid_wvpph9="117" lang="EN-GB">The NCAA championship is firstly a contest, where athletes from all over the country compete to prove their university is the best in the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">United States</place></country-region>. Along with Hakonen Ekiden in <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Japan</place></country-region> and Penn Relays this is the most groundbreaking manifestation in the sport of Athletics of what collegian team spirit can do. In the second week end of June in <place w:st="on"><city w:st="on">Des Moines</city>, <state w:st="on">Iowa</state></place>, Texas A&M representatives came in search of a historic third consecutive title and they achieved it in the very last event, the 4x400 metres relay in the most dramatic fashion.</span></span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="136" closure_uid_6r7rei="119" closure_uid_b2fe05="117" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"> Tabarie Henry, an experienced senior from US Virgin islands, who had participated in Beijing and finished just out of the medals at Berlin Worlds, disappointed everybody after being unable of qualifying for the final at the single <metricconverter productid="400 metres" w:st="on">400 metres</metricconverter> in Des Moines. He made up for this failure, anchoring Texas A&M to victory in the race and thus in the overall competition, along with teammates Bryan Miller, Demetrius Pinder and Michael Preble. It was not without a thriller. <state w:st="on">Texas</state> needed maximum points to overcome leaders <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Florida</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype> <placetype w:st="on">University</placetype></place>, who were not in the race and, at the same time, they needed to recover five points from their neighbours Florida Gators. Henry received the stick ahead but had to overcome a fierce opposition from LSU, <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Mississippi</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype></place> and Baylor, whose respective anchors were such accomplished quartermilers as Riker Hylton, Tavaris Tate and Marcus Boyd. Hylton, the new Jamaican champion, seemed for a moment capable of spoiling the Aggies party but Henry could hold the lead. The Gators just finished sixth. The winning time, 3:00.62 ranks, as for now, second in the season lists, just 17 hundredths short of the mark this same squad obtained in April at the Texas relays. The race stands as the best of the year: the first, second, third and fourth placed teams in Des Moines are into the current world top-<metricconverter productid="12 in" w:st="on">12 in</metricconverter> the male 4x400. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_163vv5="130" closure_uid_5clnok="128" closure_uid_6r7rei="120" closure_uid_7owedw="157" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">In the women’s the Aggies where tied with the Oregon Ducks, prior to the last race. All the responsibility went to Jessica Beard's shoulders.<span closure_uid_163vv5="129"> (1) (2) </span>Beard is used to silver in individual races. She had finished runner-up at the 2008 World Junior Championship and then in successive editions of the NCAA indoors and out, behind rivals like Joanna Atkins or Francena McCorory. Yet, she proved decisive in the last two Aggies team victories, contributing with valuable points and helping win the relay. Eventually she could break her bad luck as a soloist in 2011, her last University year, winning first the NCAA indoor in College Station, Texas, with an impressive 50.79, which topped the world seasonal lists, then outdoors in Des Moines, ahead Atkins and new wonder Diamond Dixon.</span></div>
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<div class="MsoNormal" closure_uid_163vv5="136" closure_uid_3vhhhr="118" closure_uid_4kqijd="126" closure_uid_b2fe05="135" closure_uid_bor7hj="152" closure_uid_gynhmi="163" closure_uid_jwsnj8="137" closure_uid_ka9vg3="130" closure_uid_lpyh6c="143" closure_uid_thj3rj="125" closure_uid_v9l29l="134" closure_uid_x4o87v="239" style="margin: 0cm 0cm 0pt; text-align: left; text-indent: 35.4pt;">
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<span closure_uid_163vv5="132" closure_uid_3lz1ej="137" closure_uid_5clnok="129" closure_uid_6r7rei="121" closure_uid_gynhmi="162" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"> Jeneba Tarmoh led the crucial relay race, passing on the baton to Blessing Mayungbe and this one to Jamaican hurdler Andrea Sutherland. Jessica received in third position, behind <city w:st="on">Auburn University</city>, which had an advantage of more than <metricconverter productid="20 metres" w:st="on">20 metres</metricconverter>, and <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oregon</place></state>. In an impressive display, the <state w:st="on">Texas</state> anchor caught first Duck freshman Laura Roesler, then leader Kai Selvon, a new <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Trinidad and Tobago</place></country-region> rising star, who has qualified for Daegu's <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter>. Selvon tried to hold Beard but it was in vain. Jessica romped home to win the third title in a row for Texas A&M. It does not mean her rivals were weak: <place w:st="on">Auburn</place> freshman Selvon ran 50.67 for her leg and Roesler 51.45, but Jessica Beard was just sensational, achieving 49.14, the best split ever in a NCAA relay race. This feat is going to give her a huge boost of confidence for Daegu, in her second world championship. Beard is also finalist, along with Kimberlyn Duncan and Tina Sutej for the prestigious Bowerman award, a distinction for the best NCAA athlete of the year. Among the men, Ngoni Makusha, Jeshua Anderson and Christian Taylor are the candidates.</span></div>
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/great121ful">http://www.youtube.com/user/great121ful</a></div>
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And the 200m here: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYUyiQ4Z4xU&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYUyiQ4Z4xU&feature=related</a></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="138" closure_uid_wvpph9="118" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Ngonidzashe Makusha (3) (4) (5) was arguably the man of the meeting in Des Moines, after being the only athlete in winning three gold medals. The Zimbabwean ace from the Florida State Seminoles had his breakthrough campaign in 2008, when he crowned himself NCAA champion in his freshman year and later in the summer narrowly missed the bronze medal at Beijing Olympic Games. He went on the following year, for a second Collegian title but his progression was cut by a severe injury, which sidelined him for most of 2010. Now he is back in astounding form in his classic event and has also had a stunning success in his first serious season running the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter>. In his first competition in the distance in four years, he surprised everybody, breaking the 10 seconds barrier (9.97). Two months afterwards in De Moines, after beating a solid field with a huge <metricconverter productid="8.40 in" w:st="on">8.40 in</metricconverter> the long jump, which ranks him second in the seasonal lists, he amazed the world again winning also the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter> in 9.89, improving Ato Boldon’s collegiate record in the process. The third gold medal came in the short relay, but there were <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter> champion Maurice Mitchell and especially anchor Brandon Byram, who had to make up for a more than sluggish exchange between Cayman Islands Kemar Hyman and Makusha. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_6r7rei="122" closure_uid_wvpph9="119" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Thus Ngoni became only the fourth man in striking back to back titles in <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter> and long jump in a same championship in 80 years of NCAA history, putting his name alongside icons like Jesse Owens, DeHart Hubbard and Carl Lewis. Among the women, another athlete of African origin, competing for Texas-El Paso, Blessing Okagbare achieved the feat as recently as last year. For the Seminoles, Walter Dix had won for the last time the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter> title in 2007. They have not had to wait too much for Coach Ken Hardnen to shape another world beater. Makusha has already been compared to Olympic champion Donovan Bailey and the same Lewis, because he is not fast out of the blocks but is able of maintaining an irresistible acceleration until the finish line, like the four times long jump Olympic champion. Now with 6 NCAA titles in his pocket, Ngoni has decided to leave “the kindergarten” and become a professional to prepare himself the better for more demanding challenges, which requires his growing status as athlete. Yet he is grateful to his University and do not plan to move from <place w:st="on"><city w:st="on">Tallahassee</city></place> for the remaining of his career. A phenomenon in his home country, he could also take part in an awesome Zimbabwean 4x100 relay, along with Gabriel Mvumvure, <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Louisiana</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype></place>’s anchor in their victorious performance at last Penn Relays, and Brian Dzingai, provided the latter can be back to his past fitness. Still a newcomer in the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter> he has plenty of room to improve and will be a fearsome dark horse for Daegu and the Olympics. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="139" closure_uid_wvpph9="122" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Zambian Gerald Phiri is another African consummate sprinter based in <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">America</place></country-region>. In his senior year in Texas A&M he has lowered the national record to 10.06 and finished a solid fourth in the NCAA final. Among the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">US</place></country-region> specialists, the best among the collegians this season has been Makusha’s teammate Maurice Mitchell, an astonishing winner in the <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter> final in Des Moines and bronze at the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter>, besides achieving brand new PBs this season (10.00 and 20.19). In the national trials he was really close to book a ticket for Daegu, finishing a creditable fourth in the contest. Jeff Demps, the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter> NCAA defending champion and once an unofficial world junior record holder, did not advance unbelievably to the final this year but was the only collegian in making it for the national championships. Talented Rakieem “Mookie” Salaam also has had an erratic year of up and downs, being his best achievement the <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter> indoor title he won for Oklahoma and his biggest deception the 6<sup>th</sup> place in the same contest outdoors, being the prohibitive favourite. Other <country-region w:st="on">US</country-region> sprinters as Horatio Williams, Brandon Byram and Tran Howell performed well in De Moines but did not reach the final in the national trials, held in <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Eugene</place></city>. However, Salaam did and so did <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Kentucky</place></state> junior Justin Austin. Keep an eye on Arkansas’ Marek Niit, <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter> silver medallist this year at the NCAA and a world junior champion back in 2006, who besides has set no less than 11 national records for his country Estonia during the season. </span></div>
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/jazzcyclist">http://www.youtube.com/user/jazzcyclist</a></div>
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Indoors too: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOVajZ40sbk&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KOVajZ40sbk&feature=related<span closure_uid_7o6j61="117" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"></span></a></div>
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<span closure_uid_7o6j61="117" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">During the last seven years Allyson Felix and Veronica Campbell-Brown have dominated overwhelmingly the <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter> dash event. The American won the gold medal at the last three world championships and the Jamaican at the last two Olympics, being the other athlete runner-up in most of the occasions. Both are still a guarantee for their teams and keep the role of favourites for Daegu. Notwithstanding other sprinters are this season in the mix and, maybe for the first time since these two track stars coming-of-age, their crown is in danger. Carmelita Jeter is giving a go to the distance and she is being as astounding as she is in the shorter sprint event, and Bianca Knight is being as consistent all over the year. Both have already beaten Allyson once at her favoured distance at the Diamond League this summer. Meanwhile, Shalonda Solomon won the national trials in an impressive 22.15. At the college, there are also some talented challengers. There are at least two women who are good enough to aim for next year Olympic medals: Kimberlyn Duncan and Jeneba Tarmoh.</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_7o6j61="140" closure_uid_m9cp1a="117" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua"; font-size: 12pt;">Kimberlyn (6) (7) has been the most amazing revelation of this 2011 year. Nothing special in her high school years, this native of <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Texas</place></state> did not appeal the interest of the athletics powerhouses of her homeland and eventually was recruited by the Louisiana State Tigers. She has grown as an athlete since, and now, after her exploits in her sophomore year, she is starting to believe in herself and what she is capable on. Eventually it seems <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Duncan</place></city> finished up in the team which fits best her personality and running ways. She is the prototype Lady Tiger: shaped tall and majestic, like a beautiful leopard; the look of her eyes, the calm and confident sound of her voice, awake the power and magnetism of the lion; and feline are too her graceful and strong strides over the athletic track. Does not she look like Wilma Rudolph?</span><br />
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<span closure_uid_7o6j61="140" closure_uid_m9cp1a="117" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua"; font-size: 12pt;"> Kimberlyn Duncan was the dominant force of the winter season, running the <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter> at the SEC final in 22.78, the fastest time in the world indoors since the 22.40 World Junior best set by Bianca Knight in 2008, and then striking the NCAA title. In the summer she continued in the same impressive style, recording three under 22.30 timings, the not windy-aided one (22.24), being her clocking for the gold medal at the NCAA championships outdoors. </span><span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua"; font-size: 12pt;"><span closure_uid_7o6j61="119">Kimberlyn thus became only the sixth woman in winning back-to-back titles in the event both indoors and out and the first Lady Tiger since Dawn Sowell achieved it in 1989. Only Sowell and Carol Rodríguez are now ahead of her in the all-time collegiate lists and she still has two University years left. <span closure_uid_3lz1ej="140" closure_uid_6r7rei="123" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua"; font-size: 12pt;">Jeneba Tarmoh, the world junior champion in the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter> in 2008, made up for not qualifying for the final in that event, challenging fiercely Duncan in the homestretch, and finishing runner-up again, like last year, but more than a half a second faster (22.34) than in that occasion, when she and Porscha Lucas achieved a remarkable 1-2 for Texas A&M. Tiffany Townshend of Baylor won the bronze in 22.58, followed by Candyce McGrone, Aareon Payne, Semoy Hackett and Nivea Smith, all of them under 23 seconds. Eighteen year old Jessica Davis closed a final, which globally obtained the best results of the championships in a single event, along with the male <metricconverter productid="800 metres" w:st="on">800 metres</metricconverter> and long jump.</span></span> </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="141" closure_uid_6r7rei="125" closure_uid_7o6j61="144" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Kimberlyn Duncan had again the better of Tarmoh in the 4x100 relay, cutting up the long winning streak of the almost invincible Texan Aggies. Freshman Ashley Collier had replaced graduated Lucas, to join Tarmoh, Gabby Mayo and Dominique Duncan, with success, as the team won again at the Penn Relays. Yet in <place w:st="on"><city w:st="on">Des Moines</city>, <state w:st="on">Louisiana</state></place> State faced them with a more than extraordinary squad: <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter> finalist Semoy Hackett, <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter> finalist Kenyanna Wilson, Rebecca Alexander and Kimberlyn Duncan, who just ate up rival anchor Ashley Collier in the homestretch. Jeneba had some consolation contributing to the Aggies final victory in the last event, the 4x400. However she would rise back strongly in the nationals, placing third and thus qualifying for Daegu, while <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Duncan</place></city> was left out in fifth, despite running 22.35. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_6r7rei="127" closure_uid_jw6bnr="117" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">The talented Lady Tiger was tantalisingly close to matching Ngoni Makusha with a third gold medal, at the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter>, but she was beaten by another amazing newcomer to the elite, <place w:st="on"><state w:st="on">Oklahoma</state></place> sophomore Candyce McGrone (10.08 to 10.09). Jessica Young from the Texas Christians obtained the bronze with a 10.14 PB, followed by Central Florida Aurieyall Scott and Kenyanna Wilson. <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oregon</place></state> freshman English Gardner, who had run an awesome 10.03 Area Junior record at the Pacific 10, only could place seventh. One position ahead and equally disappointing was the woman who had dominated the <metricconverter productid="60 metres" w:st="on">60 metres</metricconverter> indoor season, winning the NCAA title and topping the world lists, LaKya Brookins. She has the best outburst but it seems the last <metricconverter productid="40 metres" w:st="on">40 metres</metricconverter> are too long for her. In spite of this, she was one of the three collegians in the American trials final for Daegu, along with Candyce McGrone and Jessica Young. On the other hand, Aurieyall Scott won the national junior championship in an outstanding 10.12. World junior medallists in Moncton Takeia Pinckney and Stormy Kendrick, the woman who beat British prodigee Jodie Williams in the <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter>, were missed this season. </span></div>
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/great121ful">http://www.youtube.com/user/great121ful</a></div>
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In this video Kirani James sets a new world junior indoor best at the 2011 SEC:</div>
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhwKMlHw2yk&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhwKMlHw2yk&feature=related</a></div>
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<span closure_uid_mfglgm="118" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Traditionally, foreign guest students live in the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">USA</place></country-region> for four or more years, where they obtain a valuable education and guidance in sport, while contributing with valuable points for their colleges in regional and national contests. We have already spoken about some of the awesome African sprinters enrolled right now in the NCAA system. American Universities are also a regular destination for <place w:st="on">Caribbean</place> speedsters and long jumpers. Richard Thompson, Rondel Sorrillo, Kelly-Ann Baptiste, Kerron Stewart, Simone Facey, Nickiesha Anderson, Bianca Stuart, Rhonda Watkins or Shara Proctor were among the last to leave their footprint on US NCAA tracks, before following up a successful professional career. Yet new generations keep coming. <placename w:st="on">Louisiana</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype>, which had the pleasure of working with Kelly-Ann Baptiste, hurried to enrol Semoy Hackett, another promising speedster from <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Trinidad and Tobago</place></country-region>. Her compatriot Kai Selvon is in <city w:st="on">Auburn</city> and so is Bahamian Nivea Smith, while the other woman who is making a big contribution in rejuvenating the national sprinting scene, Sheniqua Ferguson, is engaged with <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Southwestern</placename> <placename w:st="on">Mississippi</placename> <placetype w:st="on">College</placetype></place>. Virgin Islands’ Allison Peter is in <state w:st="on">Texas</state>, Saint Kits and Nevis’ Marecia Pemberton in <city w:st="on">Florida State</city>, <country-region w:st="on">Barbados</country-region>’ Kierre Beckles in <state w:st="on">South Carolina</state> and South Plains can be proud of a colourful relay team formed by <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter> specialist Grenadian Janelle Redhead, hurdler Janeill Belille from <place w:st="on">Trinidad</place> and two of the best Jamaican hopefuls: Daegu-bound Jura Levy and Natoya Goule. Among the jumpers, there are British Virgin Islands citizen Chantel Malone (<state w:st="on">Texas</state>), Bahamas-born Ray Higgs (<state w:st="on">Arkansas</state>) and Kimberly Williams (FSU), Damar Forbes (LSU), Tarik Batchelor (also <state w:st="on">Arkansas</state>) and new British Julian Reid (Texas A&M) from <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Jamaica</place></country-region>. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_1l2wt7="109" closure_uid_mfglgm="119" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">There are bets about which Universities are going to catch the new <place w:st="on">Caribbean</place> wonders Antonique Strachan, Shaunae Miller or Michelle Lee Ahyee. Yet quite a lot area powerhouse'<country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on"></place></country-region>s rough diamonds are reluctant to make the trip.<span closure_uid_1l2wt7="108" closure_uid_mfglgm="120"> Jamaica's athletic dedication and ressources at school levels are among the best in the world and we can see the results. Some young athletes have further reasons: </span>Ristananna Tracey, who is going to be in Daegu 400 hurdles start line at nineteen, turned down invitations from American colleges, stating she might be burn out in <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">American</placename> <placetype w:st="on">College</placetype></place>, forced to run too many events in order to make points for her team. </span></div>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Not many standout speedsters, among the Caribbean men are present these days in the <placename w:st="on">American</placename> <placetype w:st="on">College</placetype>: some hurdlers as Jamaican Andrew Riley (<state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Illinois</place></state>) or Puerto Rican Jamele Mason (Texas Tech) or some quarter milers as Tabarie Henry, Demetrius Pinder or Riker Hylton. Also a <metricconverter productid="400 metres" w:st="on">400 metres</metricconverter> specialist is arguably the most talented <place w:st="on">Caribbean</place> athlete right now in the NCAA track and field: Kirani James. </span></div>
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<span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"><span closure_uid_ra5nn9="126"></span> </span> <span lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">America just said goodbye to the awesome frères Borlée but their place in the NCAA stardom in the event has been quickly covered for a man from the small island of Grenada, who has already been labelled, because of his stunning qualities as an athlete and his precocity, as the new Usain Bolt. He is also known as the new Michael Johnson. Kirani James had already run the <metricconverter productid="400 metres" w:st="on">400 metres</metricconverter> distance in 45.24, being sixteen, in <metricconverter productid="2009 in" w:st="on">2009 in</metricconverter> Bressanone, where he completed a sensational 200/400 double World Youth title. Yet by then, Kirani was already a veteran. Inspired by World indoor champion Alleyne Francicque, he entered athletics and realised it was possible, despite coming from a country of just 104.000 people, to compete against such athletic powerhouses as <country-region w:st="on">Jamaica</country-region> or the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Bahamas</place></country-region>. James was discovered as so many great <place w:st="on">Caribbean</place> athletes at the prestigious Carifta Games, which he won for the first time in 2007. The same year he would grab the silver medal at Ostrava World Youths, clocking 45.70, the best time ever run by a 15-year-old; and the following year the same colour of medal in <place w:st="on"><city w:st="on">Bydgoszcz</city></place>, on occasion of the World junior championships, facing athletes up to 4 years older. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="142" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">In 2010, the Grenadian prodigy was recruited by <placename w:st="on">Alabama</placename> <placetype w:st="on">University</placetype>, to be coached by Harvey Glance and he has astonished everybody in <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">America</place></country-region>, in every race he has run since. In his freshman year Kirani was runner-up at the NCAA championship indoors, in the last <metricconverter productid="400 metres" w:st="on">400 metres</metricconverter> final someone was able to beat him, climbing to the top of the podium outdoors. He also won the world junior title in <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Moncton</place></city>. In his sophomore year he has run indoors in 44.86, a World junior best, on occasion of the SEC final. Yet he fell in the NCAA final. Outdoors, he has lowered his PB to 44.61, which is the world lead, and won back-to-back collegian titles in Des Moines in an incredible final, which delivered a blanket finish. Kirani James ran blindly in lane 8 and had to recover some valuable metres in the homestretch, against a quality field, which never gave up. James, Gil Roberts (later disqualified), Tony McQuay, Mike Berry and Demetrius Pinder all finished in 45.23 or less, and just 13 hundredths separated the winner and the fifth. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="143" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Five other athletes from University have also run under 45.30 this year: Joey Hughes, Josh Mance, Errol Nolan, Bryan Miller and Rondell Bartholomew of South Plains, who stands second in the yearly lists with 44.65, behind his compatriot Kirani James, in an amazing result for their country. The third in the ranking is another collegian: NCAA runner-up Tony McQuay, a sophomore from Alabama Gators, who went up to upset in the national championships a weak Jeremy Wariner, clocking 44.68. The <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Athens</place></city> Olympic gold medallist will not eventually be in Daegu, because of injury; almost good news for him, after his poor display all over the year. Also defending champion LaShawn Merritt is just back after his doping offence vacation and no other veteran has been able of clocking something better than 44.69. Only American collegians seem to be doing what is expected from them. Indeed, the way to Daegu’s gold medal is wide open for upcoming stars like Kirani James, McQuay or Demetrius Pinder. It would not even be regarded as an upset a first World Championship title in senior category for the 19-year-old Grenadian. In the 4x400 relay, it will not be easy either for the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">United States</place></country-region>, without a leader and well behind their standards, to beat a motivated Bahamian team, where talented youngsters Pinder and Ramon Miller will join the always excellent Chris Brown and Micheal Mathieu. </span></div>
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/mawasa">http://www.youtube.com/user/mawasa</a></div>
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Another races worth seeing:</div>
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Women 400m Hurdles <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yuiXVOhZ1k">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yuiXVOhZ1k</a><br />
Men 110m Hurdles <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTod2oLtv0s">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTod2oLtv0s</a></div>
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Women 100m Hurdles <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAFunaNQ9n0">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAFunaNQ9n0</a></div>
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<span closure_uid_hx4x6g="118" closure_uid_xbd19v="167" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Washington State <metricconverter productid="400 metres" w:st="on">400 metre</metricconverter> hurdler Jeshua Anderson is one of the five NCAA champions this year, who have achieved the goal of winning the overall <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">US</place></country-region> title as well, two weeks afterwards. The others are Matt Centrowitz in the metric mile, Christian Taylor in the triple jump, Brigetta Barrett in the High Jump and Emma Coburn in the steeplechase. In this category might be included Tony McQuay and Marquise Goodwin, who were just second and fourth in their respective <metricconverter productid="400 metres" w:st="on">400 metres</metricconverter> and long jump events, among the collegians, but went on to beat the seniors in Eugene. Eight other members of the US Universities booked a ticket for Daegu in the trials: Charles Jock in the <metricconverter productid="800 metres" w:st="on">800 metres</metricconverter>, Eric Kynard in the high jump, Will Claye in long and triple jump, among the men; and Jeneba Tarmoh, in the <metricconverter productid="200 metres" w:st="on">200 metres</metricconverter>, Jessica Beard in the <metricconverter productid="400 metres" w:st="on">400 metres</metricconverter>, Stephanie Garcia in the steeplechase, Jasmine Chaney in the 400 hurdles and Jeneva McCall in the hammer throw, among the women. It makes a remarkable figure of a total of 15 collegians qualified for the world champions, not speaking about the several other students from abroad, who will go with their respective national teams. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_hx4x6g="119" closure_uid_xbd19v="168" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Jeshua Anderson (10) (11) (12) owns also the merit, like Ngoni Makusha of having won three NCAA outdoor titles in 2008, 2009 and 2011. In 2010 the triumph went to archrival Johnny Dutch. The two hurdling aces have faced each other in most of the big contests they have been in. <city w:st="on">Anderson</city> beat runner-up Dutch for the first NCAA title in 2008 and later in the season they repeat the same order at the World Junior championship, held in <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Bydgoszcz</place></city>. In the following year Johnny was for the second time defeated at the NCAA championships but finished second in the national trials for <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Berlin</place></state>, while Jeshua (fifth) could not make the team. Dutch won his first collegian national title in 2010 getting the better of <city w:st="on">Anderson</city> but turned pro and did not defend, so it was easy task for the <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Washington</place></state> senior to collect a third NCAA crown. Only Nigerian Amaechi Morton from <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Stanford</placename> <placetype w:st="on">University</placetype></place> was reasonably close. Johnny Dutch has a superior PB (47.63), but Jeshua Anderson has dipped under 48 seconds at the right time, upsetting, at the national trials, great champions Angelo Taylor and Bershawn Jackson, taking a big step in his career. <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Anderson</place></city> is also an excellent football player and could practice in his freshman and sophomore years both sports simultaneously, but decided to concentrate in track and field in his junior season. Now he dreams becoming a 400 hurdler Olympic champion in <place w:st="on"><city w:st="on">London</city></place> and then quit athletics to return to football for a professional career, as legendary hurdlers Renaldo Nehemiah and Willie Gault once did.</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_hx4x6g="120" closure_uid_oto0o4="117" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">In the 110 meter hurdles there is not a quite solid athlete as Jeshua Anderson but the standards are always high in the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">USA</place></country-region>. The NCAA outdoor final was much of a catastrophe, when in the central lanes, first NCAA leader (13.23) Omo Osaghae from Texas Tech, then Drake Relays revelation and Big East winner, Terence Sommerville from Cincinnati stumbled heavily through the barriers. Eventually, LSU junior Barrett Nugent, runner-up in the last editions of both indoor and out championships, defeated the man who had won in both occasions, Jamaican Andrew Riley from <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Illinois</placename> <placetype w:st="on">University</placetype></place>. A respectable number of hurdlers from College have run this year in 13.50 or better: besides the athletes cited above, Brendan Ames, Keiron Stewart, Oscar Spurlock, Jeffrey Julmis, Ronald Brookins and Ray Stewart. Maybe some of them will follow on the steps of past NCAA champions Jason Richardson and Ronnie Ash, now stunning professionals. It is worth mentioning too, Riley won the Jamaican national trials and is expected to do well in Daegu.</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="144" closure_uid_hx4x6g="121" closure_uid_ut8ibw="138" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">In the women field, Nia Ali, a woman who had to overcome a family tragedy, has privileged the hurdles in her senior year in Southern California University, giving up the heptathlon for the moment, proving especially skilful in the event. An accident ruined her chances in the NCAA indoor final but in the outdoor contest she won overwhelmingly her first title in a slightly wind-aided 12.63 and then achieved a respectable fifth place at the national trials for Daegu. Ali is the American hurdler of the future and to qualify for major championships is just a question of time. A couple of steps behind, Christina Manning, Jackie Coward, Jasmin Stowers, Letecia Wright and collegian indoor champion Brianna Rollins, all made the top-<metricconverter productid="50 in" w:st="on">50 in</metricconverter> the world yearly lists. Not as good in its standards, the intermediate hurdles were won by a whisker by <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Miami</place></city> senior Ti’erra Brown over UCLA sophomore Turquoise Thompson in 55.65. Thus Brown added the school title to the overall she got last year. Amazingly, it was fourth placer Jasmine Chaney from <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Arizona</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype></place>, who got to qualify for Daegu, after finishing third in the trials, behind Lashinda Demus and Queen Harrison. </span></div>
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This is the 1500m final: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8pnoPuXCOY8&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8pnoPuXCOY8&feature=related</a></div>
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<span closure_uid_ut8ibw="140"><span closure_uid_xbd19v="170" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">American Track and Field enthusiasts have reasons to feel optimistic about their future in the <metricconverter productid="800 metres" w:st="on">800 metres</metricconverter>. We had not seen such exciting a race in the NCAA in many years. Long distance runners as Rupp, Solinski or Hall awoke the long slept national pride and now milers and half milers feel also ready to challenge the world, including the powerful Kenyans. A whole generation of outstanding athletes is meeting the College amateur tracks in this moment and they would not make us wait for too much before they also come to stardom in the international scene. Andrew Wheating was the first member of this generation in raising the audience eyebrows, when he qualified for the Olympic Games <metricconverter productid="1500 metres" w:st="on">1500 metres</metricconverter> as a 20-year-old <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oregon</place></state> junior and two years later ran the distance in 3:30.90, the same season the Ducks swept the NCAA outdoor metric mile, with Wheating, A.J. Acosta and Matt Centrowitz. Now in 2011, the latter of the trio has become both collegian and senior champion in two weeks, beating with an impressive final kick <place w:st="on">Northern Iowa</place>’s Dorian Ulrey in the NCAA final and the likes of Lagat, Manzano, Wheating, Lomong and also Ulrey, in the national trials, qualifying for Daegu. A pity German Fernandez, the young man who had raised so many expectations in high school and his <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">freshman</placename> <placetype w:st="on">University</placetype></place> season, seems lost this year.</span></span><span closure_uid_ut8ibw="141"> </span> </div>
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<span closure_uid_1l2wt7="106" closure_uid_csgpbv="117" closure_uid_ut8ibw="167" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"> The <metricconverter productid="800 metres" w:st="on">800 metres</metricconverter> are also in a high in the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">United States</place></country-region>. No less than ten men have achieved the Daegu A standard (1:45.40), which is one more than <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Kenya</place></country-region>, among them six collegians. No wonder the NCAA final in the event was the must awaited race of the whole championships and it fully lived up to the expectations, becoming arguably the best race in the championships. <a href="http://moti-athletics-800-m.blogspot.com/2011/08/four-races-to-remember.html">http://moti-athletics-800-m.blogspot.com/2011/08/four-races-to-remember.html</a> Everybody was in: First US world junior medallists in the event in the history of the championships, Casimir Loxsom (Penn State) and Robby Andrews (Virginia), NACAC champion Charles Jock (Irvine), former US junior champion Elijah Greer (Oregon), collegiate leader and Pacific 10 winner Cory Primm (UCLA), the only senior in the final, and Big West Champion Ryan Martin (Santa Barbara California). </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="147" closure_uid_ut8ibw="160" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Two charismatic men were the standouts of the race. Jock (13) (14) and Andrews (15) (16) have the talent and they also have a strong confidence in their possibilities. The UC Irvine junior believes he can destroy the pack with a killer front running and the <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Virginia</place></state> sophomore knows he can sit in the back of the pack and trust his devastating kick. Jock pushed further than he had done before, clocking a 49.85 split at the bell, though everybody was still in contention. At the <metricconverter productid="600 metres" w:st="on">600 metres</metricconverter>, with the East African-born keeping on, Andrews was last, more than one second behind. The race seemed lost for him but he still unleashed a powerful final change of speed, starting to overcome rivals and eventually catching Jock in the finish line to romp home in 1:44.71, just one hundredth of a second short of mark Everett’s meeting record. Greer and Loxsom followed. All four of them set big PBs. It was the second NCAA victory for Andrews, after the one he had achieved in his freshman year, beating big favourite Andrew Wheating indoors. These two big hopes of American track and field, who have already been compared (17), because of their tactics and awesome performances to Johnny Gray (Jock) and Olympic champion Dave Wottle (Andrews) went with the biggest ambitions to the national trials. Jock did not mind he was against a professional field and tried again a gun to tape victory. Only two men, Olympians Nick Symmonds and Khadevis Robinson could overcome him in the end, so the main target was achieved, with another outstanding PB (1:44.67). Andrews felt short this time and so did Loxsom and Greer, but future is on their side. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="148" closure_uid_ut8ibw="164" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">In the other distance races in Des Moines Matt Hughes, a Canadian competing for <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Louisville</placename> <placetype w:st="on">University</placetype></place>, won his second NCAA title in the <metricconverter productid="3000 meter" w:st="on">3000 meter</metricconverter> steeplechase, booking also his ticket for Daegu. In the 5000 and 10.000 outings, once men like Galen Rupp or Chris Solinski graduated, there is not another <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">US</place></country-region> runner standout in the horizon. The Kenyan based in the country Samuel Chelanga (<city w:st="on">Liberty</city>), Leonard Korir (Iona), Stephen Sambu and Lawi Lalang (both from <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Arizona</place></state>) battled for the medals. Korir won the <metricconverter productid="10.000 metres" w:st="on">10.000 metres</metricconverter>, while Chelanga did it in the <metricconverter productid="5000, in" w:st="on">5000, in</metricconverter> his last year in University. It was his second NCAA victory, after the one he achieved last year at the longer distance. </span></div>
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Watch this one if you rather encourage Sheila Reid to win:</div>
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IdDIYmzpcMw&feature=related">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IdDIYmzpcMw&feature=related</a></div>
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<span closure_uid_llnz4u="119" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">There is not quite the same excitement in the female <metricconverter productid="800 metres" w:st="on">800 metres</metricconverter>. Past champions Geena Gall, Latavia Thomas, Phoebe Wright, all have joined the professional fields. Anne Kesselring, an <state w:st="on">Oregon</state> sophomore coming from <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Germany</place></country-region> was the NCAA outdoor winner this year. At the <metricconverter productid="3000 meter" w:st="on">3000 meter</metricconverter> steeplechase, standards have also lowered dramatically since Jenny Barringer-Simpson and Anna Willard-Pierce graduated and then abandoned the distance, to try other events like the <metricconverter productid="1500 metres" w:st="on">1500 metres</metricconverter>. From Barringer’s home during her school years, the <place w:st="on"><placetype w:st="on">University</placetype> of <placename w:st="on">Colorado</placename></place>, comes Emma Coburn, the best American steeplechaser of the moment. In her junior year Emma has won the NCAA championship and also the national trials for Daegu, where Stephania Garcia from <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Virginia</place></state> and last year collegian champion Bridget Franek qualified as well. Coburn has lowered her PB to 9:37 and there is a lot of room to improve, but the general feeling is American steeplechasers have lost the train of the event elite, as it was evident in recent Diamond League meetings. In longer distances are missed too the current professional athletes Lisa Koll, Angela Bizarri or Sally Kipyego. The latter has qualified for Daegu for the <metricconverter productid="10.000 metres" w:st="on">10.000 metres</metricconverter> at last national trials in <place w:st="on"><city w:st="on">Nairobi</city></place>, where Kenyan television made laugh American athletic fans, when they treated Sally Kipyego as “a little known long distance runner”. Juliet Bottorff from Duke was the NCAA champion this year at the distance.</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_llnz4u="117" closure_uid_xbd19v="166" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">The most interesting news right now in American female distance running are about teen prodigy Jordan Hasay (18) (19) (20) recruitment by Oregon University, her first steps on the NCAA track and her duels against Canadian Sheila Reid (21) (22) (23) from Villanova. Hasay, born in Arroyo Grande in 1991, was <metricconverter productid="1500 metres" w:st="on">1500 metres</metricconverter> World Youth runner-up in 2007 and then missed narrowly the medals in two straight World Junior championships. Yet, what is probably more remembered about her precocious athletic career is the way she qualified for the <metricconverter productid="1500 metres" w:st="on">1500 metres</metricconverter> <city w:st="on">Beijing</city> Olympic trials final in <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Eugene setting a new high school national record</place></city>, when she was just 16 year old (and she looked still younger). The spectators cheered on her with great enthusiasm, saying that famous “come to <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oregon</place></state>”. So here she is. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_1lak84="117" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Just on the other side of the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">United States</place></country-region> and one year before, Sheila Reid had finally got to be admitted for an American college, after months of trying. She chose Villanova and Coach Gina Procaccio, because another famous Canadian athlete, Carmen Douma had been there. <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Villanova</placename> <placetype w:st="on">University</placetype></place> has a long and impressive history, as the cradle of quite a respectable number of Olympic champions in Athletics. However, during the last decade they had known a huge crisis of results. Sheila Reid became the leader of a young team craving to bring back the College to the place it used to be and their first victory came late in 2009, at the National Cross Country. Villanova was ready to defend in <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Indiana</place></state> but there was another ambitious young runner in another prestigious team, coached by famous Vin Lananna, who also liked running on both athletic tracks and Cross Country fields. Jordan Hasay launched her attack and went alone with <metricconverter productid="500 metres" w:st="on">500 metres</metricconverter> to go but Sheila Reid and <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Georgetown</place></city>’s Emily Infeld caught her back in the last metres. Reid won the race and led again her squad to victory, while Jordan Hasay finished in a disappointing for her third place. They clashed again at last winter NCAA indoor championships at the distance medley relay, where they ran the anchor <metricconverter productid="1600 meter" w:st="on">1600 meter</metricconverter> leg. Reid won for the second time, nipping Hasay at the line. <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Jordan</place></country-region> reacted the day afterwards, winning impressively her first national title at the mile, after a flawless tactic display of the Ducks, who finished first, third and fourth and thus sealed the overall victory for their College. Hasay had qualified for the <metricconverter productid="3000 metres" w:st="on">3000 metres</metricconverter> but did not need to race again.<span closure_uid_1lak84="121"> </span>Yet she had to talk a word or two to her friend Sheila Reid. New-Kim-Smith Lucy Van Dalen eliminated everybody, except <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oregon</place></state> and Villanova leaders. Reid kicked at the bell but immediately Hasay kicked back and hold her rivals in the homestretch. It was almost a draw. (24)</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_1lak84="119" closure_uid_3lz1ej="149" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">There were high expectations to see the two middle distance stars facing each other again for the NCAA outdoor championships in Des Moines. Hasay won the 1500 and <metricconverter productid="5000 metres" w:st="on">5000 metres</metricconverter> at the Pacific 10 and so did Reid at the Big East. Both would try the double. Unfortunately, there was no match, because Hasay, who had tried valiantly to break away in the last laps, faded badly in both races, finishing fourth in the 5000 and eight in the <metricconverter productid="1500. In" w:st="on">1500. In</metricconverter> the post race interviews she did not know she had raced too much or not had peaked properly. Anyway, next year she has decided she will not do again all three Cross Country, indoor track and outdoor track, in order to be in the best possible form in the time of the Olympic trials. Hasay blamed herself for her failure, which cost the team the title. However it is fair to say <state w:st="on">Oregon</state> won the indoor contest just three months before just because of <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Jordan</place></country-region>’s stunning performance; and there were other negative results, which played against the Ducks as English Gardner's seventh place in the <metricconverter productid="100 metres" w:st="on">100 metres</metricconverter> and the 4x100 relay not making the final. Also Jeff Demps was made responsible in the NCAA indoor champions Florida Gators defeat, but even the same Christian Taylor, who won brilliantly in the triple jump event, only finished 10<sup>th</sup> in the long jump. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_1lak84="120" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Sheila Reid, only pushed by Emily Infeld and New Zealander Lucy Van Dalen, achieved an extraordinary unprecedented double at the 1500 and <metricconverter productid="5000 metres" w:st="on">5000 metres</metricconverter>, becoming the first woman in NCAA history in doing so. She also won the national <metricconverter productid="1500 m" w:st="on">1500 m</metricconverter> title, ahead of Hillary Stellingwerff and Malindi Elmore, the best milers in the country. </span></div>
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<a href="http://www.youtube.com/user/MeriteSportifBeauce">http://www.youtube.com/user/MeriteSportifBeauce</a></div>
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Réalisateur: Pierre Bourque</div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="150" closure_uid_xbd19v="159" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua"; font-size: 12pt;">A remarkable number of five Canadian won at the NCAA championships this year: Sheila Reid and Matt Hughes in Des Moines; and Brianne Theisen in the pentathlon and Derek Drouin in the high jump event, in <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">College Station</place></city>. Shot putter Julie Labonté was the one winning both championships indoor and out. <span closure_uid_xbd19v="158"> </span></span></div>
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<span closure_uid_llnz4u="151" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Julie Labonté (25) (26) (27) was the most outstanding thrower of the winter in the NCAA and has been even better during the spring. A French speaker from Sainte-Justine in Quebec, daughter of a former decathlete, she broke a 45 year-old shot put high school record and had some success in her teens. Then she decided to move to a US University in order to improve on her technique and find some challengers to push her further. Julie could not choose better. She had some problems in the beginning to explain herself in English but, in Arizona she found a much better weather than in the place she came from and a reputed coach, Craig Carter, who has been the main responsible of the career of one of the best shot putter in the country and former Wildcat, Jill Camarena-Williams. Carter thinks Labonté has the potential to become one of the best in the world: she is someone who holds well the pressure and has a lot of room to improve in her strength, because for the moment she bench press quite less than most of her teammates. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_llnz4u="152" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Julie Labonté started her sophomore season with a 16.83 overall PB. She improved during the winter until 17.60, and then in the spring broke for the first time the <metricconverter productid="18 metres" w:st="on">18 metres</metricconverter> barrier at the Pacific 10 final in <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Tucson</place></city>, where the Wildcats swept the places in the podium. Finally, she set her, as for now, 18.31 PB at the NCAA outdoor championship: One metre and a half of improvement in just one year. Not bad! She totalised five national records, three indoors and two out. Julie participated and won the national championships, thus earning the right of a place for Daegu World Championships. Other NCAA shot putters had also a nice season: Tia Brooks from <state w:st="on">Oklahoma</state> also reached 18.00 and Ifeatu Okafor and Annie Alexander from <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Trinidad and Tobago</place></country-region> went further than 17.60</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_llnz4u="153" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Not much happened in other throwing events, in a quite weak year in the sector. In the hammer, Croatian Dorotea Habazin of Virginia Tech got the better of Daegu-bound Jeneva McCall of <place w:st="on">Southern Illinois</place>. The only throw over <metricconverter productid="70 metres" w:st="on">70 metres</metricconverter> of the season was made by Gwen Berry (also of <place w:st="on">Southern Illinois</place>), but she did not score any valid attempt during the NCAA championships. Trecey Rew from <placename w:st="on">Northwestern</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype> upset favourite Anna Jelmini in the discus and Brittany Borman of <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oklahoma</place></state> won the javelin.</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_llnz4u="154" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Among the men, Ryan Whiting, who was close to the <metricconverter productid="22 metres" w:st="on">22 metres</metricconverter> in the last edition of the NCAA outdoor championships has turned professional. <span closure_uid_3lz1ej="156"> Without him</span>, the title was won this year more than two metres below by Jordan Clarke of <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Arizona</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype></place>. <placename w:st="on">Illinois</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype>’s sophomore Tim Glover obtained an interesting PB of 80.33 to win the collegian javelin title, while Australian World junior medallist Jim Wruck of <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Texas</placename> <placename w:st="on">Tech</placename> <placetype w:st="on">University</placetype></place> stroke gold in the discus. Finally, German Alexander Ziegler upset in the hammer event his teammate in Virginia Tech, Marcel Lomnicky of <place w:st="on"><country-region w:st="on">Slovakia</country-region></place>, who had sent the implement beyond <metricconverter productid="75 metres" w:st="on">75 metres</metricconverter> during the season. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="151" closure_uid_llnz4u="156" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Like Whiting in the shot put, much was missed Ashton Eaton in the combined events. Michael Morrison of California-Berkeley won over Curtis Beach the NCAA outdoors in a competition where six men tallied more than 7900 points and Miller Moss of Clemson won the championship indoors. Ryann Krais, a <place w:st="on"><placename w:st="on">Kansas</placename> <placetype w:st="on">State</placetype></place> junior, was close to 6000 points to win the female heptathlon in Des Moines, besides earning a bronze medal at the <metricconverter productid="400 meter" w:st="on">400 meter</metricconverter> hurdles event. Canadian Brianne Theisen of <state w:st="on">Oregon</state>, who had finished 15<sup>th</sup> at <state w:st="on">Berlin</state> world Championships, won in <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">College Station</place></city> but she did not compete outdoors, during the spring. The combined events standards are also going down. The <country-region w:st="on">United States</country-region> have four awesome specialists: Bryan Clay, Trey Hardee, Ashton Eaton and Hyleas Fountain, but no one else has been able of making the A Daegu standard in two years in the country and the <country-region w:st="on">US</country-region> will not have a full team in <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Korea</place></country-region>. Even Clay and Fountain were selected, despite not completing the trials, because no other athlete was ready to go.</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_jgpgkg="156" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">Much better are things in the jumping events. The biggest improvement is in the male horizontal jumps that were in big crisis in the past years. In the country, only Dwight Phillips and Walter Davis seemed to be reliable enough for a major competition. Now things are up for a change. At the NCAA outdoor championships, five men landed beyond <metricconverter productid="8.15 metres" w:st="on">8.15 metres</metricconverter> in an excellent long jump competition which topped Ngoni Makusha with 8.40. Although the winner and runner-up (Jamaican Damar Forbes) are not eligible for the <country-region w:st="on"><place w:st="on">USA</place></country-region>, the three followers (Will Claye, Marquise Goodwin and Bryce Lamb) are, and two of them have earned a spot for Daegu, despite their young age and inexperience. <place w:st="on"><placetype w:st="on">University</placetype> of <placename w:st="on">Texas</placename></place>’ Marquise Goodwin flied in the national trials to a slightly wind-aided 8.33 and Will Claye was so good he qualified in both horizontal jumps. Goodwin has seen his potential and has decided to redshirt his football career to concentrate full and exclusively in doing well at the Worlds and try to go to the Olympics. Notwithstanding all the talk right now is about Will Claye and his Teammate in Florida Christian Taylor.</span></div>
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<span closure_uid_1py8ml="106" closure_uid_3lz1ej="152" closure_uid_d3ryns="107" closure_uid_jgpgkg="157" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"> Taylor and Claye (28) (29) (30) (31) were two promising jumpers and rivals, who started University in 2009, the former in the Gators, the latter in <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oklahoma</place></state>. <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Taylor</place></city> had won a gold medal in 2007 at the World Youth champs but by 2009 Claye had reached him. The <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oklahoma</place></state> freshman achieved a noteworthy Area Junior record in the triple jump (17.19) and won the gold medal at the Pan American Championship junior. In their most important clashes of the year they got a draw so <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Taylor</place></city> won the NCAA indoor and Claye outdoors. 2010 was an unfortunate season for the <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Oklahoma</place></state> hope. He had to sit out injured and meanwhile the Gator collected two other all-University titles. Nevertheless, the great idea was, once Will Claye was recovered, to put them together. Claye made the trip to Florida and from then on the two up-and-coming athletes started to push each other, inside of what has been called the most intense and dynamic group of jumpers in school history, trained by arguably the best coach of the country in the sector ever, Dick Booth, who has won 49 NCAA titles in his long teaching career. A spontaneous and rather special atmosphere is always to be found when the Florida Gator's are practising their speciality .Claye and Taylor say they are just up for fun and seem to jump in their own bubble as forgetting there are other athletes in the competitions, going further and further towards the end of the pit. No wonder, Taylor states he chose triple jump because it is the closest thing to flying he can do. In <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">College Station</place></city>, the jumpers scored 30 of the 52 points, which gave the Gators the NCAA team title. Claye led three <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Florida</place></state> jumpers in the top-5 and besides finished runner-up in the long jump. However this was just a prelude of their huge breakthrough at the outdoors championship, which may be labelled as one of the most explosive duels in years in a triple jump competition. Two teammates without any fear or inhibition, enjoying jumping and breaking their own limits in every triple fly towards the pit. Eventually, after succesive alternatives, <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Taylor</place></city> led Claye 17.80 to 17.62, both wind-aided but they also achieved valid jumps and respective PBs of 17.40 and 17.35. Christian and Will had proved in Des Moines they were already the best jumpers in the country and no wonder they also finished 1-2 at the national trials for Daegu, where they are going to make another big impression. If someone still was ignorant about their chances, Christian beat the international elite at the London Diamond League meeting, establishing his provisional limits at <metricconverter productid="17.68 metres" w:st="on">17.68 metres</metricconverter>. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="153" closure_uid_jgpgkg="159" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">The male vertical jumps have not been so emotive but NCAA new champion Eric Kynard, a Kansas State sophomore, has jumped 2.33 indoors and 2.31 outdoors and, most important of all, has qualified for Daegu, and Mississippi sophomore Ricky Robertson has been near. <span closure_uid_3lz1ej="154"> In the winter, Canadian Derek Drouin, had won the NCAA title, with a fabulous 2.33 national record jump. Yet, she did not compete outdoors. </span>In the pole vault event, collegiate champion Scott Roth from <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Washington</place></state> University and Jack Whitt are quickly closing the gap with the best specialists in the country. <span closure_uid_jgpgkg="151"> </span></span></div>
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<span closure_uid_3lz1ej="155" closure_uid_jgpgkg="160" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";">The standards in horizontal jumps among the women are not really comparable to their counterparts. Since Brittney Reese graduated, no jumper of note is in the College fields. This year, <place w:st="on">Southern Mississippi</place> junior Tori Bowie has won the NCAA championships, both indoors and out, but her PB stands at an average 6.64. On the other hand, triple jump lacks a tradition among female American athletes. Foreign students usually sweep the medals at the most important College outings. This time around, Jamaican Kimberly Williams has won the last two NCAA championships indoors and Clemson student Patricia Mamona the last two outdoors. Watch out in the future for this extraordinary triple jumper, who recently improved her PB to a huge 14.40 at the national Portuguese championships. <span closure_uid_jgpgkg="154"> <a href="http://moti-athletics-tj-w.blogspot.com/2011/08/some-rivals-for-yargelis-savigne.html">http://moti-athletics-tj-w.blogspot.com/2011/08/some-rivals-for-yargelis-savigne.html</a></span> </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_jgpgkg="155" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"> Among the jumping events, pole vault has the most thrilling female field. Kylie Hutson, who won four straight NCAA titles, has become a successful professional, winning the last national trials, ahead of Jenn Suhr. <state w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Arkansas</place></state> junior Tina Sutej, has taken the relay as the dominant force in the event. She won 13 consecutive finals, improved the collegiate record and grabbed the NCAA indoor championship. <a href="http://moti-athletics-pv-w.blogspot.com/2011/03/any-alternative-to-isinbayeva.html">http://moti-athletics-pv-w.blogspot.com/2011/03/any-alternative-to-isinbayeva.html</a> Unfortunately, her first defeat of the year came in the most important competition of all, the collegian outdoors, where, under the rain, Duck Melissa Gergel got the better of the Slovenian vaulter, in her last chance of winning a title as a student. Gergel performed well also in the national trials, where she finished fourth. Another athlete to follow is Greek Ekaterini Stefanidi, based in Stanford, who won a gold medal at the 2005 World Youths, among other prizes in age competitions. </span></div>
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<span closure_uid_jgpgkg="153" lang="EN-GB" style="font-family: "Book Antiqua";"> In the high jump, after Amy Acuff retired, Destinee Hooker moved to volleyball and Chaunté Lowe took a rest from athletics to bear her second child, Brigetta Barrett (32) (33) (34) seems to have been left alone as the only consistent US jumper. She started her sophomore 2011 year with a modest 1.91 PB but has been improving steadily, striking successively NCAA indoors, NCAA outdoors and national trials, where she did her best jump to date: 1.95. Brigetta was raised in the New York Bronx but because of family issues moved to <city w:st="on"><place w:st="on">Dallas</place></city> for a change, to the house of an older cousin. She enjoyed her school and new life and was moved for Art and for Athletics too. In 2010 she was recruited by the Arizona Wildcats, who had then the NCAA champion, Liz Patterson, who is still Barrett workouts’ mate. She studies Theatre Arts and likes singing, dancing or writing poetry (often in the same athletic track), and dreams to become a famous entertainer. <a href="http://moti-athletics-hj-w.blogspot.com/2011/04/high-jumping-new-faces.html">http://moti-athletics-hj-w.blogspot.com/2011/04/high-jumping-new-faces.html</a> She believes Athletics or whatever job she does has to be fun and this is the way of doing your best in it; and also never become an obsession: a person must have a variety of passions in life, not depend for your happiness on only one thing. </span></div>
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Because there is not only track & field in Human Life!!!</div>
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<span closure_uid_ut8ibw="143" style="color: purple;">(13)<u> </u><a href="http://www.ucirvinesports.com/sports/m-track/mtt/jock_charles00.html">http://www.ucirvinesports.com/sports/m-track/mtt/jock_charles00.html</a></span></div>
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(16) <a href="http://runningtimes.com/Article.aspx?ArticleID=22014&PageNum=2">http://runningtimes.com/Article.aspx?ArticleID=22014&PageNum=2</a></div>
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(17) <a href="http://www.letsrun.com/2011/final800-0611.php">http://www.letsrun.com/2011/final800-0611.php</a> </div>
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(18) <a href="http://www.goducks.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=500&ATCLID=3759217">http://www.goducks.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=500&ATCLID=3759217</a></div>
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(19) <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/640597-jordan-hasay-on-the-track-this-barbie-doll-becomes-gi-jane">http://bleacherreport.com/articles/640597-jordan-hasay-on-the-track-this-barbie-doll-becomes-gi-jane</a></div>
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(20) <a href="http://www.ksby.com/news/hasay-returns-home-after-sensational-year-eyes-olympic-run-in-2012/">http://www.ksby.com/news/hasay-returns-home-after-sensational-year-eyes-olympic-run-in-2012/</a></div>
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(21) <a href="http://www.villanova.com/sports/w-track/mtt/reid_sheila00.html">http://www.villanova.com/sports/w-track/mtt/reid_sheila00.html</a></div>
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(22) <a href="http://runningtimes.com/Article.aspx?ArticleID=19559">http://runningtimes.com/Article.aspx?ArticleID=19559</a></div>
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(23) <a href="http://racingnews.runnersworld.com/2010/11/a-brief-chat-with-villanovas-sheila-reid-and-gina-procaccio.html">http://racingnews.runnersworld.com/2010/11/a-brief-chat-with-villanovas-sheila-reid-and-gina-procaccio.html</a></div>
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(24) <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/725211-ncaa-track-field-championships-jordan-hasay-vs-sheila-reid-is-one-hot-ticket">http://bleacherreport.com/articles/725211-ncaa-track-field-championships-jordan-hasay-vs-sheila-reid-is-one-hot-ticket</a></div>
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<a closure_uid_53idzv="142" href="http://washingtonstate.scout.com/2/1076553.html"></a></div>
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(25) <a href="http://www.arizonawildcats.com/sports/w-track/mtt/labonte_julie01.html">http://www.arizonawildcats.com/sports/w-track/mtt/labonte_julie01.html</a> </div>
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<div closure_uid_bor7hj="152" closure_uid_jwsnj8="137" closure_uid_lpyh6c="143" closure_uid_thj3rj="125" style="text-align: center;">
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<span closure_uid_llnz4u="122" style="color: purple;">(26) <a href="http://www.wildcat.arizona.edu/sports/athlete-of-the-week-julie-labonte-sophomore-thrower-1.2161445">http://www.wildcat.arizona.edu/sports/athlete-of-the-week-julie-labonte-sophomore-thrower-1.2161445</a></span></div>
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(27) <a closure_uid_llnz4u="134" href="http://www.examiner.com/women-s-sports-in-phoenix/arizona-s-julie-labonte-breaks-canadian-shot-put-record-at-pac-10-championships">http://www.examiner.com/women-s-sports-in-phoenix/arizona-s-julie-labonte-breaks-canadian-shot-put-record-at-pac-10-championships</a></div>
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(28) <a href="http://www.gatorzone.com/trackfield/men/bios.php?year=2011&player_id=102">http://www.gatorzone.com/trackfield/men/bios.php?year=2011&player_id=102</a></div>
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(29) <a href="http://www.gatorzone.com/trackfield/men/bios.php?year=2011&player_id=128">http://www.gatorzone.com/trackfield/men/bios.php?year=2011&player_id=128</a></div>
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(30) <a href="http://www.flotrack.org/article/7137-Christian-Taylor-the-future-of-the-Triple-Jump">http://www.flotrack.org/article/7137-Christian-Taylor-the-future-of-the-Triple-Jump</a></div>
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(31) <a href="http://sportsday.typepad.com/sportsday/2011/06/ufs-claye-he-could-be-the-best-athlete-youve-never-heard-of.html">http://sportsday.typepad.com/sportsday/2011/06/ufs-claye-he-could-be-the-best-athlete-youve-never-heard-of.html</a></div>
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(32) <a href="http://www.arizonawildcats.com/sports/w-track/mtt/barrett_brigetta00.html">http://www.arizonawildcats.com/sports/w-track/mtt/barrett_brigetta00.html</a></div>
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<span closure_uid_d3ryns="128" style="color: purple;">(33) <a closure_uid_jgpgkg="140" href="http://www.wildcat.arizona.edu/sports/using-track-as-her-stage-1.2186878">http://www.wildcat.arizona.edu/sports/using-track-as-her-stage-1.2186878</a></span></div>
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(34) <a closure_uid_jgpgkg="132" closure_uid_thj3rj="161" href="http://ny.milesplit.com/articles/68781">http://ny.milesplit.com/articles/68781</a></div>
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<u><span closure_uid_thj3rj="132" style="color: purple;"><a href="http://www.athleticsweekly.com/news/makusha-duncan-andrews-and-taylor-shine-at-ncaas/">http://www.athleticsweekly.com/news/makusha-duncan-andrews-and-taylor-shine-at-ncaas/</a></span></u></div>
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<u><span style="color: purple;"><a closure_uid_lpyh6c="144" href="http://www.ustfccca.org/2011/06/featured/ncaa-division-i-championships-final-day-notes">http://www.ustfccca.org/2011/06/featured/ncaa-division-i-championships-final-day-notes</a></span></u></div>
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<a href="http://www.ncaa.com/sports/trackfield-outdoor-men/d1">http://www.ncaa.com/sports/trackfield-outdoor-men/d1</a></div>
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</div>Haile Tuluwamihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17051107067196613890noreply@blogger.com0