If there have been days during the last several months that you've come to eliterunning.com and the news hasn't been updated in a timely manner, it's because I've been focusing most of my time on a different project. As of tonight, The Runner's Cookbook: Winning Recipes from Some of the World's Best Athletes is available for purchase here. This is a fundraising cookbook, and all of the proceeds will go to the Ryan Shay Memorial Fund and the Jenny Crain "Make It Happen" Fund. The book contains 100 recipes from 90+ elite distance runners, including Deena Kastor, Catherine Ndereba, Joan Benoit Samuelson, Hendrick Ramaala, Sebastian Coe, Alan Webb, Ryan and Sara Hall, Adam and Kara Goucher, Dathan Ritzenhein, and many more.
For more information and updates on the project, visit www.runnerscookbook.com.
Posted by Alison Wade at 10:28 p.m. | Tags: Fundraising | Comments (1)
The ESPN show E:60 is scheduled to air a segment on Ryan Shay tonight (Tuesday, April 29th) at 7:00 p.m. ET.
Update: The video can be viewed here.
Posted by Alison Wade at 10:48 a.m. | Tags: Television Coverage | Comments (0)
As of a couple days ago, all of our photos of the U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Women's Marathon are posted. As of tonight, Peter Rufo's Boston Marathon photos are up. Alison's Boston Marathon photos won't be posted until Sunday (5/4), due to a host of other things going on.
You may have noticed that updates have been somewhat sporadic here recently. We've been working on a big project, which is something we are hoping to be able to announce in the relatively near future. In the meantime, please bear with us, because the updates should become a little more regular again relatively soon.
Posted by Alison Wade at 11:11 p.m. | Tags: Site News, Running Photos | Comments (0)
NBC Sports will be providing live online coverage of Sunday's U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Women's Marathon, beginning at 8:00 a.m. ET. WCSN.com will be providing live online coverage of Monday's Boston Marathon, beginning at 9:30 a.m. ET.
In addition, viewers in New England can watch the Boston Marathon via WBZ-TV's live online coverage, which begins at 9:00 a.m. on Monday.
WBZ-TV will have a live local television broadcast of the Boston Marathon beginning at 8:00 a.m. Versus will also broadcast the Boston Marathon live from 9:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. ET. To watch the Trials on TV, you must wait until Sunday, April 27th, when MSNBC is scheduled to air a highlights show from 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. ET.
Other relevant links:
B.A.A. web site
U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Women's Marathon web site
Runner's World's Olympic Trials coverage
Runner's World's Boston Marathon coverage
USATF's Trials web site
Flotrack's Trials coverage
The Boston Globe's marathon coverage
Posted by Alison Wade at 7:51 p.m. | Tags: Television Coverage, Webcast | Comments (0)
Emily LeVan, her daughter Maddie, and their Two Trials fundraiser will be the subject of a segment on NBC Nightly News tonight. Check your local listings for times.
In other good news, LeVan has surpassed her fundraising goal, raising $64,185 to date.
Update: You can now watch the segment on YouTube.
Posted by Alison Wade at 3:50 p.m. | Tags: Television Coverage, Fundraising | Comments (0)
Live results and live video from this weekend's NCAA Division I Track & Field Championships in Fayetteville, Arkansas are scheduled to be available at the above links. A highlights show will air March 20th on ESPN2 at 4:00 p.m. ET (check your local listings).
Live results are also scheduled to be available from the Division II and Division III championship meets, along with live video. A link to the DII video coverage was not yet available at the time of this writing, but we suggest going to the DII meet web site once the event is underway. The DIII video coverage can be found here.
For additional relevant links, visit the USTFCCCA's Championship Central page.
Posted by Alison Wade at 2:06 p.m. | Tags: Web Sites, Webcast, Race Results | Comments (0)
WCSN.com, in partnership with USA Track & Field, will provide free live coverage for the 12th IAAF World Indoor Championships being held in Valencia, Spain at Palau Luis Puig Velodrome March 7-9.
The free live webcast starts at 10:00 a.m. ET on Friday, March 7th. Live coverage continues on Saturday March 8 (10:50 a.m. ET) and Sunday, March 9 (10:50 a.m. ET).
Team USA fields a strong roster of 51 athletes including four past World Indoor individual champions, will compete with the world's best. Athletes will compete for a total of nearly $2.5 million in prize money, including $40,000 for individual champions and a $50,000 bonus for world records.
Please visit www.wcsn.com for updated schedule, news, results, photo galleries and more information.
March 7 morning session (on-demand)
March 7 evening session (LIVE 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. ET)
March 8 morning session (on-demand)
March 8 (LIVE 10:50 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. ET)
March 9 morning session (on-demand)
March 9 (LIVE 10:50 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. ET)
* all sessions will be available on-demand
[Content and information provided by USATF.]
Posted by Alison Wade at 7:04 p.m. | Tags: Web Sites, Webcast | Comments (0)
Rob Myers won the men's 1,500m Sunday evening at the AT&T USA Indoor Track & Field Championships in 3:40.89, just .09s slower than his own meet record for the event, set in 2004. Myers has posted fast times in competition in recent years, but this race marked his return to the podium's top step in the absence of such event-dominating names as Bernard Lagat and Alan Webb.
Myers entered this year's national championship as the favorite, unlike 2004, when he was an unknown Ohio State senior and the first question asked of him by the media was, "Who are you?" He ran the race with the sort of tactical command that might be expected of Lagat himself, sitting in second and letting others make the pace until he felt comfortable taking charge. Once Myers took the lead, he never relinquished it, pulling well clear of his last challengers as they entered the final homestretch.
The 800m finals were also contested on Sunday, with Khadevis Robinson winning the men's final by .01 seconds over Nick Symmonds, and Nicole Teter making a return to the victory stand by outlasting Nicole Cook in the women's final.
Myers, who can expect an uphill battle to earn an Olympic team spot this summer with two legitimate medal contenders in his event, will be taking his chance to represent the USA at the IAAF World Indoor Championships next month in Valencia, Spain. "I haven't sacrificed any training for outdoors" by running a full indoor season, said Myers, who is still coached by Ohio State coach Robert Gary and trains with steeplechasers Brian Olinger and Daniel Huling.
The second team spot will go to Stanford redshirt Russell Brown, a native of New Hampshire who enjoyed a hometown reception at the Reggie Lewis Center on Sunday evening. Brown, who qualified for this meet with a 3:58 mile on the oversized track at the University of Washington earlier this month, has a 3:37.56 outdoor PR and was third in the 2007 NCAA Outdoor final. In 2004, Brown ran the World Junior Championships 1,500m, where he placed fifth in his heat and did not advance to the final.
Posted by Parker Morse at 10:18 a.m. | Tags: Race Reports, 2008 USA Indoor T&F Champs | Comments (0)
Shannon Rowbury and Christin Wurth-Thomas won their first national titles Saturday, February 23rd at the AT&T USA Indoor Track and Field Championships, and Matt Tegenkamp defended his title in the 3,000m, but only Wurth-Thomas is certain to take a spot at the IAAF World Indoor Championships to be held next month in Valencia, Spain.
The three distance finals happened in quick succession at the end of the first day of competition at the Reggie Lewis Center in Boston's Roxbury neighborhood. The women's 3,000m was first, and Rowbury waited for the last 400 to open up her stride and run away from Jen Rhines, the pacesetter for most of the race. Rowbury won in 8:55.19. Rhines, who had hoped to push hard enough in the middle of the race to burn off challengers like Rowbury, finished in 8:59.98, which until five seconds earlier would have been faster than Rowbury's PR.
Neither Rowbury nor Rhines was certain on Saturday evening if they would compete at the World Indoor Championships. Rhines, who had made Valencia her goal earlier in the season, was disappointed by her form and troubled by a recent calf injury. She said she and her coach (and husband), Terrence Mahon, would re-evaluate before committing to Valencia. Rowbury was also uncertain, explaining that her need to run an Olympic "A" standard in the 5,000m would take priority for the spring, and she, too, would consult with her coach (in this case, John Cook) before committing to the Worlds.
Behind them, both Julie Culley (third, 9:00.14) and Katie McGregor (fourth, 9:03.34) ran the qualifying standard for Worlds as well, and they would be the next athletes considered; Amy Hastings (sixth) also has the mark from a previous race and would next in line.
Matt Tegenkamp surprised nobody by running away from the men's 3,000m field, with his former Wisconsin teammate and current training partner Chris Solinsky right behind, but again, both Solinsky and Tegenkamp professed uncertainty about their plans for Valencia. "We'll need to talk to [Coach] Jerry [Schumacher] about whether that's a good idea," said Solinsky. "We're still building," said Tegenkamp. "I've only done two track workouts so far, so I'm not sure if it's a good idea to take a week out of my schedule and race in Europe."
"The focus this year is the Olympics, and making the team at the Trials will be a fight, too."
Behind Tegenkamp and Solinsky, both Jonathon Riley (third) and Steve Slattery (sixth) have qualifying marks for Worlds and would be asked if Tegenkamp and Solinsky don't take their spots.
The women's 1,500m, on the other hand, has little such uncertainty. Wurth, who stepped up the pace with five laps remaining and built a three-second margin of victory over Jenelle Deatherage, won in 4:14.21 to 4:17.38. Both plan to compete in Valencia. For Deatherage, this will be her first international team; Wurth, who is planning her own Olympic campaign, hopes to nail down an Olympic "A" standard at the Worlds. She also sees a little bit of Cold War in the Worlds meet. "We're going after the Russians," she said, alluding to the Russian dominance of the 2008 performance list. Russian women are six of the 10 fastest this year in the 1,500m with 11 of the 15 fastest marks--but only two athletes per country will be allowed to run in Valencia.
Posted by Parker Morse at 2:11 p.m. | Tags: Race Reports, 2008 USA Indoor T&F Champs | Comments (0)
An all-star group, including Matt Taylor, Tony Reavis, Mary Wittenberg, Amby Burfoot, Chris Lear, and Lauren Fleshman, has worked together to bring you a new web site, runnerville.com.
In their own words:
"Runnerville.com is a collection of voices and pens (err, keyboards) brought together to discuss the sport of running. It’s a conversation intended to engage, inspire, and prod the running community. It’s a dialog intended to encourage change. Running has reached the proverbial fork in the road. One path leads us into deeper obscurity, the other into the collective conscious of sports fans. We’re pushing for the latter."
Posted by Alison Wade at 7:56 a.m. | Tags: Web Sites | Comments (1)
Michelle Gallagher qualifies for Olympic Trials in debut marathon
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Ryan Hall and Deena Kastor strengthen field in Bolder Boulder
Brian Sell and Paige Higgins win USA 25k titles in Grand Rapids
HS: Chanelle Price runs 2:03.20 800, and other high school news from the weekend
Paula Radcliffe may wear mask in Beijing while she's not competing
Oregon's Andrew Wheating flies past field in 1,500
MS HS: Cory McGee wins hard-earned state meet triple
Olympians to run Bolder Boulder*
Kenneth Mungara and Natalya Yulamanova win Prague Marathon titles
Sara Hall so very close to Olympic Games
Kara and Adam Goucher are Runner's World cover models for June issue
Video: Barack Obama visits Hayward field
Video: Andrew Wheating runs 3:38 1,500 at Oregon Twilight meet
Hard-running Furman alum Chris Borch shares the wealth
SC HS: Final stretch for Luke Lovelace
TX HS: Kelsey Johnson wins state meet double, sets 3A 1,600 record of 4:53.75
TX HS: Kristie Krueger wins 800 gold, 1,600 silver
Paula Radcliffe hopes for better Olympic showing in 2008
Josephat Kithii and Rose Kosgei win TC 1 Mile
FL HS: Joseph Franklin blazes 1:48.97, Ashley Brasovan runs 10:21
25k launches big weekend for the Ritzenhein family
David Makori and Alina Ivanova lead Prague Marathon field
Interview with SUNY Plattsburgh's Toni Wiszowaty
IL HS: Heather Olson wins 1,600 in season-best 5:03.75
Caroline Chepkorir wins Fifth Third River Bank Run
Brian Sell gets first River Bank Run title
Ryan Hall is watching his step as he prepares for Olympic Games
Wrong turn costly to Laurel Park in River Run 10k, Suzanne Larsen wins race
Flotrack's coverage of the Ivy League Heptagonal T&F Championships
TX HS: Flotrack's coverage of the UIL Texas State T&F Championships
Ryan Hall: More precious than gold
Florida State's Hannah England runs NCAA-leading 4:12.24 1,500
Peter Rono: ICG defamation of Kenyan runners still hurts
A Brief Chat with Dathan Ritzenhein
Brent Vaughn excited for Big 12s at home
Dathan Ritzenhein focused on prep for Olympics
Malindi Elmore takes another run at Olympic berth
Sebastian Coe finds sport means business
A new route: Tom Raunig will be missed by athletes after 12 years as coach at UM
Sarah Jamieson starts Beijing bid in Qatar
Interview with Takayuki Matsumiya
Wilfred Bungei to run Qatar Athletic Super Grand Prix
Iowa's Micah VanDenend running into records and injuries
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