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Home IAAF

Lagat Out of US Indoor: Ankle hurt in AVIVA Birmingham, by Alfons Juck Note by Larry Eder

Larry Ederby Larry Eder
February 27, 2009
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Bernard Lagat is the latest American star to bow out of the US Indoors, which happens this weekend in Boston. Bernard had hurt his ankle running the 1,500 meters in Aviva Birmingham last weekend.
At this time, Lo Lo Jones running the 60 meter hurdles and Jenn Stuczynski in the pole vault look to be two of the major events at the U.S. Indoor championships.


EME NEWS (FEB 26, 2009)
BOSTON (USA): Double world champion Bernard Lagat has withdrawn from this weekend’s USA Indoor Championships in Boston because of an injury he suffered at the Aviva Indoor Grand Prix in Birmingham, England, last Saturday. “He went over heavily on his ankle on the curb only 20 meters after the start in Birmingham,” explained his long-time manager, James Templetonin a text message to Race Results Weekly. “He struggled through the race and was in considerable pain, since.”
DEFAR CLOCKS 9:06.26 UNOFFICIAL WORLD RECORD FOR TWO MILES

Meseret Defar running in the 5,000 meters in Beijing-2008 was “disappointing”
PRAGUE (CZE): After her sensational 9:06.26 world best in tonight’s two-mile contest at the inaugural edition of the aptly named Meeting of World Record Holders meet in the Czech capital, Meseret Defar was visibly pleased with her short, but sterling 2009 indoor season. “My goal was to get three world records this season,” the 25-year-old Ethiopian beamed. “I only missed one, so that’s not bad.” Eight days ago, Defar broke the world indoor mark in the 5000m with a 14:24.37 run in Stockholm. In Stuttgart 11 days earlier, she narrowly missed her own record in the 3000m, clocking 8:26.99. On paper, an assault on her own 9:10.50 standard in the rarely run event was certainly within her capabilities. But it didn’t come easily. Frustrated behind pacesetter Ksenia Agafonova for the first mile, Defar had plenty of ground to make up after reaching midway in just under 4:38. Urged on by her husband who was shouting out splits in Amharic from trackside, Defar managed to up the tempo dramatically to cover the final mile in under 4:29. “She was a bit slow and I had to make up the time over the final laps,” Defar said of Agafonova, who went on to finish the race. “There was a time when I thought the record might not happen.” Her negative split tonight was considerably faster than the 4:37/4:33 back-to-back miles she produced at the Reebok Boston Indoor Games a year ago, suggesting a marked improvement in her early season speed. But Defar said that the focus of her winter training hasn’t been on speed alone. “This year I’ve worked very hard on all aspects of my race,” she said. “I had to make up this year for what I lost last year.”
Before and after each of three appearances this winter, Defar has expressed disappointment with her 2008 season, when she failed to defend her Olympic title. Her rewriting of the all-time lists over the past 19 days, she said, was an important message to no one but herself. “This is a strong message to me because 2008 was such a disappointment. This will boost my morale for this year. Defar said she’ll lighten her training load considerably over the next two weeks before focusing her full attention to defending her world 5000m title at the world championships in August. Zakia Mrisho of Tanzania won the race for second over Lidia Chojecka, clocking 9:32.75 to the Pole’s 9:33.23 close to European best 9:32.00.
Defar’s was the third world lead of the evening, with the first coming in the men’s 800, the first main program event on the newly constructed oval. The contest featured the fourth face-off this season between Olympic gold and silver medalists Wilfred Bungei and Ismail Ahmed Ismail, but from the outset, it was for Ismail, already the world leader, a race against the clock. The only runner to stick fairly close to the two pacesetters, the 24-year-old powered on as he passed the bell, with no one giving him a serious chase. He reached the line in 1:44.75, breaking Abubaker Kaki’s Sudanese national record to join rare company inside the event’s all-time top five. Only Wilson Kipketer, Yuriy Borzakovskiy, and Kenyan Joseph Mutua have covered the distance faster indoors. “I am happy for the Sudanese record,” said Ismail, who was also warmly congratulated by training partner Kaki for his achievement. “I would like to continue like this in the summer.” As fiercely as Ismail defended the front spot, so too did Boaz Lalang with the runner-up position. The Kenyan Olympian, who celebrated his 20th birthday just 18 days ago, stopped the clock in 1:45.19, knocking more than two full seconds from his career best. Bungei was well back in third, but still managed a 1:45.91 season’s best. Kaki completed a Sudanese double with a solid victory in the 1000m in 2:17.22 to finish his season undefeated in three races over the distance this winter.
Kenyan Augustine Choge was second, clocking a career best 2:17.79. In the men’s 5000m, the pre-meet plan called for a trip to rarely treaded sub-13 minute territory. For a stretch, it seemed that Paul Kipsiele Koech and Abreham Cherkos might succeed, but in the end it was a race between the two that took over. With the Kenyan steeplechase specialist doing much of the front-running, Cherkos, last year’s World indoor 3000m bronze medallist, bided his time until the bell, when he unleashed a kick to which Koech simply couldn’t respond. Cherkos clocked 13:07.83, another world leader, with Koech reaching the line in 13:09.37. Both contested the distance indoors for the first time.
While Defar hit two-for-three in her World record or world best ambitions this winter, Yelena Isinbayeva will have to settle for one notch lower and be content with the pair of records she set in her debut in Donetsk. The Russian, the meeting’s poster girl, didn’t start the competition until 4.75m, when the rest of the field had already packed up their gear for the night. She needed a second try at her opening height, and a second at 4.90m as well before the bar raised to a would-be World record of 5.01m. Her third attempt was the best, thrilling the 8,452 spectators for a second or two, before the bar came tumbling down.

Another Day for World record 27….
“I think I was jumping well today,” Isinbayeva said,” but I didn’t have stiff enough poles.” She broke into tears briefly after the competition, but coach Vitaliy Petrov managed to cheer her up quickly. South American record holder Fabiana Murer was the runner-up after a second jump success at 4.55m.
While the spotlight in the womens’ 60m Hurdles fell on Olympic champion Dawn Harper’s first and only race of the indoor season, her compatriot Danielle Caruthers had other ideas. The winner in Valencia 12 days ago, the 29-year old Caruthers sped to an impressive victory in 7.89, just a scant 0.01 seconds shy of her career best. Eline Berings’ 7.97 performance for second was a Belgian nation record, while 2006 World champion Derval O’Rourke of Ireland dipped under eight second for the first time this season, taking third in 7.99. Unable to shake out the rust, Harper was never a factor, and finished sixth in 8.08. In the men’s hurdles, American Dexter Faulk’s momentum continued. The 24-year-old won his fourth consecutive contest handily, beating Dutch record holder Gregory Sedoc 7.55 to 7.64. With a strong second half, World leader Carmelita Jeter cruised to a 7.20 win in the 60m, her third victory in a row. World champion Angela Williams was second (7.27) with Yekaterina Butusova of Russia third (7.31). The men’s dash was considerably closer, with Briton Craig Pickering edging Kim Collins in a photo finish. Both were credited with 6.58, a season’s best for Collins, last year’s World Indoor Championships runner-up. Rolando Palacios finished third in 6.62, a Honduran national record.
On the infield, Czech Roman Novotny produced much-appreciated home victory in the Long Jump after an 8.05m fourth round leap. Cuban Wilfredo Martinez was second with a season’s best 7.96m. In the women’s High Jump, Spanish champion Ruth Betia placed herself closer to the Turin medal picture with a season’s best 1.98m clearance. Czech Iva Strakova was second, clearing 1.96m.
QUOTES FROM ATHENS

Anna Alminova: “I am glad to have broken the meeting and stadium record, but I feel that my finish time is not the fastest, as I am sure I can do better. I would like to thank the spectators for their support during the race” (she ran almost alone for the entire race, except for the first 600m where she was behind the pacemaker).
Haron Keitany: “I had a health problem recently, as I had been sick with the flu, so I was not feeling very strong today. After the 1000m mark the pace slowed down, that’s why I was not able to better my season best, which is the world’s leading indoor time”.
After his victory Ivan Ukhov said: “I am in excellent shape, something which I was able to prove in today’s competition. I did the best I could and I am looking forward to having the opportunity to try again to break the world record in one of the next competitions”
OTHER NEWS
ATHENS (GRE): Triple jumper star Hrysopiyi Devetzi is currently training without a coach, due to the temporary departure of Thanasis Sioundris, as family issues have taken him away from his coaching duties, HellenicAthletes informs.
BUDAPEST (HUN): Former high jumper Erika Rudolf passed away at age 54. Her performance of 1.87m in 1975 ranked her 8th in the season’s top lists. She was 5th at the 1977 European Indoor Championships in San Sebastian (1.83m). She had an indoor best of 1.90m.
OTTAWA (CAN): Athletics Canada announced the confirmation of six National High Performance Training Centres that will pave the way to London 2012. They are Edmonton for the sprints (Tyler Christopher, Adam Kunkel, Carlene Muir), Ottawa for Relays, Victoria for middle-distance (Gary Reed, Achraf Tadili), Kamloops for Throws (Dylan Armstrong), Calgary for an outreach programme for targeted athletes not currently based at one of the other centres (Jessica Zelinka) and Sherbrooke for Para-Atletics. The Centres Lead Coaches will report directly, and fall under the supervision of National Team Head Coach Alex Gardiner
Special thanks to Alfons Juck, EME News.
For more on the world of athletics, please click http://www.american-trackandfield.com

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  • Larry Eder

    Larry Eder has had a 52-year involvement in the sport of athletics. Larry has experienced the sport as an athlete, coach, magazine publisher, and now, journalist and blogger. His first article, on Don Bowden, America's first sub-4 minute miler, was published in RW in 1983. Larry has published several magazines on athletics, from American Athletics to the U.S. version of Spikes magazine. He currently manages the content and marketing development of the RunningNetwork, The Shoe Addicts, and RunBlogRun. Of RunBlogRun, his daily pilgrimage with the sport, Larry says: "I have to admit, I love traveling to far away meets, writing about the sport I love, and the athletes I respect, for my readers at runblogrun.com, the most of anything I have ever done, except, maybe running itself." Also does some updates for BBC Sports at key events, which he truly enjoys.

    Theme song: Greg Allman, " I'm no Angel."

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Larry Eder has had a 52-year involvement in the sport of athletics. Larry has experienced the sport as an athlete, coach, magazine publisher, and now, journalist and blogger. His first article, on Don Bowden, America's first sub-4 minute miler, was published in RW in 1983. Larry has published several magazines on athletics, from American Athletics to the U.S. version of Spikes magazine. He currently manages the content and marketing development of the RunningNetwork, The Shoe Addicts, and RunBlogRun. Of RunBlogRun, his daily pilgrimage with the sport, Larry says: "I have to admit, I love traveling to far away meets, writing about the sport I love, and the athletes I respect, for my readers at runblogrun.com, the most of anything I have ever done, except, maybe running itself." Also does some updates for BBC Sports at key events, which he truly enjoys. Theme song: Greg Allman, " I'm no Angel."

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