• Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Login
  • Register
  • Home
  • Archive
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Archive
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Track & Field

Beijing World Champs, Day 8: In praise of Ashton Eaton, World Record Holder, by Alex Mills

Larry Ederby Larry Eder
August 30, 2015
0
0 0
0
SHARES
8
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Eaton_AshtonDiscBookW-Beijing15.JPGAshton Eaton, 43.34m Discus throw, photo by PhotoRun.net

Ashton Eaton’s WR has a back story. Here is the behind the scenes story, by Alex Mills, on all the drama, emotion, training and love that go into such an effort.

It is a fascinating story…

A performance of total grit and determination from Ashton Eaton to break his own world record by the finest of margins was the undoubtably the highlight of the penultimate night at the IAAF World Championships in Beijing.

Crowning a sensational series of performances, in which he broke the world decathlon bests and championship records on one of the biggest stages of all, Eaton reiterated his position among the titans of sport by breaking his previous record in the most dramatic of fashions, at the Bird’s Nest Stadium.

Eaton_Ashton400m-World15.JPg400m in 45.00, photo by PhotoRun.net

Needing to run 4:18.25 in the final event, the 1500m, to break his previous best tally of 9,039 points, Eaton went out steadily going through 400m in 1:09, remaining in the pack, though he soon began to move up and as Algeria’s Larbi Bourrada then took up the lead, passing 800m in 2:21.56, Eaton went with him. But there was still ground to make up.

As he hit the bell already giving his all, with every strain and sinew illustrated on his face, the American had to somehow produce a 63.5-second last lap in order to make history. Digging deep into his reserves once more, he found an extra gear, yet his fate still hung precariously in the balance, with 200m to go he had to break 30 seconds. Charging down the home straight, arms pumping, fists clenched, the crowd roaring him home, he continued to stay strong, crossing the line before collapsing to the floor.

The time on the clock 4:17.52! Some 0.73 quicker than the time he needed. The world’s greatest athlete had got even greater, unfrickinbelievable.

Throughout the race, his wife, Brianne-Theisen Eaton had been standing by the track watch the clock on her phone anxiously hoping it matched up to what he needed.

Here’s how she saw it: “I was taking splits on my phone. He had said he was going to run 70, 70, 70 and then 48 for the last 300″ so I knew he was on pace but going with 400m to go I didn’t think he looked good. I thought it’s not going to happen and then all of a sudden on the back stretch he got this extra kick and that’s when it was like he’s going to do it!”

With the crowd going delirious, the Olympic and now double-world champion picked himself up, broken both physically and mentally, he headed for the stands to celebrate with Team Eaton, with barely a dry-eye between them as Brianne, coach Harry, mum Roz, agent Paul and many more were all embraced and gave thanks for the part they’d played.

“The older I get, the more I realise we’re making choices that impact the experiences we’re having, those choices include giving a lot of stuff. Of course, track is temporary so it’s not the end of the world, but you just feel like you miss a lot like friends and family. So it’s just an accumulation of those feelings and when you do something you just realis, I’m doing this for a reason, and when that reason manifests itself it’s pretty emotional” he explained post race.

As for Theisen-Eaton, it was experience that made her more emotional than she’d expected: “I always said Oregon [first world record] was the best and nothing would top it, I wouldn’t say this topped it, but it was the same amount of emotion, which is crazy because I feel like when you do something once, it’s kind of not as exciting, but that was not true in this case.”

“It says a lot when you break a world record at a world championships because it’s not an ideal situation, the days are super long, it’s super hot out. He just handled himself really well, so him to have do it have not having done a dec in two years, to be able to come back and do that, I think that’s great. It was just a nail-biter at every event and that was what was so exciting.” she said.

After a well deserved victory lap, Eaton took a phone call from the man who’s record he had first beaten in 2012 and the athlete who had first inspired him to do the decathlon, Roman Sebrle: “I just remembered this yesterday. There was a newspaper on my kitchen table when I was a teenager and the front page had this picture saying if we were to send an athlete to a galactic universe from earth who would it be? It had all these other sportsmen and then, right in the middle it had Roman Sebrle throwing the javelin and he was the one we would send. I had no idea what decathlon was, and barely knew what track was, so that was my first real deal with the decathlon.” Eaton said. “Then, in 2012, when I broke the world record, I was emotional then because I thought I’d taken something from such a great person. Because he had the record and he’s such a great guy. I got to talk to him and he said you know that I broke the world record so that somebody else would look at it and try to break it, so now it’s your turn to inspire somebody else.”

Eaton_AshtonHelmet-WorldCH15.jpgAshton Eaton, with his Nike cooling hat (love it), photo by PhotoRun.net

“I’m just so happy that he broke the world record and became the first man to break 9,000 points to show that it is possible, I don’t think I would have broke 9,000 if it hadn’t been for him.”he said.

What made Eaton’s achievement even greater, was the fact that this was his first decathlon competition since winning his last world title in 2013. Ashton Eaton, having taken a year out from the event in 2014 to test himself over the 400mh. Then being forced to miss the Hypo Meeting in Gotzis due to a last minute injury: “It [WR] was really good because Ashton had an up and down year because he was really fit and ready to compete in Austria and that was devastating for him. I know because he was in really good shape and he just got kind of lost wondering what he was doing and if he should still keep going in track.” she said. “So, to see him get back like this, it’s like a lot of people don’t understand because people don’t see all the work he puts into it. So, it’s just a cool perspective from my end to see all the work that has gone into it. I’m just so happy for him.

As for Eaton’s return to multi-events, it was an experience that made him realise almost instantly how much he loved it: “When I got here 2 days ago, getting ready to go out for the 100m, then I realised how much I missed it and I think it was at that moment that I said this isn’t about records or trying to be too serious, this is about trying to have fun with these guys because you don’t get a lot of opportunities to do this.”

Eaton_AshtonHJ-WorldCh15.jpgAshton Eaton, 2.01m high jump, photo by PhotoRun.net

Throughout the two days, talk began to grow and grow about whether Eaton really do it, as he continued to perform excellently, staying almost bang on WR pace. Having started with a CRP in the 100m, he then flew out to 7.88m in the long jump, 14.52m in the shot and 2.01m in the high jump before the sensational 45.00 400m raised hopes ever more. Nevertheless, with the challenge of a tough second day still to go and the margins still way too tight for Eaton himself to begin to think about the record, it became even more clear how far into his mental and physical reserves he would have to dip into in order to get the win.

Eaton_AshtonSP-WorldCh15.jpgAshton Eaton, Shot Put, 14.51m, photo by PhotoRun.net

Starting the morning with a steady 13.69s in the 110 metre hurdles, Eaton then took on the toughest three events of the day, excelling in all three. First, he threw beyond expectation in the discus going out 43.34m, then in the pole vault, one of his best events, Eaton survived the aches and pains, to launch himself to a final clearance of 5.20m, continuously overcoming the frustrations of first time failures. Finally, needing a big throw in the javelin to set himself up for a manageable target in the final event, Eaton stayed calm before firing out to 63.63m in the third round to put himself in a great position to achieve his goal, though it might have been even easier had he not slipped over the line when producing a huge throw in the second round.

Eaton_AshtonHH-Beijing15.JPGAshton Eaton, 13.69 for 110m hurdles, photo by PhotoRun.net

After 9 of the 10 events, the American stood 8,216 points, requiring 824 points from his final task to achieve the magnificent feat by running at least the second fastest time of his career.

“I was doubting myself in the rest room before I went out, thinking man I don’t know if I can run that, but I had a lot of people believing in me, like my coach, my wife, my family, my manager, they were all saying you can do it! I knew the time I had to run, I just had to try what other option did I have?” Eaton admitted post race.

Eaton_AshtonLJ-WorldCh15.jpgLong Jump, 7.88m, photo by PhotoRun.net

Aside from Eaton, there were some other great performances as was shown by the fact it was 100% PB’s for those on the podium. Canada’s Damian Warner was rewarded for excellently consistent performance by a total of 8695, taking silver to add to the bronze he won two years ago, improving the Canadian record for the second time in just five weeks. “Getting the silver medal was nice, you always aim for gold but when the guy breaks the world record you can’t complain too much, I had a great year overall, I’m moving in the right direction and I can’t wait for next year.” he said afterwards.

Bronze went to Germany’s Rico Freimuth’s who hung onto third to claim his first major medal with a score of 8561

To make an already great competition even better, seven men scored 8400 points or more for the first time in world championship history.

Eaton_AshtonPV-Beijing15.JPG5.20m pole vault, Ashton Eaton, photo by PhotoRun.net

Author

  • 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.

    RelatedPosts

    The Brooks Run Guide, A Brooks Coaching Newsletter, Back Issues (#1-#10), Fall/Winter 2025

    This Day in Track & Field-December 2, Frank Shorter wins Fukuoka Marathon for third time (1973), Born this Day: Mike Larrabee, two-time 1964 Olympic gold medalist (400m, 4x400m), written by Walt Murphy

    The Brooks Run Guide Interviews, Julian Florez, Assistant Coach, Brooks Beasts Track Club,  Episode 9 

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

    View all posts
Previous Post

Beijing Stories: Some thoughts on the sprint relays, by Stuart Weir

Next Post

Beijing Stories: Raucous Relay Rants: Global Quartets Talking Smack in the Mixed Zone, by David Hunter

Larry Eder

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."

Similar Post

2025 Fall Cross Country & Racing Season, December 3, 2025, Week 14, Day 7, Sunday is the long day!
Cross Country

2025 Fall Cross Country & Racing Season, December 8, 2025, Week 15, Day 3, Wednesday is an easy day!

December 10, 2025
Amy Hunt – World silver medalist!
Interviews

Amy Hunt – World silver medalist!

December 10, 2025
WOLFE, KELATI TAKE USATF SENIOR CROSS COUNTRY TITLES
Cross Country

WOLFE, KELATI TAKE USATF SENIOR CROSS COUNTRY TITLES

December 10, 2025
2025 Brooks XC Regional West, December 6, 2025, Results and Photo Gallery, Photos by Kevin Morris
Cross Country

2025 Brooks XC Regional West, December 6, 2025, Results and Photo Gallery, Photos by Kevin Morris

December 10, 2025
The Brooks Run Guide, A Brooks Coaching Newsletter, Back Issues (#1-#10), Fall/Winter 2025
Digital Magazines

The Brooks Run Guide, A Brooks Coaching Newsletter, Back Issues (#1-#10), Fall/Winter 2025

December 9, 2025
Coffee with Larry, December 8, 2025, NIKE NXN 2025 was spectacular, Brooks’ inaugural XC comes this next weekend.
Cross Country

2025 Fall Cross Country & Racing Season, December 9, 2025, Week 15, Day 2, Tuesday is Tempo Day!

December 10, 2025

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Subscribe to RunBlogRun's Global News Feed

Wake up to RunBlogRun’s news in your inbox. Sign up for our newsletter and we’ll keep you informed about the Sport you love.

*we hate spam as much as you do

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Clyde Hart’s Guide to 400 meter training (from 1996 Super Clinic Notes/World Coaches Notes)

Clyde Hart’s Guide to 400 meter training (from 1996 Super Clinic Notes/World Coaches Notes)

April 5, 2023
2023 Nike Pre Classic: Two Amazing Days of Track & Field!

Noah Lyles, The Clock Doesn’t Lie

March 7, 2024
Grand Slam Track’s Kingston Slam Comes to a Close with 12 Slam Champions

2025 Spring Racing/Training Program, April 11, 2025, week 4, day 5, fourth week of year, Friday is an easy day!

August 27, 2025
USATF / Day Four:  USA’s Assembled Team Is Ready!

Abby Steiner replies via twitter, on the curiosity about her new professional running contract

February 6, 2025
Mondo Duplantis and the Jump that made him the greatest of all time

Mondo Duplantis and the Jump that made him the greatest of all time

8
What happened to the crowd at Eugene?

What happened to the crowd at Eugene?

7
My Five Biggest Takeaways from the Men’s Olympic Trials Marathon, by Oliver Hinson

My Five Biggest Takeaways from the Men’s Olympic Trials Marathon, by Oliver Hinson

7
Asafa Powell, Considering Longevity in Sprinting

The RunBlogrun Interview: Asafa Powell

5
2025 Fall Cross Country & Racing Season, December 3, 2025, Week 14, Day 7, Sunday is the long day!

2025 Fall Cross Country & Racing Season, December 8, 2025, Week 15, Day 3, Wednesday is an easy day!

December 10, 2025
Amy Hunt – World silver medalist!

Amy Hunt – World silver medalist!

December 10, 2025
WOLFE, KELATI TAKE USATF SENIOR CROSS COUNTRY TITLES

WOLFE, KELATI TAKE USATF SENIOR CROSS COUNTRY TITLES

December 10, 2025
2025 Brooks XC Regional West, December 6, 2025, Results and Photo Gallery, Photos by Kevin Morris

2025 Brooks XC Regional West, December 6, 2025, Results and Photo Gallery, Photos by Kevin Morris

December 10, 2025

Popular Stories

  • Clyde Hart’s Guide to 400 meter training (from 1996 Super Clinic Notes/World Coaches Notes)

    Clyde Hart’s Guide to 400 meter training (from 1996 Super Clinic Notes/World Coaches Notes)

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Noah Lyles, The Clock Doesn’t Lie

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • 2025 Spring Racing/Training Program, April 11, 2025, week 4, day 5, fourth week of year, Friday is an easy day!

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Abby Steiner replies via twitter, on the curiosity about her new professional running contract

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • 2025 USATF Outdoors: Kenny Bednarek Finally Gets His Moment in the 100 Meters

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
2025 Fall Cross Country & Racing Season, December 3, 2025, Week 14, Day 7, Sunday is the long day!
Cross Country

2025 Fall Cross Country & Racing Season, December 8, 2025, Week 15, Day 3, Wednesday is an easy day!

December 10, 2025
Amy Hunt – World silver medalist!
Interviews

Amy Hunt – World silver medalist!

December 10, 2025
WOLFE, KELATI TAKE USATF SENIOR CROSS COUNTRY TITLES
Cross Country

WOLFE, KELATI TAKE USATF SENIOR CROSS COUNTRY TITLES

December 10, 2025
2025 Brooks XC Regional West, December 6, 2025, Results and Photo Gallery, Photos by Kevin Morris
Cross Country

2025 Brooks XC Regional West, December 6, 2025, Results and Photo Gallery, Photos by Kevin Morris

December 10, 2025

Recent Tweets

Next Post

Beijing Stories: Raucous Relay Rants: Global Quartets Talking Smack in the Mixed Zone, by David Hunter

runblogrun

RunBlogRun comments on the global world of athletics, sports & ethics, and the Olympic movement. @runblogrun

Browse by Category

Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receives daily updates direct to your inbox!

  • Home
  • Archive
  • Contact Us

© 2022 Run Blog Run - All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Home page
  • My Account
  • Sample Page

© 2022 Run Blog Run - All Rights Reserved

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

Select a password for yourself. (minimum length of 8)

Paste here the user biography.

Provide here the twitter screen name. i.e. @RunBlogRun

Provide here the instagram screen name. i.e. @RunBlogRun

Provide here the facebook profile URL. i.e. http://www.facebook.com/RunBlogRun

Provide here the linkedin profile URL. i.e. https://www.linkedin.com/in/larry-eder-5497253

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Archive
  • Contact Us
  • Home page
  • My Account
  • Sample Page

© 2022 Run Blog Run - All Rights Reserved