US Distance Trade Values: 11-25
Previous Page - Intro - 26-50 - 11-25 - Top 10 - Next Page
We're into the second half! From here on out, you'd better be a heavy favorite to either win some titles, break some records, or both! Again, athlete's are designated with last year's rank (and PR's in parentheses)
![]() Just 19 years old, Derrick is already running away from the rest of the NCAA. |
Here's a quick breakdown of Derrick's performances in championship meets since he got to Stanford:
2008 NCAA XC: 7th
2009 USA JR XC: 2nd
2009 World JR XC: 15th
2009 NCAA Indoor 3000m: 5th
2009 NCAA Indoor 5000m: 4th
2009 NCAA Outdoor 5000m: 3rd
2009 NCAA XC: 3rd
He's going to have a tough time winning a title this year with Chelanga and McNeill in the NCAAs, but that's the kind of consistency that makes a great runner. Add to this that he briefly held the AJR for 5000m and that he's the second coming of Dathan Ritzenhein and he has a huge future ahead of him.
24. Amy Yoder Begley, 27 (1500m 4:10.04 - 3000m 8:53.27 - 5000m 15:24.88 - 10000m 31:13.78 - Half 70:09)
She's the 4th fastest 10000m runner in US history, but she runs in the same era as Flanagan (#1), Goucher (#3) and now Koll (#6). Begley's 2009 USA 10000m title and 6th place finish in Berlin were a huge step up and showed that in the short-term, she'll be in the hunt for every US 10000m title for the foreseeable future. In the long-term, her 70:09 half-marathon debut shows she has some promise when she eventually heads to the roads.
23. Leonel Manzano, NR (800m 1:46.20 - 1000m 2:19.73 - 1500m 3:33.33 - Mile 3:53.01 - 3000m 8:14.59)
22. Lopez Lomong, 23 (800m 1:45.58 - 1000m 2:20.98 - 1500m 3:32.94 - Mile 3:53.35 - 3000m 7:49.74)
I left Manzano off this list last year despite the fact I was fairly sure it would bite me in the arse. Still, he doesn't have the most range and until last year, he hadn't put up the spectacular times he now has. It was justified, if stupid. Since that time, however, he's gone on to run big PR's in the 800m, 1500m, and mile, qualify for and advance to the final in Berlin, and win a US Indoor 1500m title. With Lagat moving up to the 5000m, he could be the next US #1 miler.
That is, if Lopez Lomong doesn't stand in his way. Lomong hasn't been heard from since 2009, where he also set big PR's at 1500m and the Mile, won the US Indoor 1500m title and finished 8th in Berlin. But he's got great range, great finishing speed, and historically, he's 5-1 head-to-head with Manzano, which gives him the nod here.
21. Abdi Abdirahman, 18 (3000m 7:47.63 - 5000m 13:13.32 - 10000m 27:16.99 - Half 60:29 - Marathon 2:08.56)
20. Meb Keflezighi, 40 (3000m 7:48.81 - 5000m 13:11.77 - 10000m 27:13.98AR - Half 61:00 - Marathon 2:09:15)
On paper, these guys are relative equals. Meb has shown that on any given day he can compete with the best in the world. Despite coming back from a terrible injury in 2008, Meb went on to run PR's for the half and full marathons, and win the NYC Marathon. He's now prepping to run Boston, where a win would not only cement his legacy but bring in tons of money.
Abdi has been quiet since he struggled at the US Outdoor 10000m. When he's fit, he's as good as Rupp or Ritz over that distance, and he's shown he can rip a good marathon, too. He's never seemed to pop a big race on the world stage, though. Does he have it in him?
![]() Maggie Vessey's emergence had US fans making the same face. |
The surprise of 2009, Vessey is the highest ranked person to not make the list last year. But that's what happens when you run the 6th fastest time ever by an American. I hate the way she races--she relies way too much on her kick, something that's become very popular amongst American half-milers of late--but you can't deny that she's exciting and has a ton of potential. Her win at Pre might have been the most exciting race of the year. That said, she's still not the best 800m runner in the country.
18. Jordan Hasay, 13 (1500m 4:14.50 - Mile 4:35.01 - 3000m 9:12.25)
We learned at the NCAA Indoors that Jordan isn't quite ready to win an NCAA title at the mile distance. She's very very good for a freshman, but there are a few athletes ahead of her. She gets this spot because of what she's going to do in the 5000m, though. I think she's going to run 15:30s at Stanford, and possibly break Molly Huddle's AJR. By the end of her freshman year, she could be one of the strongest 1500m/5000m runners in the NCAAs.
| Who had the biggest ranking leaps and falls from last year to this year? Biggest Falls Laurynne Chetelat -15 (36 to NR) Luke Puskedra -16 (35 to NR) Anthony Famiglietti -16 (14 to 30) Christine Babcock -19 (32 to NR) Khadevis Robinson -19 (26 to 45) Brie Felnagle -26 (25 to NR) Treniere Moser -27 (24 to NR) Jacob Hernandez -29 (22 to NR) Chanelle Price -31 (15 to 46) Sarah Bowman -31 (20 to NR) US middle distance is so deep (especially on the women's side) that the value of being good but not great is not what it used to be. Biggest Leaps Brenda Martinez +16 (NR to 35) Phoebe Wright +18 (NR to 33) Meb Keflezighi +20 (40 to 20) Lukas Verzbicas +21 (48 to 27) Christin Wurth-Thomas +22 (NR to 29) Ashley Sveinsson +25 (NR to 26) Angela Bizzarri +25 (42 to 17) Leonel Manzano +28 (NR to 23) Robby Andrews +31 (46 to 15) Maggie Vessey +32 (NR to 19) Maggie Vessey earns the title for most unexpected performer of 2009! |
Bizzarri is probably my favorite US runner right now. Somehow or another, she always finds a way to win. She's the reigning NCAA Outdoor 5000m champ, NCAA Cross Country champ, and now the NCAA Indoor 3000m champ, taking down Lisa Koll (see below) in a thrilling 8:57 personal best. She'll have her hands full beating Koll over 5000m this year, but I've said that every race for the past year and she continues to win. I can't wait to see what she does outdoors.
16. Alan Webb, 9 (800m 1:43.84 - 1500m 330.54 - Mile 3:46.91AR - 3000m 7:39.28 - Two Miles 8:11.48 - 5000m 13:10.86 - 10000m 27:34.72)
Why Webb isn't #1 is a mystery to all US distance running fans. Despite faltering in the final of the World Champs in 2007, Webb looked poised to dominate US distance running for years to come. Instead it's been two years since he put up a legitimately exciting time and now he's recovering from Achilles surgery. Will he ever come back? At 27 years of age, there's way too much potential to write him off, but with so many great runners in the US right now, this seems like the best place to put him.
15. Robby Andrews, 46 (800m 1:48.02 - 1000m 2:22.28 - Mile 4:03.49)
To be a great competitor, you have to have a great kick. There's no running away from people in a championship race. Either you've got that gear at the end or you don't, and most people don't. Robby Andrews does.
Is it a world-class kick? That remains to be seen. But he's already shown it's good enough to surprise the best 800m runner in the country, Andrew Wheating, and with three more years of eligibility, it's hard to imagine him not winning a couple more NCAA titles. In the meantime, he'll have to show he can run world-class times before he gets a world-class ranking.
14. Matt Tegenkamp, 19 (1500m 3:34.25 - Mile 3:56.38 - 3000m 7:34.98 - Two Miles 8:07.07AR - 5000m 12:58.56)
Teg won the 2009 USA Outdoor 5000m, finished 8th in the final in Berlin, and then busted out a 12:58.56 personal best in September. Unfortunately for him Ritz ran 12:56 the week before (somewhat stealing his thunder) and Bernard Lagat has decided to focus on the 5000m from here on out (somewhat stealing his future thunder).
Personally, I have a few gripes with Teg that make it hard for me to rank him higher than this. He doesn't race much (only 8 races in 2009, compared to 20 for Lagat). He refuses to race above 5000m (for no other reason than to torment all of us who are sure he'd be a great 10k runner). And when he gets into international races, he's passive and deferential to others in the field. Small gripes, perhaps, but that's the roadmap to increasing his trade value. If he wants to settle for just being a US champion then so be it.
![]() Symmonds is to running what bumblebees are to flight. |
You know how for a long time physicists thought it should be physically impossible for a bumblebee to fly, given its wing to body mass ratio. I think Symmonds is the bumblebee of US distance running. We're going to look back and wonder how someone with his form and physique could have run the times he's run. Can we get some physicists on this already?
Even without knowing how he does it, Nick Symmonds is the clear #1 800m runner in the country right now. He won the 2008 Olympic Trials, won the 2009 USA Outdoors, finished 6th in Berlin, and recently won the 2010 USA Indoor title. He also set a new PR of 1:43.83. All while looking more like a gymnast or wrestler than a distance runner.
I don't see Symmonds going much faster than he's already gone, which is plenty fast to win a major medal already. The 800m is notoriously random, so anything's possible, but he's got some serious competition in Kaki, Rudisha, Yego, Mulaudzi and Kamel. On top of that, I truly believe Wheating is just one year away from challenging him for a US title. This is as high as I can rank him.
12. Kara Goucher, 4 (1500m 4:05.14 - 3000m 8:34.99 - 5000m 14:55.02 - 10000m 30:55.16 - Half 66:57 - Marathon 2:25:53)
Kara Goucher didn't have a bad year last year. Despite focusing on the World Championships marathon, she ran PR's at 800m, One Mile, 2000m, and 3000m indoors. She also won the USA Outdoor 5000m title. But her marathons weren't what she was hoping for and she's announced that she's going to try and have a baby, which puts her next couple years in limbo. The even bigger question is whether Flanagan will eclipse her status as "best up-and-coming US marathoner" when she runs her first full marathon sometimes within the next year.
11. Ryan Hall, 5 (3000m 7:56.74 - 5000m 13:16.03 - 10000m 28:07.93 - Half 59:43AR - Marathon 2:06:17)
Ryan has made a full commitment to the marathon and in the process has really raised the bar for US distance runners on the roads. Unfortunately, despite running solid times and earning solid places in Boston and NYC, he hasn't had the kind of breakthrough he's been looking for. And his half marathon times haven't come close to what he did in early 2007.
Ryan will be back in Boston in April, and just as much a threat to win as he was last year when he led early and finished 3rd. If he does win, this ranking will look like a big mistake. But as I wrote with Ulrey, he'll be facing a beastly field, and I'm betting the field.
Previous Page - Intro - 26-50 - 11-25 - Top 10 - Next Page
.jpg)


.jpg)





.jpg)



.jpg)