News

Samuels finishes tenth; Bolt disqualified

posted by rtsam on August 28, 2011, 3:40pm


 


 

Dani Samuels finished 10th in the discus final on the second day of competition at the IAAF world championships in Daegu (KOR), while Usain Bolt (JAM) was disqualified in the 100m final.

dani samuels

 

Samuels, the defending champion, was unable to advance into the final eight of competition, with her first attempt landing at 58.08m.

 

Germany’s Nadine Muller carried the form she’d shown in qualifying straight into the final with a first heave of 65.06m, which only Yanfeng Li (CHN) surpassed. Li then bettered that with 66.52m on her second throw, and Samuels also enjoyed improvement with her second effort, albeit 59.14m was not enough to see heradvance.

 

All three of the medals came in the opening three throws, and all three were further than that which saw Samuels crowned champion in 2009.  Li took gold with her 66.52m effort, Muller silver with 65.97 and Yarelis Barrios (CUB) bronze with a third heave of 65.73m.

 

Samuels said: “I just couldn’t relax I don’t think, my body was just too tense.  I was trying to focus on being loose and limber, but just couldn’t put it together in a throw, it’s really frustrating because I should’ve been out there [in the final].

 

“Over the last couple of days my confidence hasn’t been that crash hot, I considered myself extremely lucky to get into the final and was really pumped and positive all day and was really looking forward to it. But as soon as I got out there the upper body just tensed up and I couldn’t get that smooth rhythmic throw that I have been getting recently.

 

“When I’m too tense there’s not really any rhythm, the timing’s out, there’s no speed or acceleration throughout the whole thing as well, so being tense is a bigdowner.

 

“I was in a position I’ve never been in before. World champion, defending champion, I’ve never had to do that before. World youth and world juniors are a bit different.

 

“Like I said I was trying to build my confidence this year and I really thought I had it in the last couple of days, but was just too tense, that’s all I can sum up.

 

“I’ve been looking forward to London, been counting down to it since I’ve been 16, it’s always been six years, five years and now it’s less than a year away so it’s exciting. After we go home I’ll have a little break and then start planning what comps we’ll do in the led up to London. It’s exciting; London’s been the big one the whole time.

 

“There’s no better motivation than disappointment so I definitely will not let this happen in London, if I have any say about it. I think it really gives you that extra motivation to not let this happen again. It’s the Olympics as well, it’s what I’ve been aiming for my whole career so I’ll let nothing come between it.

 

“This is a big disappointment. After Beijing, as I said, disappointment is the best form of motivation and I had a really good 2009.”

 

usain bolt disqualifiedThe upset of the evening was caused in the 100m when Bolt (JAM) false started and was therefore automatically disqualified. His compatriot Yohan Blake (JAM) took full advantage of the opportunity to win in 9.92, while Walter Dix (USA) finished in second in 10.08 and former world champion Kim Collins (SKN) took bronze in 10.09.

 

Elsewhere in the night’s finals Brittney Reese won the USA’s first gold medal, in the long jump with a leap of 6.82m. Olga Kucherenko (RUS) finished second (6.77) and Ineta Radevica (LAT) third (6.76).

 

Trey Hardee and Ashton Eaton (USA) claimed further medals for America, in the decathlon, when they took gold and silver respectively.

 

Mo Farah (GBR) took silver after he was chased down in the last few metres of the 10,000m byIbrahim Jeilan (ETH), who won in 27:13.81. Jeilan had seen compatriot Kenenisa Bekele drop out after 6000m, but was joined by Imane Merga (ETH) on the podium.

 

Earlier, in the morning session, Kaila McKnight (Vic) booked her place in the 1500m semi finals with a time of 4:08.74 in heat three. McKnight led the group, which included double world-champion Maryam Yusuf Jamal (BRN), and her early efforts paid off with a quick time to see her through.

 

For more information on the 2011 IAAF world championships including Australian Flame team information, athlete profiles, news and results, please visit 

athletics.com.au.

 

IAAF world championships
August 29 

Day 3

 

10:10 (11:10 AEST) 

M Discus Throw: Benn Harradine (Vic)

 

10:40 (11:40 AEST)

M 3000m SC: Youcef Abdi (NSW)

 

12:20 (13:20 AEST)

W 400mH: Lauren Boden (ACT)

 

The 2011 IAAF World Championships are LIVE on SBS TWO with daily highlights from 27 August – 5 September.

 

ENDS

Daegu day one: Kenya’s morning. Kenya’s evening. Kenya’s day

posted by rtross on August 27, 2011, 3:52pm


Daegu day one. Distance day. Kenya’s morning. Kenya’s evening. Kenya’s day.

By Len Johnson


Kenya celebrates its independence from Britain on 12 December. But it was Kenya’s national day in Daegu on 27 August.

There may well be better days to come, but Kenya took both gold medals, all the minor medals and one fourth place on the opening day of Daegu 2011 world championships.

Thank heaven for distance races. The revised program for the world champs (and next year’s Olympic Games) may have other virtues, but it leaves the first day hostage to the success of just two events – the women’s marathon and the women’s 10,000 metres.

Everyone from the top of the IAAF to the bottom will therefore be composing mental notes of thanks to Kenya’s women distance runners who dominated the two events like no country ever has.

I suppose if you want to quibble, Kenya’s women could have got the first five places in the marathon, as it incorporated the World Cup. Instead, it was merely all three medals, with 2010 New York winner Edna Kiplagat leading home teammates Priscah Jeptoo and Sharon Cherop after 42.195 kilometres around the warm and humid streets of central Daegu.

Then, in the evening session, Vivian Cheruiyot won the 10,000 from teammates Sally Kipyego, defending champion Linet Masai and PriscahCherono. It was total domination after token resistance from Ethiopia’s number one, Meseret Defar, and a harder fight from the incredibly consistent Meselech Melkamu.

There was always worries about the marathons in Daegu, which one travel guide describes as having the most oppressive weather in Asia. Not recommended reading for marathoners, that one.

Women’s marathon day, at least, has dodged the bullet. It was warm – 26 deg.C – and the humidity was up over 70 percent for the 9am start, but there was cloud cover for pretty much the entire race.

With London marathon winner Mary Keitany and runner-up Liliya Shobukhova both giving Daegu a miss, Kiplagat was the fastest woman in the field (and also third-fastest on this year’s performance list).


If there was any pressure on her, it never showed. Kiplagat lurked at the back of a big pack early in the race, watching closely for moves that never came. When she went, just past 30km, it was decisive, with only her teammates able to stay with her. From there, only disaster could stop her.

It very nearly did, as Cherop tripped her as they exchanged positions at the 37.5km drink stop. Kiplagat hit the road hard, gashing her knee, but a horrified Cherop helped her teammate to her feet and no real damage ensued.

Even with the fall, that last full 5km split took 16:10. Kiplagat continued at that pace to the finish, her 2:28:43 one of the slower winning times in world championships history, but still impressive with a 71:57 close.

So on to the 10,000. I’m one of those who thinks he has never seen a bad 10,000 – there’s always some saving grace. This one didn’t need any help, though, with teammates and rivals Cheruiyot and Masai both going for distance doubles here and Ethiopia moving Meseret Defar up to the longer distance to try and thwart them.

There were little cameos – such as Shalane Flanagan, Jenn Rhines and Kara Goucher leading early in east-African fashion. That couldn’t last, but it was great to see.

Then Masai, with that classical languid style, cranking the pace up either side of half-way, shredding the lead pack one by one until it was just her and her teammates fighting out the medals (with Melkamu keeping them honest, but no more than that).

The surprise was Sally Kipyego, who has had a long US collegiate career, but has not taken off internationally until this year. It was she, not Masai, who posed the biggest threat to Cheruiyot in the closing stages. But Cheruiyot was not to be caught, as defending 5000 metres champion she has plenty of speed. A 61-second final lap took her to a one-second win.

Masai looked in trouble at one stage of the final lap, but fought back to take the bronze ahead of Cherono. Melkamu was fifth, Defar did not finish.

Now Vivian Cheruiyot has the 5000 to come. Can anyone other than a teammate stop her? Can Kenya go 1-2-3-4 again?

It could, which would create a little more history. The feat has only been possible since the introduction of the wild card entry for defending champions, and the only two previous occasions both came in Helsinki in 2005 when Ethiopia went 1-2-3-4 in the women’s 5000, as did the USA in the men’s 200.

An appearance by Usain Bolt in the 100 metres heats late in the program was almost an anti-climax, but the great man did enough to suggest it will be Jamaica Day tomorrow.

Samuels advances but disappointment for Hooker

posted by rtsam on August 27, 2011, 3:46am


 
 


 

Australia’s defending world champions were both in action on the first morning of day one 

dani samuels

but while Dani Samuels qualified for tomorrow night’s discus final, Steve Hooker failed to do the same in the pole vault.

 

Samuels was in Group A of the discus qualifying and on her first throw recorded 59.77m, whileNadine Muller (GER), Yarelys Barrios (CUB) and Jian Tan (CHN) all went beyond the automatic qualifying mark of 62m. Muller’s heave of 65.54m was the furthest by any athlete in qualifying.

 

When the defending champion returned to the circle she improved to 60.05m, whichwould be her best attempt with the third reaching 59.98m.

 

Samuels was then forced to wait until the second group of discus throwers came out for qualifying, in the knowledge that she would make the final if no more than six athletes from Group B threw beyond 60.05m.

 

Nine athletes from the second group had season best’s beyond the 62m mark, but only two managed it in Daegu Stadium with another three heaving further than Samuels. That result left Samuels placed 11th and through to the final.

 

After the second group of qualifying, Samuels said: “I was at the warm up track during that second group of competition. I did everything I would’ve done had I got the automatic qualifier because I had to be ready for the final.

 

“I didn’t do it the easy way but it doesn’t matter now. Hopefully I will have a good three attempts tomorrow, and then another three.

 

“I have confidence in my training and preparation.  I hope to bring a bit more timing and speed in the circle tomorrow and will have a think about that today with my coach. We’ll have a debrief and see what we can improve for tomorrow.

 

“There’s no wind over the discus in the stadium so it doesn’t add to the lift at all. Even a bit of swirly wind would lift it a little bit, but we’re surrounded by hills and a high-density area. It just means that I will really have to get under it and nail it tomorrow.”

 

Not one athlete in the pole vault was required to attempt the automatic qualifying mark of 5.70m, with eight through on 5.65m, including Frenchmen Renaud Lavillenie and Romain Mesnil, and a further three on 5.60m.

 

However, Hooker entered and failed to clear 5.50m, a height which was enough for five men to make the final, including PawelWojciechowski (POL), who only two weeks ago cleared a world-lead of 5.91m.

Visit runnerstribe.com for more Videos

 

Hooker said: “I was not feeling good on the run-up today, but physically I think I am in good shape, which is very important to me. The last two years I was ending the season injured.

 

“Practically, this is the end of the season for me and I will have a rest, take a mental break and will get back to training.“

 

“Mentally it wasn’t there, I had no confidence in what I was doing out there, I felt kind of lost on the runway. It’s tough to take off and tough to get jumps done when you’re in that way.”

 

“I had a very rushed preparation this year, I didn’t do anywhere near as many jumps in training as I would normally do before a season and only two competitions.

 

“There’s no excuses for what happened today, three run throughs at 5.50 at world champs is not on, I would expect more from myself than that. It’s disappointing that it happened that way, especially with 5.50 getting through to the final.

 

“If I have to take a positive out of it it’s that I’m healthy so finishing the year healthy, it’s the first time I’ve done that since 2008 which means I’m going to get an early start on my preparation for next year and get the jumps in that I missed this year.”

 

In the only final during the morning session, Kenya made it a one-two-three in the women’s marathon. Edna Ngeringwony Kiplagat won in 2:28:43, followed by Priscah Jeptoo (2:29:00) and Sharon Jermutai Cherop (2:29:14).

 

Saturday 27 August

Evening Session

21:00 (22:00 AEST)

10,000m: Eloise Wellings (NSW)

 

For more information on the 2011 IAAF world championships including Australian Flame team information, full results, athlete profiles, news and results, please visit 

athletics.com.au.

 

IAAF world championships
Daegu (KOR)
August 27 – September 4, 2011

 

The 2011 IAAF World Championships are LIVE on SBS TWO with daily highlights from 27 August – 5 September.

 

ENDS

Hooker & Samuels set for the challenge

posted by rtsam on August 26, 2011, 6:17pm


 


The Flame’s two defending world champions, Steve Hooker and Dani Samuels, will be in steve hookeraction on the opening day of competition and both believe the ability to be a proven championship performer is the key to success.

 

Hooker won gold in Berlin, two years ago, with only his second jump in the final. His clearance of 5.90m ensured he added a world championship title to his Olympic gold.

 

However, since defending his Commonwealth Games crown, in New Delhi last October, the world indoor champion has been hampered by injury, with his first competition only coming at the end of July.

 

The Flame captain said: “I’ve gotten through a couple competitions and gotten through a lot of training over the last couple of months, so that’s the big positive for me, coming out of this season that I’m back jumping and getting through the season fine. At the moment it looks like I’ll finish the season healthy, which will be the first time in a couple of years.

 

“Ideally I would’ve liked to have had full preparation being healthy all the way through and done a couple more comps in the lead up.

 

“I’m probably at a point now where my jumps a bit inconsistent, I can be anywhere in a 50cm range form a 5.40 and a 5.90. I reckon, anywhere in that range depending on the day and how it comes together. I’m realistic that it’s going to be a real fight for me out there.

 

“In Berlin I was in the position where I actually had something wrong with me physically but I was mentally confident in my jump and knew I could put together jumps when I needed to, so right now it’s the exact opposite of that.

 

“Physically now I’ve got myself into pretty good shape but I just haven’t had the jumps to back that up. I haven’t been in shape for long enough where I’ve been able to get the number of jumps I’ve needed to.”

 

European champion Renaud Lavillenie (FRA), who won bronze in Berlin, has dominated the pole vault in Hooker’s absence this season, including a jump of 5.90m to win the Diamond League meet in Monaco. It is Poland’s Pawel Wojciechowski, however, who holds the world-lead of 5.91m which he cleared in Szcezin (POL) only 11-days ago.

 

Hooker continued: “I’m going to have to try and battle my way through this comp and my whole attitude is going to be just to stay alive, and that’s the cool thing about my event, you get three attempts at every height and I just have to make one of those work.

 

“I’d like to have jumped 5.90 like a couple of the guys have in the lead up because that gives you the confidence going in that you’ve already done it before.

 

“I’ve done this for long enough to know that I’ve got results that I didn’t think I’d ever get. I’ve felt like there’s no way I can jump 5.90 and then somehow it comes out and just happens.

 

“I know how quickly things can turn around and how quickly you can find an oldfeeling that you’ve had before, but you don’t have that happen unless you’re optimistic about it and stay positive.”

 

dani samuelsSamuels arrived in Berlin with seven girls in the field having thrown further than her that season and somewhat off the radar, despite being the newly crowned Summer Universiade champion.

 

But at only 21 years of age, the Sydney-born athlete threw a personal best of 65.44m in the penultimate round to steal the victory and firmly confirm herself as a world-beater.

 

She said: “We’ve tried to stick to what I did in 2009 because that really did work, just the phases we went through, how many competitions I had, leading into Berlin.

 

“It’s pretty much been the same [as in 2009], I’ve had four competitions, tried to mirror them on 20 days out, 24 days out, that type of thing.

 

“What works for me is to forget about everyone else and forget about who’s thrown what this year, it doesn’t matter.”

 

Samuels’s main opponents will be China’s Yanfeng Li, who holds the world-lead of 67.98m, German Nadine Muller and Cuban Yarelis Barrios, who is the reigning world and Olympic silver medallist.

 

Samuels added: “World championships is a totally different ball game, so I’ve just been focusing on training, the last few days have been really good. If I can just get a little bit more speed and really nail one, I feel like I should get a PB (personal best).

 

“The last two years has been interesting, just competing in Diamond Leagues for one thing. I haven’t actually won a Diamond League yet, I’ve got second, third, fourth and fifth.

 

“The Diamond Leagues are a good practice for competing against those girls that you will compete against at world champs regularly. I think they know that I thrive on a big competition, a medal motivates the hell out of me.

 

“I will do anything that I can to win a medal on that day, so I think they arewary that major competitions is where they will have to look out for me.”

 

For more information on the 2011 IAAF world championships including Australian Flame team information, athlete profiles, news and results, please visit athletics.com.au.

 

IAAF world championships
Daegu (KOR)
August 27 – September 4, 2011

 

The 2011 IAAF World Championships are LIVE on SBS TWO with daily highlights from 27 August – 5 September.

 

ENDS



 

 

Hollingsworth Optimistic & defends selection policy

posted by rtsam on August 24, 2011, 7:32pm


 

 

Hollingsworth Optimistic on Daegu & defends hard line selection policy

Speaking to the Runner’s Tribe from Daegu, Korea today, Australia’s high performance manager and team leader, Eric Hollingsworth, has expressed his optimism about Australia’s chances.

 

Just two days out from the start of the World Championships Hollingsworth says that the team is settled and is now acclimatised to Daegu’s conditions.

 

sally pearsonHollingsworth is hoping for five medals from Daegu with the weight of expectation being carried on Australia’s biggest stars including Dani Samuels, Steve Hooker, Mitchell Watt, Sally Pearson and the men’s 400m relay team (Ben Offereins, Sean Wroe, Steve Solomon, John Steffensen and Tristan Thomas).

 

Injury wise, Hollingsworth reports a pretty clean slate with only a few question marks lingering. Speaking from Daegu he said:

“Fab (Long Jumper Fabrice Lapieere) was a concern but he has trained well over the past three days and Ryan Gregson’s calf injury has healed”

 

When questioned about a few notable athletes who were not selected for Daegu such as Tamsyn Lewis, Lachlan Renshaw and Zoe Buckman, Hollingsworth defended Athletics Australia’s selection decisions stating that only athletes capable of finishing in the top 16 were considered, and only an A qualifier ensures their spot on the team. When speaking  of Renshaw Hollingsworth stated:

zoe buckman

“Lachlan did a great job at the World University Games wining the 800m. It is a shame he didn’t get the A qualifying time. It is up to Lachlan now to knuckle down and to train hard so that he can come out and get that A standard for London”

 

Hollingsworth also pointed out that Athletics Australia’s hard line on selection is working, stating that athletes have risen to the added expectation.

He said that: “One year out from the London 2012 Olympics a total of twenty athletes have already produced A qualifying standards”.

 

The Runner’s Tribe will be catching up with Eric Hollingsworth throughout the Daegu World Championships for regular team and athlete updates. Stay tuned to Runner’s Tribe….

Ends 

sally pearson

Tamsyn Manou (Lewis) Interview: By Lara Nicod

posted by rtross on August 22, 2011, 7:09pm




Editors Note: Please note that Athletics Australia were not approached for comment about the contents of this article. 

Runners Tribe advise that these opinions are of Tamsyn Manou only.



There was a time when outspoken athlete Tamsyn Manou (nee Lewis) was better known for her cat fights with Jana Rawlinson (nee Pittman). When some people took more notice of her posing in a bikini in men's magazines than her running.
She has had many rolling eyes and critics who in the past have publically slammed her.

 

However this outspoken athlete has represented Australian for over 15 years.  She has won a total of 17 Australian national titles over three distances (400m, 400m hurdles and 800m).  She has represented Australia in three Olympic Games, five outdoor World Championships and three World Indoor Championships.  On top of that she has won gold at the 2008 World Indoor Championships and in 1999 silver in the 4x400m relay. She has been part of three successful 4x400m teams that have won gold medals at a commonwealth level and has been the closest athlete in 11 years to get close to Charlene Rendina’s Australian 800m record which has stood since 1976.

 

Recently criticised by the media for letting down her fellow 4x400m team mates by deciding not to attend the up-coming World Championships in Daegu this month, Tamsyn opens up to The Runners Tribe to give us the true story and insights into her running career up to now - how she overcomes criticism and talks about the coaching philosophes from her past coaches such as Sebastian Coe, Daley Thompson and Peter Fortune.

 

Is it fair to say no one was more surprised then yourself, when you won your first major international title at the World Indoor Championships in Spain in 2008?  The win shattered Mozambique superstar Maria Mutola’s bid to claim her unprecedented eighth World indoor 800m title.  

 

Q: When you look back on that gold medal moment, has the memory faded with time, or is it still vivid?

 

A: Definitely still vivid. As an athlete you put so much into your training and a lot of sacrifices are made. For me I have always done the training and put myself on the start line giving everything I have. For that one moment, to be the best in the world, standing on a dais hearing your national anthem is extremely special and I will never forget it.  Especially beating a world-class field including Maria Mutola, who had been the superstar of the 800 for as long as I had been competing. It showed me, and hopefully others, that if you keep doing the right things often enough and presenting yourself, anything is possible.

 

Throughout your career you have been assisted by a number of well-known coaches such as Peter Fortune, Sebastian Coe and Daley Thompson. Since 2004 your brother Justin has taken over the coaching duties.

 

Q: What are the basic philosophes of Fort, Coe and Thompson and your present coach Justin?

 

I have been so lucky with my coaches. My first coach was a man called Neville Sillitoe whom coached my Father to the Mexico Olympics and he is one of the main reasons I’m still able to compete at 33. As a junior his philosophy was to develop with a minimalist approach whilst concentrating on speed. All my coaches have had a philosophy of being supportive and guiding me on and off the track. Each coach has given me so much and taught me things that I still use in my career/life today.

 

Fort helped me to bridge the gap from juniors to seniors - not an easy task - he did this thru his great ability to set a successful program.

 

Daley has the strongest mental attitude of anyone I have ever met. His work ethic is second to none so the philosophy I picked up and still get from him is to apply yourself whole heartedly to your training and leave no stone unturned. His voice still says to me in every second last rep that this is the one that counts because no point being a hero on the last rep!

 

Seb has been one of the most influential people on my career. He is still a massive part of my life and career. He taught me that if you want something badly enough you put your head down and you do everything 100% right. His philosophy is on the importance of dotting the I’s and crossing the T’s. Every element of life/training is important to get to the end result. He showed me the importance of having a great team around you to get to your goals. The little things count, because a lot of the times it is the difference.

 

Finally the person who has been the biggest influence on me in life and track is my big brother and current coach Justin. His philosophy is to get the most out of oneself. He coaches athletes at various levels and to each one he says it’s about getting the most out of the talent you have and using what you have to the best of your ability each day. I love this philosophy for not only track but life. And that is why I am still here. We still believe I haven’t fully reached my potential so we train to do that. We focus on my ability, my strengths and weaknesses, to try and hit that perfect race before retirement.

 

Both your mother Carolyn and father Greg were athletes themselves. Your mother a six time national high jump champion and your father a semi finalist in the 200m at the Mexico City Olympics.

 

Q What useful advice did they give you when you started to get into the sport of athletics?

 

I guess to be perfectly honest they didn’t want me to do the sport and finally after the last few years of seeing first hand the hardships and politics of the sport, which can lead to disappointment and hurt, I now understand why.

My mum should have gone to the Olympics having finished 2nd on a count back to first in the trials yet they took 1st and 3rd. My Dad missed the games in 1972 even though he qualified and he won the nationals over Peter Fitzgerald in 1976 and they took Peter to the Olympics on discretion as he had a medical certificate. Little things like that have tainted their view on the sport as they didn’t want me to get hurt like them. Having said all that I had to read about most of their achievements because they rarely talked about athletics as I grew up. When they realized I had talent at the sport and loved it they have always been supportive and my number one fans. I am so lucky to have had them as they made sure I wasn’t pushed as a junior and as they completely get it they understand the quiet break-fasts pre-race, the grumpy replies post bad race and are always there with the perfect advice to make me a better athlete/person. I am very lucky as I think they are first and foremost parents and are always proud that I go out there and have a go. And as their daughter I love making them proud. I can never thank them enough for coming to all my meets and supporting me financially and emotionally in a pretty tough sport.

 

A person may describe you as a tenacious athlete, who seems to face as many challenges off the track as on.

 

Q How do you separate the politics of the governing body from your enjoyment of the sport and continue to remain focused and motivated?

 

Ah that’s a hard one. I guess for me I am a true lover of the sport of track and field. The future of the sport in this country is very important to me and I respect every athlete at every level who participates and has a go at it. I get unbelievably disappointed when the governing body makes it tougher on the athletes than it already is. I think telling athletes on the one hand they are sending A’s, B’s, & the biggest team to the Commonwealth Games last year and then taking that back is not a good thing for athletes who are giving everything to represent our country and our sport proudly.

 

I am a vocal believer of big teams. I think for our sport to survive we need athletes in lanes. I will retire next year and when I watch the World Champs in 2013 I am more likely to watch an event if an Aussie’s in it than not. I love cheering for my team mates. I think if they are the best we have then send them. This sport is very tough. A lot of sacrifices need to be made and I think team representation is a deserved reward. What keeps them in the sport without reward? Not every athlete is going to make a final or medal; for some athletes making the B time/distance (which these days is world class) is their Olympic medal and they deserve to be rewarded.

 

I also think the snow ball effect of this will increase numbers which are rapidly declining in our sport (in athletics in Victoria we have decreased senior membership from 16,000 members in early 1990’s to 4000 members currently).

 

We are Australian, we are in a completely different hemisphere, and we are so far away from the world class races. Athletes in Australia do not get paid vast sums of money to compete. Not every athlete can afford to be based in Europe and compete on the off chance of making a team. Chasing times/distances in Australia is much harder than being in Europe where world class meets are on week in week out. I don’t believe the elite European model works here. I think an athlete will flourish and get the most out of themselves in an environment of support, transparency, and belief in the system. Athletes will support the system if the system supports them. Perhaps we will keep athletes on the cusp of selection in the sport a bit longer then, or we will convince the great football/netball/cricketer to stick with athletics.

 

So I guess for me my love of competing with other athletes and then also trying to speak up when I feel the athletes aren’t being treated well goes hand in hand with my love of the sport.

 

Q What is it about the sport that keeps you involved despite limitations and difficulties?

 

 - My coach and training environment. I love going to training because I get to hang out with my friends. I also think the goals my coach set’s keeps me striving to improve. That and an inner belief that I still have more to give.

 

I guess you should always focus on the positives and there are many great things about the sport of track and field, especially at the grass roots level. I love going back to where I began in the sport and running interclub. I love seeing the athletes out there competing for the love of it, their enthusiasm and support is refreshing. Track and Field although an individual sport can still be very social, and most of my great mates I have met within the sport.

 

In total you have won seventeen Australian National Championships at 400m, 400m hurdles and 800m.  You have also gone on to represent Australia in three Olympic Games, five Outdoor World Championships and three World Indoor Championships.  On top of that you won gold at the 2008 World Indoor Championships and a silver in 1999 in 4x400m relay, been part of three successful 4x400m teams that have won gold medals at a Commonwealth level and have been the closest athlete in 11 years to get close to Charlene Rendina’s Australian 800m record which has been standing since 1976.

 

This is an exhausting list of accomplishments, which in any other country would probably be celebrated. However in the past you have been criticised and called an underachiever, fair-weather athlete, a show pony - the list continues.

 

Q How do you overcome this criticism and not let it affect you negatively?

 

I think in life you will always come across criticism when you are out there having a go. I still believe it is far better to have a go than sit on the side lines and be a 'could have been'. I think what I have learnt to do is only focus on the comments of those who are important to me. My brother says to me ‘if it was easy everyone would do it’ and he’s right. I am out there just giving my best if it’s not good enough for someone who is sitting on the sidelines hiding behind a computer screen on a blog, or a journalist who has never been an elite athlete in his/her life I really am not going to respect their comments so it’s like water off a ducks back. The people whose opinion I respect are people of integrity, people who show some sense of understanding as to what is required to make it to the elite level in a truly world sport. I have for over 15 years given everything I have to represent my family, friends and country proudly. There are a lot of great athletes out there and I compete with them. I may not have achieved what others expect of me but I have always given my all and I sleep well at night knowing that. I have achieved all my goals through hard work, sacrifice and dedication.

 

You will find the majority of criticism comes from people whom are unhappy in their own skin and have not achieved what they wanted to out of life. I like a quote my dad taught me ‘if you see a bit of dog poo on the side of the path you don’t stop and look at it – you move to one side and continue down the path you’re travelling’.

 

Q What have your accomplishments taught you?

 

I enjoy the moment when I have achieved a certain goal and then I move on quickly to the next goal. So I suppose my accomplishments have taught me not to dwell on them, just focus on the process of achieving another one.

 

In the past you have been quoted saying “Being in a position of privilege where people look to you as a role model, it’s very important to involve yourself in positive activities that benefit the community.” Believing that elite athletes should involve themselves in the broader society for their own benefit as well as that of others.

 

 


The Butterfly Foundation is an organisation you support and an ambassador for.

 

Q What drove you to want to support this community based charitable organisation?

 

I guess being a female athlete in a very body conscious sport and having been affected personally by an eating disorder I felt that it was a good fit for myself to be aligned with The Butterfly Foundation.

 

I often see athletes and young people in society being affected like I was with this horrible disease that can really control your life. I think the most important thing with going thru hard times, like suffering an eating disorder, is that when you make it out the other side if you can help others then you should do so. I love being involved with charities because I love seeing the positive effects they have on the community. That and you also meet some truly amazing people. I am also aligned with the Variety Club of Victoria and Assistance Dogs Australia. They are all amazing charities that I hope to work alongside for a very long time.

 

To clear the air you were recently selected for the 4x400m team for the coming World championships in Daegu, but have chosen to withdraw and go back to Australia and start preparing for London Olympics next year.

 

Q What is your plan of attack with London less then a year away?

 

Yes I didn’t expect it to be such a big deal. At 33 and having represented my country for over 15 years my coach and I thought, that with one more year left, I would focus on my individual goal of making a final in the 800m at the London Olympics. I feel bad that that has been construed as selfish. I informed the selection panel I didn’t wish to be named and was extremely surprised to see my name in the team.



I saw that Anneliese Rubie hurt her Hamstring at the World University Games, and subsequently spoke to the relay coach and the AA CEO and told them that if they needed me (as they didn’t name a reserve) I would fly in two days before and run. I had already informed the girls that if they didn’t qualify I would help them qualify domestically or in Japan, like we did in 2009. However the idea of three girls potentially not getting a run in Daegu because AA didn’t name a reserve, I certainly did not want to happen.

However, I was informed by the CEO of AA, that the leader of the high performance program, Eric Hollingsworth, did not want me and will use a 100m runner as a reserve. This is confusing, not only to me but to a particular AA Board member, as Hollingsworth continually uses elitism as a basis for his exclusionary stance on not selecting B qualifiers - yet instead of using the best 400m runner he is prepared to settle for an untried 100m runner in the position?

 

My plan heading into London after being excluded from Daegu is to get that 800m A time. The A is 1.59.9 which is going to be tough to do in Australia but my coach and I will use the domestic season and grass roots interclub to achieve the time - hence the need to come home and start my base training rather than miss 3 weeks of it whilst preparing for the 4x400.

 

Recently you married former test cricketer Graham Manou and said good bye to Tamsyn Lewis and embraced your new married name Tamsyn Manou.

 

Q Do you feel London will be the last time you will run in the green and gold before you hang up the runners and focus on starting a family?

I’m trying not to think too much about it too much as I know I will miss it. But yes London will be my last Olympics and I will retire after it to do other things with my life and hopefully start giving back more to those who have given me so much over the years. I often think that I will walk away and get away from the politics of it all; however I see my training partner, Katherine Katsanevakis, and my club mates and I think I love this sport and I believe that it needs a big change. Athletes need to feel like they have hope and support and I would like to see if I could help provide that. So many athletes out there on the cusp of selection are disillusioned with the sport and I would like to change that, or at least try.

Drive at 90: A Column By Len Johnson

posted by rtross on August 21, 2011, 10:20pm


A friend of mine had a disturbing attitude to driving through fog.

“Drive at 90,” Brendan would advise on encountering fog drifts across the road, “we’ll get through it faster.” I think we were talking kilometres, not miles per hour, but 90 through fog is fast either way.

Sergey Rybin seemed to adopt the same approach to Shenzhen’s 30-degree heat and 70 percent humidity when he ran the 10,000 metres at the Universiade 2011 on Wednesday night.

“Go faster, and you’ll be out of it quicker,” was Rybin’s approach to a race run in conditions closer to the Dante’s Inferno end of the spectrum than the cool, Scandinavian evenings of distance-running paradise.

For more than 24 laps, it worked, though ‘ it hadn’t yet failed’ might be a better way of putting it.

Rybin, a modest 28:15.79 performer, went out at breakneck pace. Four minutes 22 seconds for the first four laps had him on 27:20-pace. At 4000 metres, he was still on  66-second lap tempo, good for around 27:30.

Even by that stage, he was slowing – 2:44, 2:44, 2:47, 2:48 – but his lead was up to 100 metres.

By that stage, the rest of the field had been through the usual gamut of emotions.  ‘Is he mad?’. ‘Should we chase him?’. ‘Can we catch him?’. ‘Oh, sh-t’.

After a brief committee meeting, a chase coalition was formed. More of a holding company, actually, committed not so much to chasing the runaway as keeping him in sight. Japan’s Suguru Osako and Stephen Mokoka of South Africa were its leaders.

At half-way, Rybin was still on sub-27:50 pace. He had also dropped to 2:50 from 4-5k, his slowest kilometre split to date.

Still the Russian raced on, seemingly untouchable. He dropped to a 2:54, then another, before slowing dramatically to reach 8000 in 22:41.72. That averaged out at 68 seconds per lap – 28:20 pace now – but his eighth kilometre had taken 3:01, so he was actually running 30-minute pace.

Just as you can gain strength in the going – vires acquirit eundo, as the Latin poet Virgil wrote about rumour – so can you lose it. Heat can creep up on you insidiously, unnoticed.

Rybin may have been running a super race, but he was not Superman. By now, he was visibly suffering, a little unsteady in his running, relying on the sponge stations for intermittent relief and even briefer revitalisation.

Still, he had only stay on his feet to win. Suddenly, dramatically, with 120 metres to go and on the point of entering the final straight, he could no longer do even that. Down he went; out he went; off he went - on a stretcher. Cruelly, he never even got to experience that wonderful feeling of seeing the finish line with no-one in front.

Osako swept into the lead, pursued at a distance by Mokoka. The Japanese runner won in 28:42.83, a season’s best ironically, but surely worth at least 30 seconds better in less stressful conditions.

Now I have no idea whether Sergey Rybin is the next big thing (though I doubt it), a complete fraud, or (most likely) just an ordinary good runner who approached a tough race without fear and a plan to win.

But it was very hard not to be impressed with the way he ran this night. On this night, he deserved to win.

Rybin’s run, which I saw in stages on television while working at the Universiade swimming, evoked memories of some of the other great breakaways and rundowns in history.

The marathon used to produce them regularly, most famously in Jim Peters’ dramatic collapse in the Empire Games marathon in Vancouver in 1954. That race had everything – the best marathoner in the world staggering towards what he thought was the finish line (it was actually on the other side of the stadium almost 200 metres further on), but to no avail.

Then there was the  ‘winner’, Scotland’s Joseph McGhee,  totally unaware of what had happened to Peters, thinking for all the world that he was running for second. And others like Australia’s Al Lawrence pulling out when , if only they had known they were running for a medal . . .

 Before that, Etienne Gailly of Belgium led the 1948 London Olympic marathon back into Wembley Stadium only to get the staggers and be caught by first, Delfo Cabrera of Argentina, and then Tom Richards of Britain. At least Gailly held on for third.

John Ngugi featured in three famous races of the type. In the 1986 world cross-country – the first of his five wins – he had a huge break only to be caught by Abebe Mekonnen of Ethiopia. Ngugi got awy again to win by 15 metres.

In the 1988 Olympic 5000, Ngugi again broke away, surging from near-last to first mid-race. Again there was no chase initially, a fact that surprised Ron Clarke who was commentating for Channel Seven.

“It’s not as if they didn’t know,” Clarke said of the non-chasers. “He might as well have run round them ringing a cow-bell, saying, ‘I’m going. I’m going’.”

Ngugi stayed safely clear, the drama coming in the battle for second. Portugal’s Domingos Castro ultimately did chase Ngugi, only to himself be run down by Dieter Baumann of Germany and East Germany’s Hansjorg Kunze in the final straight.

Finally, of course, Ngugi was the victim when he took off again in the 1990 Commonwealth Games 5000 in Auckland – this time after a fall – only to be caught at the line by our very own Andrew Lloyd. Who could forget that?

And, speaking of ‘who could forget that’, there was the rolling breakaway by the late Sammy Wanjiru in the Beijing 2008 Olympic marathon where he just kept surging until no-one could stay with him.

Tragically, we won’t see Sammy again, but as long as people keep honouring his memory by attacking races the way he did a little bit of him will remain alive.

Adams and Brichacek crowned Australian champions

posted by rtross on August 20, 2011, 4:03pm


liam adamsBrisk and windy conditions have greeted runners at Stromlo Forest (ACT) for the Australian Cross Country Championships today, as Liam Adams (Vic) and Emily Brichacek (ACT) were crowned men’s and women’s open champions respectively.

 

Both competing after medal winning performances at the City2Surf last weekend, the duo were joined by almost 1000 runners at the purpose built facility in thenation’s capital.

 

Doing battle over 12 kilometres, it was a top field that lined up in the open men’s race. For the first seven kilometres, a main pack of 14 runners stayed together, piloted around by local legend Philo Saunders (ACT).

 

With all the contenders still in with a chance, and the kilometres quickly dropping by, it was Adams who produced a move to shock the pack into reality.

 

“I decided with two laps (5km) to go, I had to make a move that was decisive. I let rip for 200m and it really hurt me, but seems to have done the trick,” Adams explained.

 

Adams’ lead went out to 20 metres in no time, with defending champion Martin Dent (ACT) giving his best effort to stay with him.

 

Emily Brichacek “It’s been a massive week for me and I was worried I wouldn’t be able to back up today.  However I felt great all week and even managed a really tough session just 2 days after City 2 Surf,” Adams said.

 

After the initial move, Adam’s never looked back and ran seemingly comfortable to victory in a fast time of 36:05. Flame athlete Dent (ACT) headed home with the silver medal after crossing in 36:22, while Scott Westcott (NSW, 36:23) won bronze.

 

It was a relatively uneventful opening in the women’s open 8km event before eventual winner and leader of the front pack Brichacek made her move at the five kilometre mark. Challenging those around her, the Canberra-based athlete held her own on a course she frequently trains on to take out the event in 27:18.

 

“Not much happened early on, as it was pretty slow to begin with.  I think my coach will kill me as he said not to lead early and that’s exactly what I did,” Brichacek said.

 

“I’m very, very pleased with that run and the time is solid too.”

 

“We train here at Stromlo a lot, doing our 2km and 1km reps, so its great to win on a home course.”

 

Australian mile record holder Lisa Corrigan (ACT, second, 27.36) made it a local double, taking second place in a ripper return to form. Seven-time world cross country championships representative Anna Thompson (VIC, 27.46) was third.

 

The under 20 men’s race was brutal from the outset.  A fast-paced first lap led by Josh Johnson (ACT) settled into single file with Declan Wilson (NZL) and Glenn Yarham (Qld) holding out front as the race progressed.

 

Wilson and Yarham went on to cross the line first (23:57) and second (24:04) respectively, as Victorian Jordan Williamsz placed third (24:54) and Johnson fourth (third Australian, 25:05).

 

The women’s under 20 event was won by Celia Sullohern (NSW), who earlier this year was the best placed Australian at the IAAF world cross country championships in 21st.

 

Sullohern’s victory today is her first Australian title, and she was joined on the podium after six kilometres by Tessa Craig (Vic, second, 20:37) and Rosie Donegan (Vic, third, 21:09)

 

“This is pretty exciting. I’ve had a great year and it was nice to come here to Canberra and cap it off well,” Sullohern said.

 

“I always love racing at Nationals, seeing so many familiar faces and friends so this is just icing on the cake.”

For full results from the 2011 Australian Cross Country Championships, including information on the state-versus-state team competition, please click here


 

Australian relay teams ready for action in Daegu

posted by rtsam on August 18, 2011, 9:53pm


 


sean wroeWorld lead hurdler Sally Pearson, and Sean Wroe, who won a 400m bronze at the Summer Universiade overnight, will headline Australia’s relay teams when competition at the IAAF world championships in Daegu (KOR) gets underway next Saturday, August 27.

 

Combining with their teammates to ensure an Australian team is entered in all four events at the world championships for the first time since Paris (FRA) in 2003, the fast paced duo will line up with a further 17 Australian Flame athletes in both the men’s and women’s 4x100m and 4x400m events.

 

Guiding the women’s 4x100m relay team is Sharon Hannan, who this morning highlighted how well the team of Pearson, Melissa Breen, Laura Whaler, Charlotte Van Veenendaal andHayley Butler are coming together in readiness for the sound of the start gun.

 

“Sally individually is coming along really nicely, we had a very, very good European campaign and she has arrived here after a solid, strong and consistent couple of months,” Hannan said.

 

sally pearson“She has been struggling with a reduced volume of training, as have most of the relay team, but they’ll all see in a couple of weeks how that will benefit them.

 

“Hayley is obviously the newest addition to the squad and I couldn’t be happier with how her experienced and knowledgeable coach Penny Gillies has prepared her.

 

“She has gelled perfectly with the girls who are all happy and fit, the few niggles that we’ve seen have been managed perfectly by the medical team and all five girls are in top shape which is a credit to their training programs up to now.”

 

The women’s team is joined in the athlete village by the men’s 4x100m relay team of Anthony Alozie, Liam Gander, Isaac Ntiamoah, Matt Davies and Aaron Rouge-SerretHannan describes the layout as outstanding after spending near on a week in the facility already.

 

“The village is absolutely extraordinary, it’s first class,” Hannan continued.

 

sean wroe“The food has been fantastic, the people are accommodating and helpful. Everything we’ve needed has been supplied and it’s just been great.

 

“The warm up track is hard and fast, Sally is loving it. Her eyes open with excitement when she finishes her sessions.”

 

Clocking 45.93, Wroe won Australia’s first track and field medal in Shenzhen (CHN) last night. Wroe’s performance was a second season best in as many days for the 24-year-old Victorian and adds a third Summer Universiade medal to his burgeoning trophy cabinet.

 

“These past few days have been really good for me, a couple of season bests and a medal is the ideal build up before the relays in Daegu,” Wroe said.

 

Wroe will be joined by all but one of the relay team that won bronze at the 2009IAAF world championships in Berlin (GER) when he arrives in Daegu, with up and coming track star and 2011 national 400m champion Steven Solomon providing the new blood.

 

“The boys are really experienced relay runners, John (Steffensen) is a proven campaigner and so are Ben (Offereins) and Tristan (Thomas). Steve has a big future so it will be great to see him take that first step internationally with the Flame.

 

“I’m hoping that my confidence from here gives the boys a buzz, we are all pretty big characters and should get each other pumped up so we are capable of plenty.

 

“The 400m has been strange all year really, not many have run the 45.25 qualifier anywhere in the world so times across the board are slower than 2009 – we can make a final and from there who knows what could happen.”

 

Wroe’s teammates from the Summer Universiade Caitlin Sargent and Anneleise Rubie will joinLauren Boden, who will also compete in the women’s 400m hurdles, and Caitlin Pincott on the start line for the women’s 4x400m relay.

 

Sargent last night made the 400m final at the World University Games where she placed 7th in a time of 53.29, while Boden and Pincott have flown the Australian flag in the relay at the 2010 Commonwealth Games and 2009 IAAF world championships respectively.

 

IAAF world championships
Daegu (KOR)
August 27 – September 4, 2011

 
Thursday, September 1 (R1) & Friday, September 2 (final):
M 4x400m Relay: 
Ben Offereins (WA), Tristan Thomas (Tas), Steven Solomon (NSW), John Steffensen (NSW), Sean Wroe (Vic)

 

Friday, September 2 (R1) & Saturday, September 3 (final):

W 4x400m Relay: Lauren Boden (ACT), Caitlin Pincott (NSW), Anneliese Rubie (NSW), Caitlin Sargent (Qld)

 

Sunday, September 4 (R1 & final):

M 4x100m Relay: Anthony Alozie (Vic), Matt Davies (Qld), Liam Gander (NSW), Isaac Ntiamoah (NSW), Aaron Rouge-Serret (Vic).

 

W 4x100m Relay: Melissa Breen (ACT), Hayley Butler (NSW), Sally Pearson (Qld), Charlotte Van Veenendaal (Qld), Laura Whaler (NSW)

 

ENDS

Aussie & New Zealand Results from the World Uni Games

posted by rtsam on August 18, 2011, 5:18am
 

AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND ATHLETICS RESULTS

UNIVERSIADE 2011- World University Games, Shenzhen

 

Day 3-4

sean wroe

Men 

400m FINAL

 

Sean Wroe (AUS) 45.93 SB – BRONZE

 

1500m FINAL

 

Hamish Carson (NZL) 3.50.56- (10th)

 

20km Walk FINAL

 

Brendon Reading (AUS) 1.30.26  - (15th)

 

Ian Rayson (AUS) DQ

 

kelly hetheringtonFEMALES

 

400m FINAL

 

Caitlin Sargent (AUS) 53 .29–(7th)

 

800m SEMI- FINAL

 

Kelly Hetherington (AUS) 2.05.27 –(4th)

 

100m Hurdles

 

Shannon Mc Cann  (AUS) 13.87- (5th) Q

 




Day 1-2



WOMEN

 

800m

 

anneleise rubieKelly Hetherington (AUS) heat 2 (2nd) 2.04.92 Q

 

Holly Noack (AUS) heat 3 (6th) 2.06.30

 

400m

 

Caitlin Sargent (AUS) heat 5 (2nd) 53.46 Q

 

Anneliese Rubie (AUS) heat  2 ( 3rd) 54.86 Q

 

10,000m

 

Maria Danielle Trevis (NZL) FINAL (6th) 35.05.19

 

MEN

 

james nipperess100m

 

Patrick Fakiye (AUS) heat 1 (3rd) 10.61 Q

 

Patrick Fakiye (AUS) Quarter finals (7th) 10.62

 

400m

 

Sean Wroe (AUS) heat 3 (1st) 46.98 Q

 

1500m

 

Hamish Carson (NZL) heat 3 ( 5th) 3.43.55 Q

 

James Nipperess (AUS) heat 3 ( 9th) 3.47.34

 

Malcolm Hicks (NZL) heat 2 (6th) 3.50.76

 


Go to page:
Recent Posts