July 24th, 2008

Gilbert

I want to point out CNN.com’s page dedicated to the 2008 Olympic Games. (check it out here)  The coverage is not exhaustive and the content limited, but a highlight for me is featured blogger and personal friend Gilbert Tuhabonye.  Gilbert is one of several athletes and CNN correspondents writing posts leading up to and even during the Games, and he couldn’t be a better choice.

Link directly to Gilbert’s posts by clicking here.

book-cover-190.jpgAs you’ll read, Gilbert’s story is nothing short of miraculous.  He should be dead right now, not winning 10Ks, running 2:20 marathons, or coaching Austin-area runners.  See, Gilbert is from Burundi, where a violent civil war broke out in the early ’90s pitting two ethnic groups — the Hutus and the Tutsis — against each other.  A violent Hutu mob approached Gilbert’s school on October 21, 1993, surrounded it, and allowed the Hutus inside — many of them Gilbert’s close friends — to come outside.

With only Tutsis remaining inside the school, the mob chained the doors and set the school on fire.  The fire burned for hours before Gilbert, badly burned himself but alive, escaped through a window and ran away from the Hutu mob with his back on fire.  The 18-year-old doused the fire in a small pool of water before dragging himself to safety.

The subsequent story is quite long, but Gilbert would go on to attend Abilene Christian University in Texas (my alma mater) on a track and field scholarship, where he was a six-time all-American and a member of seven Division II team track titles.  Post-college, Gilbert moved to Austin, where, working for Paul Corroza’s successful RunTex store, he began winning local races and motivating thousands.  He even began coaching a group of area wannabe adult and child runners — called “Gilbert’s Gazelles” — motivating them with his knowledge of the sport and inspirational story.  He also trains and dreams of representing his home country, Burundi, in a future Olympiad.

(you can read Gilbert’s harrowing story in its entirety here)

Why does this matter?  Because stories like Gilbert’s are what may connect our sport to the masses.  It is inspirational.  It touches all who hear it.  It gives hope.  It represents humanity at its best — and worst.

I think of Lopez Lomong, the former Sudanese “Lost Boy”-turned-Olympian who will represent the U.S. in the 1,500-meter run.  There are probably others who have overcome great odds to make the Olympic team.  I would assert that stories like Lopez’s (and hopefully Gilbert’s in a future Games) may be just as important in the marketing run-up to the Olympics as the promise of blistering times from Jeremy Wariner.

What do you think?

USA Track & Field has written President Bush to express our concern at Marion Jones’ application for pardon or commutation of her conviction for making false statements to federal investigators. Make your own voice heard and join USATF in writing to President Bush. For more information on how to write the White House, click here.   Below is the text of USATF’s letter. Read more…

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July 18th, 2008

Logan Steps Out

New USATF CEO Doug Logan held his first teleconference today as he was introduced by USATF President Bill Roe, who has been serving as acting CEO since Craig Masback’s resignation in January.  Logan will assume his new job on Monday morning when he arrives in Indianapolis from his current residence in south Florida.

“I’m delighted to be in this position,” the 64 year-old former Major League Soccer CEO told the teleconference.  “As the staff will learn, I keep a picture on my desk from 1980 of me dressed in clown makeup.  It’s a reminder not to take myself too seriously.”

Yet he takes over an organization with serious problems and challenges, including a mandate by the USOC to fundamentally change its governance model and streamline its bloated board of directors. Read more…

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July 17th, 2008

Doug Logan named USATF CEO

Doug LoganINDIANAPOLIS - The USA Track & Field Board of Directors on Thursday approved top sports executive Doug Logan, the former Commissioner, President and CEO of Major League Soccer, as its next CEO. A bilingual sports and entertainment leader with a proven track record of generating long-term sponsor partnerships, television outreach and high fan attendance, Logan and MLS in 1996 were named Sports Industrialist of the Year by Sports Business Daily. Read more…

July 15th, 2008

Olympic Dream Fulfilled

In May of 1999 I hit the Olympic A standard in the 10,000 meter.  This earned me a trip to the World Championships in Seville, Spain that summer.  Fortunately, my time carried over to the following year, so I had the A standard going in to the 2000 Olympic Trials.  Unfortunately, I didn’t make the team that year.  I remember watching Meb, Culpepper and Abdi pull away from me with 5K to go.  I tried to stay with them as long as I could, but I just couldn’t keep up.  There probably isn’t a day that goes by where I don’t think about that moment and how bad I wanted to be an Olympian. 

It was the summer of 1984 when my Olympic dream began.  I just turned 13.

With the Games already in full force in Los Angeles, my father made the impulse decision to load the family in the beat up station wagon and drive the 700 plus miles from Ashland, Oregon down to southern California in order to soak up the Olympic experience.  We certainly didn’t have event tickets, nor could we possibly afford them. My dad figured we could just find a spot on the street, along the end of the marathon course, and watch the women’s marathon enter the stadium. 

Once we arrived in LA, I remember getting up extra early and driving towards the stadium on a hot summer day to catch a glimpse of the race.  We found a parking spot which seemed like ten miles a way and trudged towards where the marathon course met the stadium entrance.  As we got closer and closer we could hear the stadium speakers blaring that Joan Benoit (now Benoit Samuelson) was opening up a huge lead over the field.  Our excitement grew and we walked faster hoping to get a good spot on the street.  By the time we reached the course, the streets were so crowded that there was no chance that my dad and his three boys could ever find an open spot to watch the runners go by.  The speakers from the stadium continued to scream that Benoit was still leading with just a few miles to go.  We could now here the crowd inside the stadium chanting “U-S-A, U-S-A, U-S-A…”

At that moment my dad told my oldest brother, Bob, to stay with me and Tim.  He said that he would be right back and for us not to move.  I saw my dad disappear into the huge crowd.  Ten minutes later my dad emerged with a huge smile on his face.  He had three tickets in his hand.  He gave them to us and told us to run as fast as we could to the stadium.  We looked at him and asked him why he wasn’t coming.  He just kept on smiling and told us to run, FAST!  As the three of us raced towards the stadium with tickets in hand, I turned around and saw my dad standing there laughing.  I later learned that my dad found a scalper and bought three tickets that were being sold for an outrageous price.  He had just enough money for three tickets.  It was probably all the money he had for our entire trip to California.

The three of us boys entered the stadium.  The ushers pointed us towards the Olympic Flame and told us our seats were at the very top row, right under the Flame.  We climbed the hundreds of steps and found our seats moments before Benoit entered the stadium.  It was the most thrilling experience I have ever had.  Over 100,000 people screaming “U-S-A, U-S-A” were in complete hysterics as Benoit came charging in with her silver uniform and white cap in hand.   At that very moment I wanted to become an Olympian and I spent the next 20 years doing everything I could to become one.  It was not to be. 

However, this blog isn’t about an Olympic dream unfulfilled.  I would, in fact, argue the opposite.  After all, I learned how to chase something with reckless abandon.  I learned how to believe in myself and not some statistic.  I learned how to risk it all.  I learned that I am capable of wrestling the wolves until I am spent.  Perhaps this is what the Olympic dream is really about.  Thanks, Dad. 

PJ 

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 The Toni & Matt Show #17 [71:24m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Eugene ‘08A full debrief of the Olympic Trials with special guest Coach Vin Lananna (co-chair of the Eugene ‘08 organizing committee and director of track & field at the University of Oregon). Toni and Matt kick off the show with their assessment of the Trials - the highs and lows, surprises and disappointments - before bringing on Coach Lananna, who gives a candid recap of the show.What lived up to his expectations? What can be improved for 2012? How do we make the sport more professional? Can USATF succeed in Indianapolis? This and more on the Toni & Matt Show.

 Villard Street seemed deserted as we drove home from dinner at the Boulevard Grille on Randolph tonight.  A quick glance showed a few diehards knocking back their final Trials beers at the Villard Street Pub as we passed.  The pub had been the unofficial post-meet gathering spot night after night during the Trials, and now with packing and early morning flights waiting, there wasn’t the same urgency to stop to exchange opinions and race memories.  Strange how quickly the industry packs up and departs after settling in for the ten days it took to select this 2008 Olympic Team.

Read more…

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July 5th, 2008

Eugene `08 - Day Six

 Another sell-out crowd jammed into Hayward Field tonight for Day Six of the 2008 Trials.  Expecting fireworks on this Fourth of July with the semifinals of the men’s and women’s 1500 meters, along with the finals in the women’s 5000 and the men’s 10,000 - track crack for the Eugene distance junkies - the mood in the old barn was instead somewhat subdued compared with the other nights’ action.  Maybe it’s expecting too much for the Eugene fans to keep rising to new heights of frenzy, but though appreciative, there wasn’t the ferocity tonight we’d seen on night one with the women’s 10,000 meter final, or Monday night for the men’s 800. Still, it was somewhat surprising.

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 With the mortgage crisis continuing to ripple out into the general American economy, the possibility exists that two of the only positive impacts may come in the area of childhood obesity and the fortunes of future American distance running.  What with the price of oil soaring near $150 per barrel, Montgomery County, Maryland announced that more children may have to walk to school next year to save money on bus fuel.  Read more…

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July 1st, 2008

Eugene `08 - Night Four

 Night Four at the 2008 Olympic Trials had all the potential for hearts a thumpin’.  The men’s and women’s 800 meter finals, and the men’s 5000 final to close the show.  It may be a little choppy, but here’s how it played out in real time at Hayward Field on a glorious summer’s evening in Eugene.

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