Carey Pinkowski’s run in Chicago is enough to make even the Daley family jealous.  He began the celebration of his 20th year directing the Bank of America Chicago Marathon by announcing American star Deena Kastor as his first signing for the 2009 race. 

“We are lucky to have her, ” he told me,”just hope her foot holds up in training.”

It has been a remarkable 20 years for the event and the sport, not the least because of Pinkowski’s efforts.  When he took over Chicago in 1990 it was a sunken ship, having lost its sponsors, its pro runners, and much of the goodwill of the Chicago running community.  But by adhering to the path all runners must take to reach their full potential, starting slowly then proceeding to build up year by year, Carey has raised the great ship, and steered it back to the front ranks of the grand flotilla of world marathons. Read more…

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June 15th, 2009

Make `em Laugh

Realizing this is now a weekend old (and that Runnerville has been down for months), but did anyone else watch the live cut-in of Usain Bolt’s 100m from Toronto on ESPN Sportcenter last Thursday night? 

If USATF ex. dir. Doug Logan wanted to witness the floor in the recession of this sport, all he had to do was pay attention to that presentation.  With the NBA Finals game four coming up next, the two Sportcenter anchors couldn’t have found a more entertaining or comical interlude if they’d switched on The Comedy Channel.

“Note to self,” mocked one after the first of two false starts.  “Never schedule a live cut-in with a false start.”

His partner was already in hysterics.

“It was the smilling guy in lane eight,” he said referring to the inimitable Bernard Williams, the Nathan Lane of sprinting.  Of course the smug ESPN boys had no idea who any of the sprinters in the race were except Bolt.  Not that that didn’t keep them from ridiculing the entire offering.  Read more…

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ROAD RACE MANAGEMENT RACE DIRECTOR’S MEETING

HOLLYWOOD, FLORIDA - NOVEMBER 8, 2008

KEYNOTE ADDRESS BY TONI REAVIS

Today, running has never been healthier, from the number of events, to the size of fields, to the level of charity fund raising.  Yet within that healthy body their exists an overlooked, chronic problem, what Cellcom Green Bay Marathon race director Sean Ryan called the paradigm shift away from competition to participation.  Ironic, too, because it was a competition that inspired the fitness movement in the first place, Frank Shorter’s gold medal run at the 1972 Olympic Marathon in Munich.  Then with Bill Rodgers’ pied piper performances at the Boston and New York City Marathons from 1975 to 1980 the running movement boomed out across the land. Alberto Salazar and Joan Benoit came next in the early 1980s.  But following Joan’s American record at the 1985 Chicago Marathon we had unknowingly hit our apogee. Read more…

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Frank McCourt, owner of Major League Baseball’s Los Angeles Dodgers, issued the following release late yesterday afternoon regarding inquiries about his interest in the Los Angeles Marathon.

LOS ANGELES, Calif. (August 25, 2008)-

“I am prepared to provide financial backing to Going the Distance, a group formed by Los Angeles business executives Russ Pillar and David Kingsdale, to acquire the rights to the Los Angeles Marathon from Chicago‐based Devine Racing Management affiliated entities so long as necessary terms can be worked out with Devine Racing Management affiliated entities and the City of Los Angeles. It’s no secret that the rights to the race are for sale. The Los Angeles Marathon is an important civic asset that has the potential to have an even greater positive impact on the City of Los Angeles. Because of its great potential, I am evaluating the opportunity together with Going the Distance. Read more…

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At long last Sammy Wanjiru, the Japanese-trained Kenyan, brought order to the marathon world by winning his nation’s first Olympic gold over the classic distance.  But at the same time the tiny Kikuyu tribesman from the Central Highlands city of Nakuru might just as well have been an alien presence landing in Beijing.  That’s how much a re-ordering his 2:06:32 victory in the Olympic Marathon in 85 degree heat and high humidity created.  His run has completely altered the concept of what is possible over 42.2 kilometers.  Now, for the first time, the idea of a sub two-hour marathon has come onto the horizon as a realistic possibility.

No  longer an endurance event, the marathon has become no more than an extended 10,000 meters run in the wake of Wanjiru’s performance.  His laughable series of splits and surges throughout the brutal day just add further disbelief to the historic performance.  In both substance and style Wanjiru flew unperturbed through the zephers of every precept of marathon running.  4:41 for the first mile?!  Are you nuts?  Maybe in London or Berlin or Chicago, the flat, fast big city courses where pacers and cool weather create ideal record attempt racing.  But in championship racing profligage spending of energy would come back to haunt the intrepid for sure in the final 5K. Except it didn’t in Wanjiru’s case. 

1:02:38 through the half!?  Only a handful of marathons had ever registered a faster opening half, and certainly none on an Olympic stage much less on a hot, humid day.  They added no more than a mild irritant to the 5′4″, 112 pound dynamo who now casts his sight on the marathon world record to add to his half-marathon and world junior record over 10,000 meters.

Of the top ten marathon times ever run, Haile Gebrselassie’s 2:05:56 from Berlin 2006 stands out even more than his world record 2:04:26 from Berlin 2007.  The temperature in Berlin `06 was 72 degrees, making it the sole top ten performance run in conditions greater than 60 degrees.  Now add 10-plus extra degrees, high humidity, an Olympic field, no designated, hand picked pace setters, and wild surging.  The mind reels. 

Wanjiru entered the Olympic stadium not on his knees, but in full flight.  He picked it up over the final lap!!!  He wasn’t diminished, just out of territory to run.  He had plenty of gas left in his unimagineable tank.  Yonas Kifle of Eritrea, one of the intrepid five who formed the break away pack through halfway, faded like a real human being would be expected to in the second half.  He completed his Olympic journey in 2:20:03, good for 36th place.  

And let us not forget Morocco’s Jaouad Gharib, the two-time world champion and close runner up in the Chicago heat bath from last October.  Gharib’s brave silver medal in 2:07:16 also shattered the long-standing Olympic record 2:09:21 set by Portugal’s Carlos Lopes in L.A. `84.  Gharib was dropped at least five times throughout the course of the day, yet each time he managed to claw his way back into contention, except after Wanjiru’s final move at 35K when Ethiopia’s Deriba Merga also let go the tow line.

Americans Dathan Ritzenhein and Ryan Hall both acknowledged the temerity of Wanjiru’s run. 

“To run 2:06:32 in this is incredible,” said Ritz, whose left hamstring and calf cramped badly just past 30 kilometers, but who held on to finish 9th in 2:11:59.

“They went out really fast,” said Hall, tenth in 2:12:33, hoping for better after his 2:06:16 at the London Marathon earlier this year. “I thought it was way too hard, at least for me. I would have died if I went out that fast.”

Then, both Hall and Americ’a third Olympic marathoner, Brian Sell (22nd in 2:16:07) tempered the brutality of the conditions.

“It was definitely warm out there, but not as bad as I was expecting.” - Ryan Hall.

“It was not as bad as I had thought. It wasn’t stifling, but it wasn’t easy.” - Brian Sell.

So, was it the brutal 85 degrees we kept hearing on NBC or not?  Either way, 21 year-old Wanjiru is the undisputed new king of the marathon world, if, that is, he’s even from this world.

END 

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From Gallup Poll

Television executives are nothing if not followers, and what they follow is the money.  So when 35% of women name swimming as their favorite Olympic sport (and only 8% track and field), it is not surprising that NBC chooses to replace track with swimming in the key primetime viewing hours.

With track mired in a cycle of drug accusations and disgraced heroes, and swimming sporting Michael Phelps and Dara Torres in the Olympic Q-factor ratings, perhaps none of this should be a surprise. 

At least USATF’s new CEO Doug Logan has stepped out vigorously with an anti-doping agenda.  I was pleased by his tone in his latest blog on USATF.org which spoke of the need to triple USATF’s annual operating budget ($15 million) to bring track back in line in the business world of modern sport.  The trend lines in Olympic interest point to the ailment.  Now all we need to find are the solutions. Read more…

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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…

 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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