Tuesday, January 17, 2012

USA Olympic Marathon Trials

Well, I didn't win the $250,000 from LetsRun.com for correctly predicting the top ten male and female finishers in the trials marathon. I did have two of the three top men and women, but in the wrong order (Hall & Meb, Goucher & Davila).

The top four men with their times were; Meb Keflezighi (a pr) 2:09:08 to win over Ryan Hall (2:09:30) with Abdi Abdirahman (2:09:47) barely hanging on for an 8 second win over Dathan Ritzenhein, (2:09:55). The top six men went through 13.1 miles in 1:03:25 before "slowing".  Meb's 2:09 averages out to 4:55 per mile.

The top four women were; Shalane Flanagan (2:25:38) beat Desiree Davila (2:25:55) with a strong surge over the last mile and Kara Goucher was third in 2:26:06. Amy Hastings broke the old Trials record at 2:27:17 but didn't make the team. Deena Kastor (age 38) was 6th in 2:30:40. Unlike the fast start of the men's race, the women began at a modest 6:15 or so pace before gradually picking it up. Flanagan's 2:25 comes to an average of 5:34 per mile. Shalane won a Bronze medal in the 2008 Olympics in the 10,000 meters, so she definitely has the speed. Melissa White (Naples, NY, SUNY Geneseo) finished 13th in 2:34:33.

The Houston course seemed interesting and great for spectators. The weather was perfect for marathoning, beginning with a temperature of 43 and ending up around 50. With NBC and the USATF agreeing to not allow any live coverage via television or the web, viewers were left with a two hour highlight show in the afternoon. Actually it wasn't the full two hours since a hockey game went over and NBC cut out over ten minutes of coverage.

The announcers were knowledgeable, but the lack of telling us what mile the runners were at on the course was maddening. NBC kept showing the elapsed time, which really doesn't mean much in a race where top three is the only real important factor. Viewers were left with figuring out the miles ran based on the pace they kept telling us the runners were going at. Once in a while you could pick out a mile marker on the road and know where they were. Also, as usual, they never mentioned anyone past sixth place in either the men's or women's race. Especially with a tape delay the station could have at least had something scrolling across the screen. Even NASCAR and golf gets that.

Keep treating the sport like minor league and it will fulfill that prophecy.

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