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In this Edition
- Kibet Wins NYRR New York Mini 10K
- Nike Plans for the World's Largest One Day Running Event
- Cross Country and Track Teams Earn Perfect APR Scores from the NCAA
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- DeCelle Memorial Lake Tahoe Relay, Lake Tahoe, CA, June 14
- 35th Steamboat Classic, Peoria, IL, June 14
- GBMC Father's Day 5K, Towson, MD, June 15
- Myomed Ragnar Relay Wasatch Back, Logan / Park City, UT, June 20-21
- Emilie's Run 5K Race for Women, Ottawa, CAN, June 21
- Shriners 8K, Sacramento, CA, June 21
- Green Mountain Relay, Jeffersonville, VT, June 21-22
- Scotiabank Vancouver Half Marathon, Vancouver, CAN, June 22
- New Balance Women's Classic 5K, Baltimore, MD, June 22
- Hyde Park 4 Mile Blast, Cincinnati, OH, June 28
- USA Trail Championship: Open & Junior, Steamboat Springs, CO, June 29
- Virginia Mason Team Medicine Seafair Marathon / HM, Bellevue, WA, June 29
- Firecracker 5000, Seattle, WA, July 3
- Atlanta Journal-Constitution Peachtree Road Race 10K, Atlanta, GA, July 4
- Watermelon 5K, Winter Park, FL, July 4
- Footloose Freedom Mile, Mammoth Lakes, CA, July 4
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U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Track & Field, Eugene, OR, June 27 - July 6
Beijing Olympics qualifier
Kibet Wins 37th NYRR New York Mini 10K
U.S. Olympic marathon team led by Kastor third, fourth and sixth
By Jim Gerweck, Running USA wire
NEW YORK - (June 7, 2008) - In addition to the challenge of covering 26.2 miles on foot, the Olympic marathoners will face the additional obstacles of Beijing's heat, humidity and possible pollution.
If that's the case, the 37th edition of the NYRR New York Mini 10K proved an excellent dress rehearsal as all three elements were in full swing as the U.S. women's marathon squad made a 6.2 mile tour of Manhattan's famed Central Park.
At a pre-race press conference all three - Deena Kastor, Magdalena Lewy Boulet, and Blake Russell all from California - downplayed their chances of winning the race, noting they were all in some stage of their mileage buildup for the August Olympic race. But for the first half of the race, it appeared that Kastor, at least, might have been engaging in a bit of sandbagging, taking the lead up Central Park West and towing the pack through opening splits of 5:09, 5:11 and 5:13 miles.
"I was running a bit beyond my ability level, a little out of my head," Kastor admitted later, after finishing third. "I was definitely a bit too aggressive, but it was fun to be out there pushing the pace."
The New York crowds had cheered loudly for the American male marathoners in November when the New York Road Runners hosted the men's Trials race, and now they were getting their chance to do the same for the women, and shouts of "Go Deena!" echoed along the course as Olympic bronze medalist Kastor, 35, continued to lead the trio of Mexican marathon record holder Madai Perez, Everlyne Lagat, sister of Osaka double world champion Bernard, and pre-race favorite Hilda Kibet, hitting the halfway point in 16:12.
At that point, the start of the most significant uphill on the course, Lagat was dropped, and less than a mile later, Perez and Kibet opened a small gap on Kastor, who quickly lost contact with the pair.
"I know when I'm fit, the weather conditions don't bother me, and they definitely bothered me today, so that tells me I've got some work to do before Beijing," said Team Running USA's Kastor.
Perez, 28, did most of the pacesetting for the next two miles, and succeeded in dropping Lagat but not Kibet, who was coming off a quick 30:55 track 10,000 the week before.
"I thought anything can happen, anyone can win until you cross the finish, so I was trying to win," Perez recounted.
For her part, Kibet, 27, was all too happy to let others lead until she was ready to assert herself. "My legs felt a bit tight and heavy at the start," she said, attributing it possibly to her track effort a week earlier. "I figured I would just follow along and see what happens."
What did happen was an almost imperceptible and yet decisive move with a little more than a half mile remaining. Kibet, a cousin of four-time race winner and fellow Dutch Olympian Lornah Kiplagat, pulled away from Perez to a comfortable six second win in 32 minutes, 43 seconds (worth $10,000), with Kastor holding third in 33:14, followed by Lewy Boulet 15 seconds back.
"I was running in sixth place with about a mile to go, and could see some other runners in front of me," said Lewy Boulet. "I figured I was already feeling miserable, so it couldn't get much worse to run a little harder."
Lagat rounded out the top five in 33:38, with Russell the final 2008 U.S. Olympian two seconds back.
The race was a culmination of Running Week, NYRR's celebration of its founding on June 4, 1958 - 50 years ago. The first Mini, in 1972, attracted 78 entrants in the first all-women's race in the world; this year's race drew more than 5,000 entrants and 4,014 finishers.
Lewy Boulet and Russell indicated that they will run the 10,000 at the Olympic Trials in Eugene, but only as part of their marathon training; Kastor said she won't race again before Beijing, and would normally not have run here except she couldn't resist being a part of such a historic occasion. And all of them, as well as Perez, who will run the marathon in Beijing, and Kibet, who will compete in the 10,000 at the Summer Games, got a small taste of the climatic conditions they'll face in China this August.
37th NYRR New York Mini 10K
New York, NY, Saturday, June 7, 2008
1) Hilda Kibet (NED), 32:43, $10,000
2) Madai Perez (MEX), 32:49, $5000
3) Deena Kastor (USA / CA), 33:14, $8000
4) Magdalena Lewy Boulet (USA / CA), 33:29, $5000
5) Everlyne Lagat (KEN), 33:38, $1500
6) Blake Russell (USA / CA), 33:40, $1250
7) Aziza Aliyu (ETH), 33:56
8) Alina Alekseyeva (RUS), 34:05
9) Buzunesh Deba (ETH) 35:23
10) Salome Kosgei (KEN) 35:35
Complete race results at: NYRR.org
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Nike Plans for the World's Largest One Day Running
Event
1 day, 1 million runners, 25 cities, 25 top musical
acts: Nike+ Human Race 10K, August 31
This summer Nike will re-define the meaning of "Just Do It", offering runners across the globe the chance to compete together in the world's largest one day running event ever - the Nike+ Human Race. The 10K event will span four continents and cover 25 cities including Los Angeles, New York, London, Madrid, Paris, Istanbul, Melbourne, Shanghai, Sao Paulo and Vancouver with the goal to get a million people to run with the world all on the same day, providing a global connection on race day like never before.
Runners everywhere can join by visiting NikePlus.com to "Save a Spot" in their city of choice. Registration officially opened on June 2 with race day Sunday, August 31, 2008. Runners outside of selected cities can also participate through Nike+. With the Nike+ iPod and Nike+ Sport Band, runners can track their miles and sync, so they too can be part of the bigger race effort.
Pre-race and race-day activities will include participation by top Nike athletes, race courses that take runners by famous landmarks, and an exclusive music concert featuring one of the today's top artists in each city.
"The Nike+ Human Race is about inspiring and connecting a million runners worldwide," said Trevor Edwards, Nike Vice President for Brand and Category Management. "We're offering runners new ways to compete and race, courses through legendary landmarks, each ending with a headlining musical act. It's an unprecedented way for us to bring an entirely new running experience to consumers around the globe."
Each city's race will start on the same day, with the first race kicking off in Taipei and the last ending in Los Angeles. Race courses take runners by famous landmarks such as the famed LA Coliseum, Taipei 101 (the world's tallest building), Mexico City's historic center and the Puerta del Sol in Madrid. Istanbul's race course will span the city's famous Bosphorus Bridge, closing it to car traffic to literally allow participants to run from Europe to Asia and back again.
For more on the Nike+ Human Race and a complete listing of race cities, visit: NikePlus.com
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Cross Country and Track Teams Earn Perfect APR Scores from the NCAA
The NCAA recently released its academic progress rates (APRs) for college sports teams. The collegiate organization uses subpar APRs to reduce scholarships and impose other sanctions. Per APRs computed over the last four years, more than a third of the 329 Division I schools had at least one team penalized.
Based on the way above national average of college graduates (>90%) who have qualified for recent Olympic Marathon Trials, not surprisingly, numerous cross country and track teams secured perfect APRs. For a list of the schools with teams that earned perfect academic progress rates (APRs) of 1,000 for 2003-07, go to (and scroll to the bottom of the USA Today article): www.usatoday.com/sports/college/2008-05-06-apr-penalties_N.htm
Ryan Lamppa, Running USA Media Director
(805) 696-6232
Ryan@RunningUSA.org | www.RunningUSA.org
