The CHill Zone of T&F: Conway's View From the Finish Line

Track Shorts

Mar 19th, 2009
2:48 pm PDT

In a Track and Field News report from the Adidas Running camp it was revealed that Tyson Gay’s fall and winter training were delayed due to a knee injury. While athletes need a good fall program to prepare them for the season, Tyson as the defending World Champion in both sprints will get byes in both to this years World Championships in Berlin. Therefore he will not have to peak for this years National Championships. Tyson, therefore, can focus his energies on preparing for the World Championships. I wish him good luck.

I must say however, that when I went to his website to check on his status, his site has not been updated since last August. A quick check of many athletes websites showed that most have not been updated since last summer. Athletes please have your webmasters update your sites regularly. The Internet is a great marketing tool, and I would assume that is the reason that most of you now have your own personal sites. Your fans would really like to know how your training is going, what your competition schedule is, and other basic information. Help market the sport by keeping your sites updated with this kind of information. Its great that you list your past accomplishments, but we’d really like to know what you are up to now. It only enhances your image.

Speaking of the National Championships, the Oregonian recently asked why USATF CEO Doug Logan wants to shorten the Olympic Trials. I too ask the same question. While the Oregonian looks at it from the point of view of Eugene as host of the Trials, I look at it from the point of view of the athletes and their preparation for the Games.

Yes, we were not as successful in Beijing as we had hoped, and many athletes performed at less than their best. But in my humble opinion it had less to do with the length of the Trials themselves than the length of time between the Trials and the Games.

I can see perhaps cutting out the first round of events at the Trials, as the first round is really just a matter of sifting the wheat from the chaff and would eliminate unnecessary competition. The remaining three rounds would then be more exciting, and provide better competition for those athletes truly competing for those top three spots on the Olympic squad. But condensing the meet into a few days would only add to the stress of the competition and take away needed rest time. And with athletes competing at the levels we see today, rest becomes a very critical commodity.

So, for me, therein lies the source of our difficulties in Beijing – lack of rest time. Because six weeks between a grueling Trials and a pressure packed Olympics, was just not enough time for athletes to rest, heal, and get ready for the toughest competition of their lives. So rather than compact the Trials, I think we need to make sure our athletes have enough time between Trials and Games to prepare properly for the Olympics! Two months (eight weeks) would much more sufficient.

I understand that there may be scheduling conflicts with the NCAA, NJCAA, or other groups. But it seems to me that it is on them to adjusts for the Olympic Trials and not for the Olympic Trials to adjust for them. After all the job of the Trials is to select the best team possible, but it is the job of USATF and the USOC to have them ready to perform at their best at the Games.

For those that follow the stock market, Nike shares have dropped amid sales outlook concerns. As Nike is currently a major source of revenue for track and field athletes both here in the US and worldwide, I hope the current economic decline globally does not end up having a negative effect on the sport. I would also encourage fund raisers at USATF to aggressively seek out new funding sources for the sport. They are needed if the sport is to expand, but even more so if old funding sources have to “cut back”. I hope this is a priority at USATF.

Exclusive Interview with Trevor Graham

Mar 18th, 2009
9:26 am PDT

The name Trevor Graham strikes a cord with most fans of the sport of track and field. Earlier in the decade it was synonymous with championship winning sprinters like Marion Jones, Justin Gatlin, Shawn Crawford. Then it became synonymous with "The Syringe", as he became the man that started the BALCO whirlwind by turning in the syringe that contained THG - providing USADA with the blueprint to the undetectable designer drug that lead to the suspensions of several elite athletes, including Dwain Chambers, Kelli White, Regina Jacobs, and some of his own athletes, including Tim Montgomery and Marion Jones Read More...

Bolt to run "Street Race" in Britain

Mar 18th, 2009
8:55 am PDT

Apparently double Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt of Jamaica has signed on to run in a 150 meter street race in Manchester England on May 17. While some are excited about Bolt's appearance in the city, I have to say that it harkens back to Jesse Owens racing horses following his quadruple Olympic victories in 1936 Read More...

What’s Going on at UCLA ?

Mar 17th, 2009
4:50 pm PDT

Headline on the Track and Field News website today read: Hurting UCLA Hurdler Craddock to Redshirt This Year.As a huge sprint and hurdle fan, growing up here in Cali UCLA was one of the iconic institutions of track and field. Their storied past is littered with some of the greats of the sport: Warren Edmonson, Millard Hampton, Mike Marsh, Danny Everett, Steve Lewis, Henry Thomas, John Smith, Benny Brown, Greg Foster, Wayne Collett, just to name a few Read More...

High School News

Mar 16th, 2009
4:20 pm PDT

The preps also closed out their indoor season this past weekend with two championship meets - Nike Indoor Nationals in Boston, and the National Scholastic Championships in New York City.While the high school kids typically don't get a lot of attention, they are the future of our sport here in the US Read More...

NCAA Indoor Championships Closes Out Indoor Season

Mar 16th, 2009
3:39 pm PDT

The collegians put a nice close on what has been a rather lackluster indoor season. The University of Oregon showed that it is indeed the nations top team (at least indoors) with a convincing victory in College Station Texas this past weekend - lead by distance star Galen Rupp who had wins in the 3000 (7:48 Read More...

Track Shorts

Mar 11th, 2009
6:23 am PDT

Dwain Chambers (GBR) finished off his fast weekend in Turin with a European Championship over 60 meters with a nice 6.46. Chambers is the only man to run under 6.50 this season, doing so twice in Turin. His run sets him up to potentially run in the 9.8x range for 100 meters outdoors. Making him a potential challenger to the top sprinters including Usain Bolt (JAM), Tyson Gay (US), Asafa Powell (JAM), Richard Thompson(TRI) and Walter Dix (US) Read More...

Championships Update

Mar 7th, 2009
1:34 pm PST

Dwain Chambers clocks the first sub 6.50 60 meters of the season by blazing to a 6.42 in his Semifinal heat of the European Championships. Chambers run was a European Record and made him the #3 Performer All Time, with the =6th All Time performance. Chambers now trails only Maurice Greene (6.39) and Andre Cason (6 Read More...

Dwain Chambers and What’s Wrong with the Drug Program…

Mar 5th, 2009
3:06 pm PST

Snipets of the Dwain Chambers book have been leaking out on the Internet as a result of it being serialized In Sportsmail. .And, of course, as with "Speed Trap" and other books, it appears that he is ready to "tell all" - or at least a bit of what he knows. Already John Regis, his agent, is being investigated because Chambers says that Regis knew he was doping Read More...

Track Shorts

Mar 4th, 2009
10:11 pm PST

Plans to upgrade the "Golden League" to a new "Diamond League" were announce this past week. Beginning in 2010, it will expand the current race series to include meets outside of Europe with stops in China, the United States and perhaps Doha, Qatar. With locations still to be solidified the Diamond League could have anywhere from 12 to 15 meets Read More...