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Mission Possible: Momentum is Building for Heavy Medal(s)
American Men are Young, Experienced in the Long Run
By Drew Woodrich February 20, 2008 updated 2/21/08 For the Washington Running Report
Photos by www.photorun.net. Photo above: Dathan Ritzenhein
crosses the finish line of the 2008 USA Cross Country Men's
12K.
Photo below: The final 3K of Ed Moran's race moved
him up to fourth place.
Olympic Hopeful Edward Moran of Williamsburg, VA
Ed Moran, an assistant coach at the College of William & Mary
in Williamsburg, VA, performed brilliantly with a fourth place
(35:43) finish at the 2008 USA Cross Country Championships in
the Open Men's 12K race on Saturday, February 16 in San Diego,
CA. He graduated from William & Mary with a Masters of Public
Policy ('05), and plans to continue his professional running
career (sponsored by Nike) through the end of 2008.Ed Moran finished fifth (13:36.5) in the 2007 USA Men's 5000m
Track race, five seconds away from a place on the American team
roster for the IAAF World Championships in Osaka, Japan. One
month later, he won a gold medal at the 2007 Pan-American Games
(Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) in the 5000m with a personal best time
of 13:25.6. This year he has a decent shot at making the team
for the 2008 Olympic Games in China; the U.S. Olympic Team
Trials - Track & Field will be held in Eugene, OR (June 27-July
6). According to William & Mary's Athletics Web site, Ed Moran achieved the
Olympic "A" qualifying standard at 5,000m and 10,000m in 2007. Update 2/21/08: The New York Road Runners announced on
February 20 that Dathan Ritzenhein, Alan Webb of Reston, VA, and Ed Moran will
be competing in the USA Men's (Road) 8K Championship on
Saturday, March 15 in New York. He has two important people in his life to assist him in this
Olympic chase: his coach, Alex Gibby (head coach at William &
Mary), and his wife (also an Olympic hopeful) Katherine
Newberry. As an assistant coach, Ed also benefits from the
enthusiasm of the collegiate athletes with whom he interacts on
a daily basis. Running is a team sport; the relationships one
builds are the foundation of athletic success, and a necessary
ingredient for personal fulfillment.
2008 USA Cross Country Championships - Open Events
Top Men (12K)
PL BIB NAME AFFILIATION CITY AG TIME
=== ==== ======================== ==================== =================== == =====
1 641 Dathan Ritzenhein Nike Eugene OR 25 35:03
2 671 Jorge Torres Reebok Boulder CO 27 35:29
3 643 Josh Rohatinsky Nike Beaverton OR 25 35:41
4 616 Edward Moran Nike Williamsburg VA 26 35:43
5 563 Ryan Hall Asics Mammoth Lakes CA 25 35:50
6 523 James Carney New Balance Boulder CO 29 35:56
7 584 Max King Oregon TC Elite Eugene OR 27 35:57
8 503 Ryan Bak unattached Eugene OR 26 35:59
9 670 Edwardo Torres Reebok Boulder CO 27 36:01
10 508 Scott Bauhs California State U Danville CA 21 36:16
Top Women (8K)
PL BIB NAME AFFILIATION CITY AG TIME
=== ==== ======================== ==================== =================== == =====
1 29 Shalane Flanagan Nike Pittsboro NC 26 25:26
2 58 Renee Metivier Nike Boulder CO 26 26:36
3 10 Emily Brown Team USA Minnesota Minneapolis MN 23 26:37
4 56 Katie McGregor Reebok Saint Louis Park MN 30 26:38
5 44 Molly Huddle Saucony Elmira NY 23 26:52
6 71 Blake Russell Reebok Marina CA 32 26:54
7 64 Katherine Newberry NYAC Williamsburg VA 29 27:07
8 37 Amy Hastings adidas Flagstaff AZ 24 27:12
9 50 Julia Lucas Reebok Mammoth Lakes CA 23 27:13
10 73 Sara Slattery adidas Lafayette CO 26 27:19
2008 Olympians Ryan Hall and Dathan Ritzenhein
Ryan Hall (25) and Dathan Ritzenhein (25) secured a place on
the Team USA roster for the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing by
placing first and second at the Olympic Team Trials-Men's
Marathon held last November in New York City's Central Park.
They spoke to reporters via USATF teleconference on February 13
about the USA Cross Country Championships and their current
training.
Read Excerpts
from the teleconference.Ryan and Dathan are young but mature competitors; they will
travel to China with the hope of putting forth a best effort in
competition. Alan Webb (25) ran the fastest times in the world
in the mile (3:46.91AR) and 1500m (3:30.54) during 2007. Matt
Tegenkamp (26) finished fourth at the 2007 World Outdoor
Championships in the Men's 5000m. Ryan says these achievements
by guys his age changed his mindset about what is possible; he
intends to "take a swing" at a medal in the Olympic Men's
Marathon race. Dathan feels encouraged by the fact that so many
talented runners from his high school and college racing days
have remained in the sport, and continue to develop as athletes. Plans for 2008 Ryan Hall is preparing for the Flora
London Marathon race on Sunday, April 13 in Great Britain; it
will be his third marathon race since debuting in London last
April. He will race sparingly this year, to invest fully in the
two marathons on his 2008 schedule. He also wants to fully
support the effort of his wife, Sara, as she pursues a spot on
the American Olympic Team roster this summer in Eugene, OR. Dathan Ritzenhein, a 2004 Olympian (10,000m) and family man, is
psyched up to compete at the IAAF World Cross Championships in
Edinburgh, Scotland on March 30. But that turf race on a
difficult course will not make or break his season, he says.
Dathan will take time to recover from World Cross Country,
resume training with a focus on the Olympic Marathon in August,
and include the USA Men's 10,000m Track Championship race in
July on his schedule. A Pause in the Action After sucess in last November's
marathon, Ryan and Dathan both savored a little bit of personal
time. Ryan and Sara Hall took their first trip to Israel, as
tourists enjoying sights they have read about in the Bible.
Ryan, a devoted Christian, found the visit to be spiritually
enriching. Professional runners travel to many countries, but
this was an opportunity to experience Israel. Dathan Ritzenhein returned to Michigan to spend a month with
his parents; he wasn't fully prepared for the difficult
terrain, a sharp hill and abrupt changes in surface, when he
raced on January 12 in Edinburgh.
A resulting injury to his leg forced Dathan to train on a G-
Trainer anti-gravity treadmill wearing a heart rate monitor;
the unique design of the treadmill allowed him to minimize
pounding on his legs during workouts. The Spirit of Sleeping Bear The professional distance
running community lost a race horse on November 3, 2007 when
Ryan Shay, a native of northern Michigan (near Traverse City)
and star athlete for Notre Dame University, suffered cardiac
arrest on the marathon race course and passed away. Ryan and
Sara Hall are close personal friends of the Shays; in the 2007
USA Men's 10,000m race on June 21, Ryan Hall placed seventh
(28:52), and Ryan Shay finished eighth (28:55). Alicia Shay has continued her training in Flagstaff, AZ. Ryan and Sara Hall were in Flagstaff during early January, and Ryan says Alicia has a positive attitude after losing her husband of four months. (They were married in Wyoming, where her family lives, and Alicia shared photos with the running community via LetsRun.com immediately after Ryan Shay's death.) "She is honoring Ryan by moving forward," commented Ryan Hall in response to an Oakland Tribune reporter's question. It was
husband Ryan who had insisted she give herself a chance to get
back in the game (after a dorm room accident in college made
running difficult). See a video interview with FloTrack.com from September, 2007 with Alicia explaining her rocky road back. Ryan Hall says that Alicia has a lot to run for this summer at
the 2008 Track & Field Olympic Trials, and he notes that she
has always been tough. In Flagstaff, AZ she benefits from a
great support crew (including distance guru Jack Daniels, PhD),
and Ryan Hall is optimistic about her upcoming 2008 season. Ryan Shay's death has alerted his fellow athletes that good
health cannot be taken for granted. Regular checkups with a
physician are important for everyone.
Photo above by www.photorun.net: Ryan Hall, in a high mileage
phase of his training for the Flora London Marathon, finished
fifth.
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