The best bet for a WR this outdoor season was the M45 800. The listed record of 1:54.18 has been held since 2005 by American Saladin āSalā Allah. Thatās because Britainās Anthony Whiteman dipped under 1:53 indoors in February. Well Tony the Track Tiger did it Saturday. Athletics Weekly reports (and results confirm): āWhiteman ran 1:53.40 for fifth place in the 800m which was a second inside American Saladin Allahās M45 world outdoor record from 2005 and bettered the British M45 outdoor record by almost four seconds, though it was slower than his indoor mark from earlier in the season.ā Amazing as ever. (And thanks to Matt B for heads up!)
When is 5th place not 5th place? When itās a record, topping M45 charts.
Former Kiwi decathlon champion Grant Chapman, now a New Zealand Herald correspondent, covered the Auckland World Masters Games and also competed in the discus ā where he fell to fourth after being in the medal hunt. Great yarn. But at the end of his story, he writes: āSo now thatās over, what next? Should I dust off the road bike and pedal off into the sunset, or come back next summer as a sad, old below-average decathlete?ā He says: āIām not sure my body could sustain 10 events ā my throwing arm is virtually falling off, already ā but maybe if I changed my diet, dropped 10kg, lifted more weights, did some more running ⦠Look out Kansai, Japan, 2021.ā Kansai? Have I covered that? Nope. So hereās some news: A year after the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, the 2021 World Masters Games arrive in Kansai, a region of southern Japan. More on Kansai WMG at Inside the Games, which scooped me by three years. Oh well.
Charles had fun to end. Video below was posted three days before he died.
Sad to report the death of a shooting star. Charles Eugster of Britain, who took up sprinting at 95 and became a viral video sensation and Daegu world champion, has died at 97 of complications from heart failure, according to Athletics Weekly and his own website. āHis son, Andre, spoke briefly to say: āWe fully supported Dad in his endeavours and aside from our personal loss it is so sad that he passed away at the height of his success. He wanted to inspire the world.āā Charles had written a book ā āAge is Just a Number: What a 97-Year-Old Record Breaker Can Teach Us about Growing Olderā ā and his friend David Tarsh said: āCharles never sought physical immortality but he wanted to āchange the world,ā to make advanced old age a different experience⦠one that could be exciting, useful and fulfilling. At this, he led by example and magnificently over-achieved until the very end of his remarkable life. His legacy, however, will live on, having inspired thousands around the world.ā AW said: āBorn in London in 1919, the former dentist only took up rowing and bodybuilding in later life when he sensed his fitness fading.ā He no doubt would have been sprinting at 100, but weāre lucky to have witnessed his efforts in his late 90s. Read tributes on his Facebook page. Weāll miss his Twitter feed, too.
Doug, throwing at Perth worlds, is a newbie M65. Rob Jerome photo
Before Doug Torbert entered the ring in Eugene on April 30, the listed M65 world record in the shot (5-kilo) was 15.90 (52-2). After he ended his six throws at the Hayward Masters Classic, the Redlands resident had crushed Kurt Goldschmidtās mark twice ā first with a 16.27 (53-4 1/2) and later with a monster 16.66 (54-8). He also shattered the listed American record of 15.12 (49-7¼) by Hal Smith in 2002. So warning to you all. If you break a listed world record by 2 1/2 feet, expect a note from me. In reply to my queries, glider Doug began by giving his series: 15.47, 15.68, 16.27, 15.33, 16.66 and 15.82. This wasnāt much of a surprise, however, since in February he blasted Kurtās indoor record with a 15.83 (51-11 1/4). But still. How is he doing this? āMost of the series was about what I usually throw ā high fifteens, low sixteens,ā he graciously says. āThe fifth throw was one of those where everything clicked and the shot felt very light at the release.ā
My Canadian author friend Bruce Grierson wrote the definitive book on Olga Kotelko, who died at 95 after setting a slew of WRs. Now Bruce tackles an interesting question: Should older athletes emulate Ed Whitlock or Earl Fee? His amazing piece in the Globe and Mail of Toronto is headlined: āEd Whitlock the tortoise, Earl Fee the hare and the run of their lives.ā Bruce writes: āEarl is a devotee of HIIT ā High Intensity Interval Training. He hardly ever works out for more than 20 minutes at a time, but he makes those 20 minutes count. He goes for it, typically in a series of sprint bursts ā between short breaks ā that leave him gasping for air.ā Of the late Ed, Bruce says: āEd had long followed a program of LSD ā Long Slow Distance running. He tallied endless training laps under Evergreen Cemeteryās tree canopy, patiently building a ārace baseā ā ādrudgery,ā he called it, but all that mileage was money in the bank which he could draw on round about mile 22, when other guys were crashing.ā As in all his journalism, he relies on the latest scientific wisdom. The answer to the tortoise vs. hare question comes down to your preference and muscle makeup. But borrowing from both Ed and Earl couldnāt hurt.
Hereās how Earl Fee (left) and Ed Whitlock are pictured in Globe and Mail story. Photos by Mark Blinch and Michelle Siu.
Suzy is 48 and living the āCalifornia Girlā life in Manhattan Beach, an L.A. suburb.
In February 2016, I wrote here about an Olympian with a mental illness who briefly led a life as a high-priced Las Vegas call girl. I gave it the headline: āMemo to Suzy Favor Hamilton: Masters track would welcome you.ā I noted her account on the BBC website, and I posted my invitation on her blog. She either didnāt see it or didnāt feel like responding. So I left it there. But two weeks ago, a publicity lady for Jewish Family Service of San Diego wrote me about Suzy speaking at a May 15 luncheon in La Jolla and asked: āMay I set up an interview for you?ā Duh, YEAH! I spoke to Suzy for an hour, and hereās the resulting story on Times of San Diego. The big news: She turns 50 in August 2018 and ādefinitely wouldā be interested in Senior Olympics ā in her old events of the 800 and 1500. (She was a three-time Olympian and won a bunch of NCAA titles at Wisconsin.) Since she so courageously answered my questions, I felt emboldened to use the first person in my story. Hope you like it.
Andy canāt keep all-comers calendar. Letās help.
Andy Hecker used to maintain a North American calendar of all-comers meets. But due to complexity and other factors, he hasnāt posted in five years. No worries. Why not crowd-source what we know? Letās start here. The San Diego USATF Association is reprising its five-meet Summer Nights Track & Field series in June and July. Not all events are contested, but you get to run against beatable 9-year-olds! And entry fees are reasonable ā $7 to $10 per Wednesday meet. The first is June 7 at University City High School and the last July 26 at San Diego City Collegeās Balboa Stadium (where a kid named Jim Ryun starred a few years back). So now itās your turn. Post links to all-comers meets in your region via the comments (and justify the headline). But donāt overlook the USATF calendar.
A month ago, a newspaper in Roseburg, Oregon, told of a training group at Hayward Field in Eugene and said Colleen Milliman āwants to set a running record for 90-year-olds.ā Over the weekend, it was mission accomplished! Colleen became the first woman over 90 to record a time for the track mile (indoors or out) at last weekendās Hayward Masters Classic, clocking 13:26.46 in a mixed race. In W80, Christa Bortignon of Canada continued her string of horizontal jump WRs ā going 6.81 (22-4 1/4) in the triple jump and 3.10 (10-2) in long jump. The meet site also reports: āDoug (Quenton) Torbert ā M65 Shot Put ā 16.66 (54-8). Broke the world record multiple times in series. Added 2 1/2 feet to the previous record!ā Also noted: āAmerican Record ā Gary Patton ā M70 3,000m ā 11:29.29.ā (See results here.) Iām especially curious about Colleen. I also suspect that W90 Evelyn Tripp had the potential to run a 13-minute mile off her WR in the 5000 of 46:24 at age 93.
Photos and videos from last weekendās Hayward Masters Classic in Eugene are now posted. Happy! Also shared are images and clips of the last flight of 80-meter and 300-meter hurdles at the wrong spots. Sad! (Weāre still waiting on results as well.) Not sure how this can happen at such a prestigious meet, but several races were contested with the last hurdle of the 80s set more than the specified 7 meters apart. And the last of the 300H barriers was at the high school spot. Ladies and gents dealt with it, videos show. But 300H winner Russ Acea switched lanes to avoid the eighth hurdle. (Seven are used in masters.) In masters, the last 300 hurdle is supposed to be 40 meters from the finish. This one was about 10 meters away. Get your act together, folks! Iām told flubs happened last year as well.
Whatās wrong with this picture? If Trials pulled this stunt, thereād be hell to pay.
Ken has followed track as an athlete, writer and web-master since the late 1960s, and saw most sessions of track and field at the 1984 Los Angeles and 1996 Atlanta Olympics. He also attended the 1988, 1992, 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2012 Trials, the last three as a blogger and Patch correspondent. [More...]