PlaceHipBibNameAffiliationTimeDelta
11 Jordan HasayNike Oregon Project4:49.88 4:49.88
23 Nozomi Musembi TakamatsuOsaka Kun-ei HS4:53.26 3.38
34 Michaela FreebyTeam Run Eugene5:12.28 19.02
I'm pretty sure that's it said that Roxbury ran 853.guess she didn't race the mile.
the mile has been super slow so far
whoops I forgot its a 3k I guess
Centro- 7:55 solo. 4:11 split
PlaceHipBibNameAffiliationTimeDelta
11 Matthew Centrowitz Nike Oregon Project 7:55.25 7:55.25
24 Daniel Castle WCAP Air Force8:39.89 44.64
39 Will Baker-Robinson Portland8:45.14 5.25
45 Griffin Hay Portland8:50.03 4.8
centro wins in 7:55
misses qualifying for world indoors by 5 seconds
misses qualifying for world indoors by 5 seconds
Frankly, not very impressive times given the claim of how fast the track is supposed to be. The 60 meters result is more like what you might expect at a masters meet. Anyone seeking a USATF Indoors qualifier had better seek it elsewhere.
coach d wrote:
Frankly, not very impressive times given the claim of how fast the track is supposed to be. The 60 meters result is more like what you might expect at a masters meet. Anyone seeking a USATF Indoors qualifier had better seek it elsewhere.
Rowbury easily got her 3k qualifier taken care of on that track
Track was good. Just the first meet and first races on it. Not too much talent there today besides those big three. More will show up in the coming weeks.
For reference, a year ago Rowbury and Hasay opened with a 1000/mile double at UW in 2:40, 2:41 and 4:27, 4:28.
Eyeless in Gaza wrote:
For reference, a year ago Rowbury and Hasay opened with a 1000/mile double at UW in 2:40, 2:41 and 4:27, 4:28.
Different year with different objectives.
The Portland track is legal for qualifying marks. The Washington track is not.
UW is fine for collegiate marks. Not sure about U.S./World
It's a new year wrote:
Eyeless in Gaza wrote:For reference, a year ago Rowbury and Hasay opened with a 1000/mile double at UW in 2:40, 2:41 and 4:27, 4:28.
Different year with different objectives.
The Portland track is legal for qualifying marks. The Washington track is not.
Freemontane wrote:
UW is fine for collegiate marks. Not sure about U.S./World
It's a new year wrote:Different year with different objectives.
The Portland track is legal for qualifying marks. The Washington track is not.
UW doesn't count for worlds
Had to delete a few off topic posts. Just making a post here so we can get to page #2 as many browsers will default to page 2 and then people will be confused as there is no page 2.
Eyeless in Gaza wrote:
For reference, a year ago Rowbury and Hasay opened with a 1000/mile double at UW in 2:40, 2:41 and 4:27, 4:28.
Great post. I'd forgotten that. Last year, Rowbury and Hasay did a ridiculous double. This year, Hasay ran 4:49 in the mile - so more than 20 seconds slower and then paced Shannon through the mile in the 3k, but they were behind pace when she dropped out according to Ken Goe who has a nice article out on the meet with details.
http://www.oregonlive.com/trackandfield/index.ssf/2016/01/shannon.html#incart_river_indexWhat does it all mean? Who knows. We shall see. Being in the best shape or her life in January last year didn't help Hasay.
"I knew we were a little bit slow at the mile, and the 2k," Rowbury said. "But my goal all along was to try to work the last k."
So...Rowbury ran 8:53.52 for 3000m, Hasay ran 4:49.88 for 1 mile.
Based on this meet, it looks like there's still an ability gap between Rowbury and Hasay. Rowbury's time is 1.07435 of the world best, while Hasay's time is 1.12732 of the world best. For Hasay to have an equivalent performance by this measure, she would need to run 4:36.25.
Meanwhile, Centrowitz ran 7:55.25 for 3000m, which is 1.06522 times Haile's 2nd best mark, 1.06822 times Daniel Komen's world best.
A good start overall for Team NOP (considering Hasay is coming back from injury). Hopefully this will springboard them to some medals for the USA at Worlds!
On a side-note, I was really happy to see them running the mile instead of the 1500 at this meet.