i'll agree, not the greatest race to watch, but there's a lot of ignorance on this thread. national meets are about place, not time (unless you're trying to get the olympic or world standard). i would argue that many increased their chance of winning by running this way, and the top 2 decreased their chances, a la morcelli in '92. you leave too much to chance and position in a slow race. this might have been the only kind of race most of those guys had any chance, given that the front 2 had the best prs. run this race 10 times in 10 different ways and i'd bet 9 times we get the same first 2. the only way they lose is probably poor position/getting boxed/getting tripped, which is more likely to happen in a slow race, not a fast one.
all that said, if there's one guy who may have wussed out here, it's teg. if his goal really was to win a 1500 championship, maybe this was his best tactic; but if his goal was to try to get a fast 1500 time to prepare him for future 5ks, then he failed, or he was satisfied with his 3:39 in the prelims.
that's my story and i'm sticking to it...