Asbel Kiprop, Silas Kiplagat, Ayanleh Souleiman, Matt Centrowitz And Will Leer Announced For Bowerman Mile At This Summer’s Prefontaine Classic
Press Release
April 28, 2014
Eugene, Oregon – Asbel Kiprop is only 24 and already among the world’s greatest milers of all time. He leads the best field ever to run the signature event at the Prefontaine Classic.
The landmark 40th Pre Classic will be held May 30-31 at historic Hayward Field, and the final race will once again be the Bowerman Mile. Named after legendary coach Bill Bowerman, the event is annually the best in the world.
Asbel Kiprop was 19 when he won Olympic 1500 gold for Kenya at Beijing, the youngest ever in the event. A year later he ran his first of five straight sub-3:50 miles at the Pre Classic – three of those were victories, the most ever in the event. He has already been ranked No. 1 in the world five times by Track & Field News – a feat exceeded only by mile world record holders Noureddine Morceli (7) and Hicham El Guerrouj (7).
A stunning collection of talent includes one of the few to have ever beaten Kiprop in the mile, Silas Kiplagat. Kiplagat is the defending Bowerman Mile champ, edging Kiprop last year by 0.05 seconds in the closest finish in Pre Classic mile history. Kiplagat, 24 and also from Kenya, ranked No. 1 in the world in 2012 by T&FN – the only time since 2008 that Kiprop did not earn that honor.
Ayanleh Souleiman, just 21, brings a rare brilliance from Djibouti. He won gold at the recent World Indoor Championships in the 1500 and ranked No. 3 in the world last year by T&FN. He also won a bronze medal in the 800 meters at last year’s World Championships in Moscow.
More major medal winners in the loaded field include Aman Wote and Mekonnen Gebremedhin of Ethiopia and Johan Cronje of South Africa. Wote and Gebremedhin both clocked rare sub-3:50 bests at previous Pre Classics. Wote earned the silver medal at the World Indoor Championships 1500, and ran a world-leading 3:53.39 mile at the Drake Relays last Saturday. Gebremedhin garnered bronze at the 2012 World Indoor, and the unheralded Cronje earned surprise bronze in last year’s World Championships 1500 and will make his U.S. debut at Hayward Field.
The field also features a pair of prominent Americans who are no strangers to Hayward Field or famous mile races. Matthew Centrowitz and Will Leer are the last two winners of the world’s most prestigious indoor competition, the Wanamaker Mile at the Millrose Games. Centrowitz, who won an NCAA 1500 crown representing Oregon, also owns medals from the last two World Championships. Leer is a Minnesota native who blazed trails at Division III Pomona College and equaled his personal best at last year’s International Mile at the Pre Classic.
Additional racers ranked among the top 10 by T&FN also include Kenya’s Bethwel Birgen and Collins Cheboi as well as Morocco’s Mohamed Moustaoui. But mile fans will also keep an eye on 23-year-olds Henrik Ingebrigtsen of Norway and James Magut of Kenya – Ingebrigtsen is the reigning European champion and Magut won the last two editions of the Pre Classic International Mile and this year has been elevated to the Bowerman Mile.