2014 USA 5k National Champs Are Sunday – Eight Storylines To Follow

By Chris Lotsbom, @ChrisLotsbom. Additional adds by LetsRun.com.
(c) 2014 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved

NOTE: Assistant Editor Chris Lotsbom will be in Providence to provide on-site coverage of the  CVS Health Downtown 5-K –Ed.

(18-Sep) — In advance of Sunday’s CVS Health Downtown 5-K, Race Results Weekly breaks down seven storylines going into the annual fall showcase in Providence, R.I. In its 25th year, the CVS Health Downtown 5-K will once again play host to the USA National 5-K Championships.

Molly Huddle winning the B.A.A. 5-K last April in a personal best 15:12 (photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly) Molly Huddle winning the B.A.A. 5-K last April in a personal best 15:12 (photo by Jane Monti for Race Results Weekly)

1) HOMETOWN ADVANTAGE FOR HUDDLE: Molly Huddle has been a model of consistency on the roads of Providence, the city where she lives and trains. Winning national titles in 2010, 2012, and 2013 at the CVS Health Downtown 5-K, Huddle has established her dominance at the distance.

Huddle not only has experience on her side, but she also is coming off of a supreme year of racing. In 2014, the Notre Dame alum has set personal bests from the mile through half-marathon, including a national record 14:42.64 for 5000m on the track.

In April, Huddle won the B.A.A. 5-K in a personal best of 15:12 and most recently was third at the New Balance Falmouth Road Race in 36:15. She has to be the odds-on favorite entering the race.

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Of note, the only woman to have won more U.S. 5-K national titles than Huddle is Lynn Jennings, who claimed six wins between 1990 and 1998.

2) BUMBALOUGH RETURNS: Like Huddle, reigning men’s champion Andrew Bumbalough returns to Providence seeking to retain his title. Last year, the Nike Bowerman Track Club member earned his first national title by winning in 13:45.9 ahead of Aaron Braun and Matt Tegenkamp. It will be interesting to see how Bumbalough responds to a disappointing 5000m at the IAAF Continental Cup in Morocco last weekend, where he was seventh in 14:51.36, more than a minute and 20 seconds behind winner Isiah Koech of Kenya.

Bumbalough has a season’s best of 13:13.67 on the track for 5000m; his lifetime best for 5-K on the roads (13:45.9) came at this event last year.

Editor’s Update: Bumbalough is now a scratch.

3)  NIKE OREGON PROJECT: Four athletes coached by Alberto Salazar as part of the Nike Oregon Project will take to the roads for a late season 5-K here. The decision to race a road 5-K this far into the season came because of workouts the team had aced in recent weeks at their base in Portland, Ore.

Matthew Centrowitz, Jordan Hasay, and Mary Cain are all coming off of the NYRR Fifth Avenue Mile last week, where they finished sixth, eighth, and tenth in their races, respectively.

“I’m going to rest up and finish up strong [in Providence],” Hasay told Race Results Weekly following her race in New York, pleased with the effort and excited for the upcoming competition.

Tara Erdmann is also schedule to race; her last competition came at the Falmouth Road Race, where she was tenth in 38:04.

4) INFELD AIMING FOR GOLD: According to the Race Results Weekly yearly database and respected statistics website Tilastopaja, Emily Infeld has only raced twice this year: a sixth place finish (second among Americans) at the New Balance Falmouth Road Race last month, and a fourth place showing at the Wharf to Wharf 6 Mile in July. Not racing much over the course of the summer could play into Infeld’s hands, as numerous athletes entered are coming off long, grueling summer track or road racing seasons.

Infeld does have experience in her corner: last year she finished runner-up to Huddle, crossing the line a mere 1.2 seconds behind the champion in 15:30.8. Also, she’s been training with Shalane Flanagan, a two-time champion of this event, while Flanagan prepared for the BMW Berlin Marathon.

5) CAN MECHESO MAKE IT TWO IN A ROW?: Girma Mecheso surprised some at the USA 20-K Championships (held in conjunction with the Faxon Law New Haven Road Race), out-dueled Christo Landry and Luke Puskedra on a hot, steamy, and muggy Labor Day. The win marked the first national title for the Ethiopian-born Mecheso, a graduate of Oklahoma State University. Dropping down to 5-K from the 20-K distance is drastic, but Mecheso has shown promise at shorter races: he holds a 13:34.83 personal best on the track and led a majority of the first 5-K at the AJC Peachtree Road Race on July 4.

6) DEEP FIELDS: A number of other Americans look to be in the mix come Sunday. Road race ace and proud new father Ben Bruce returns to the New England region, where he was fourth overall and the top American at the New Balance Falmouth Road Race. German Fernandez, Miles Batty, Trevor Dunbar, Diego Estrada, and Joe Stilin lead a young contingent all seeking the coveted national title and $5,000 first-place prize.

Among the women, Sara Hall and Amy Van Alstine have a knack for doing well at national championships, while Neely Spence Gracey continues her comeback from a knee injury.

Jen Rhines, Elaina Balouris, and Katie Matthews comprise a strong Boston Athletic Association team, and Meghan Peyton leads Team USA Minnesota.

Although a citizen of New Zealand, Providence College alum Laura Nagel will race in a city she knows very well, having been part of the Friars’ National Champion cross country team of a year ago.

7) LOTS OF HISTORY

This is the 25th anniversay of the race which has featured many of the worlds best distance runners over the years.

The race featured a women’s world road record on the course in 1994 when Elana Myyer of South Africa ran 15.10. That’s not even the course record as Asmae Leghzaoui, a convicted doper, of Morocco ran 15:06 in 2002. Ismail Kirui of Kenya set the men’s course record of 13:20 for the men in in 1997.

Here is a link to all of the previous winners  http://www.arrs.net/HP_HPD5.htm

Elite race coordinator James Harvey is particularly excited about the women’s race, “The women’s field in particular is excellent and should be a great race. Molly Huddle is looking for win number 4 to equal Lynn Jennings record.”

The fastest time ever clocked by an American man at a USA National 5-K Championship is 13:37, set by Tim Broe at this event in 2004. Lynn Jennings holds the fastest women’s time with her 15:24 performance at the Freihofer’s Run for Women in 1995.

The CVS Health Downtown 5-K (formerly known as the CVS Caremark Downtown 5-K) saw 3,403 finishers in 2013.

8) FREE RACE STREAM

The race is going to be streamed live via WPRI and starts at 11.15am. The men and women start at the same time and we will have a camera truck at the head of the race.

The link is http://wpri.com/sports/cvs-health-downtown-5k/

More: Full Elite Fields Can Be Found Here.

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