As these Summer Olympics begin to wind down, and I have seen far less of them then I wish I had for a number of reasons,
I know one event will not pass me by – the men’s marathon. Even though, as I mentioned in a previous post, to catch it live I will have to be up at 3 a.m. PST, you can bet your sweet bippy I will be.
I recall writing something somewhere about the men’s
marathon in 2008 but I will be damned if I can find it in my archives. Let’s just say I was utterly convinced that
Ryan Hall was going to win. Obviously my opinion was shaped by a little bit of
homerism but I also laid out a well-thought reasoning as well. As you know, I
was way off as Sammy Wanjiru crushed the Olympic Marathon record in stifling
Beijing heat and humidity.
So who am I will predicting will podium this year? We have
already seen East African dominance fall by the way side in some of the earlier
track meets this Olympics. Galen Rupp, with his silver in the 10,000 meter gave
the United States its first medal in that event since about 350 BC. (I will
have to remember to fact check that.) Then Leo Manzano won a silver medal in
the men’s 1,500-meter final, running the fastest time ever by a U.S. athlete at
the Games. The 5,000m won’t be run until Saturday so it is hard to tell exactly
if this trend will continue but counting Bernard Lagat or Lopez Lomong out
would not be wise.
Now, granted a small shift in the medal count in some of the
shorter long distance events does not have much bearing on the marathon.
Additionally, East African dominance at the Marathon level has really
solidified itself in the past four years since Beijing, even with the untimely
death of Sammy Wanjiru. I am also far
less convinced of the American ability to medal at a these games. Yet for some reason, I think we may have a
better shot then we did four years ago.
I have been fortunate enough to have a conversation or two
with Ryan Hall, saw Meb at a book signing and I have had one tweet with Abdi
Abdirahman. So obviously I am super
tight with them all. But knowing anything about these men individually is not
why I feel this is our best chance to snag a top spot since Frank Shorter got
the gold in Munich 4 years before I was born.
In order to compete well on this stage, competitors who are
usually out to best each other, must work together even though they wish to
win. I recently read an article by Kenny
Moore about those Munich Games and it became even more clear how running alone
will get you basically nowhere (Joan Benoit Samuelson’s epic 1984Olympic games
win notwithstanding). What I have witnessed from the three US finalists is a
tight kinship. I have seen how they really do thrive on working with each
other. And while I am less doe-eyed about their chances as I was four years
ago, I still think we are in for a major surprise on Sunday.
Predictions:
Gold: Wilson Kipsang Kiprotich (Kenya)
Silver: Ryan Hall (USA)
Bronze: Abel Kirui (Kenya)
I also think the winning time will be in the 2:07s with the
race for bronze being tightly contested by Ayele Abshero from Ethiopia.
Either way, though my eyes might be tired at 3 AM, I will
be wide awake.
Well, hoping against hope you're right. Marathon start in Houston is a most civilized 5am...Steve Shepard
ReplyDelete