Canada Track & Field and Cross Country News
Maureen "Mo" de St. Croix is Co-Director of the Canadian Cross Country Championships, is an athlete, coach and board member with BC Athletics, the provincial arm of Athletics Canada, serving British Columbia.
(via athleticsillustrated.com)
North Vancouver's Jessica Smith competed in the 2012 London Olympic Games in the 800m distance. She raced the 2012 BC Cross Country Championships and will be competing in the Canadian (National) Cross Country Championships. She is interviewed here post-race at BCs.
© Copyright – 2012 – Athletics Illustrated
Steve Magness writes science-based running and training articles primarily for the website The Science of Running.
Magness recently accepted a coaching position with the University of Houston, his alma mater. Previously he was an assistant coach at Nike Oregon Project, leading up to the 2012 London Olympic Games.
Magness ran in the NCAA for Rice University and the University of Houston. Currently he coaches professional runners Jackie Areson, who has run as fast as 4:12 in the 1500m and owns a 5k personal best time of 15:14. He also coaches Sara Hall and Tommy Schmitz. Schmitz owns an 800m personal best time of 1:49 and a 1500m best of 3:39.
© Copyright – 2012 – Athletics Illustrated (via athleticsillustrated.com)
University of Victoria Vikes team workout at nearby Mount Doug Park, with guest appearance by Canadian Olympian and 800m specialist Geoff Harris. Hill repeats were the order of the day of various distances.
© Copyright - 2012 - Athletics Illustrated
Hans-Joachim “Hajo” Seppelt is a freelance journalist for ARD, a nationwide German TV and radio broadcasting network located in Berlin. He is, as his bio indicates, a film author who is involved in creating features and reporting for all of the German state broadcasting institutions. At this time, he is primarily reporting for the regional WDR network with the doping editorial team (WDR in Cologne).
© Copyright – 2012 – Athletics Illustrated (via athleticsillustrated.com)
© Copyright - 2012 - Athletics Illustrated
Are athletics federations doing enough to support WADA in suspending athletes who test positive for performance enhancing drugs?
Athletics Kenya’s Chairman Isaiah Kiplagat, gave a one week ultimatum to all foreign athletics coaches working in Kenya without work permits to leave. Kiplagat claims that the foreign coaches are responsible for the latest spate of drug use allegations, most notably from German journalist Hajo Seppelt, who acted as a sport agent, and reported that performance enhancing drug use in Kenya is rampant by both Kenyans
and foreign athletes training in the country.
© Copyright – 2012 – Athletics Illustrated (via athleticsillustrated.com)
© Copyright - 2012 - Athletics Illustrated
Ben Johnson - 30 for 30
If you have spent the last twenty-five years getting over the drama and disappointment of Ben Johnson’s world record gold medal win in the 100m at the 1988 Olympic Games and subsequent disqualification and positive test, I do not suggest watching the ESPN 30 for 30 special 9.79 which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival this summer and aired on TSN this week.
Carl Lewis, who has long come off as somewhat arrogant and phony (and not exactly the best singer) shows that time has not dulled his worst attributes. Much of what was contained in the documentary was not necessarily new – the positive test by Lewis at the 1988 US Olympic Trials for a banned stimulant has long been in the public domain.
© Copyright – 2012 – Athletics Illustrated (via athleticsillustrated.com)
© Copyright - 2012 - Athletics Illustrated
Steve Magness recently accepted a coaching position with the University of Houston, his alma mater. Previously he was assistant coach at Nike Oregon Project, leading up to the 2012 London Olympic Games. He ran in the NCAA for Rice University and the University of Houston.
© Copyright - 2012 - Athletics Illustrated
Photo: (Markus Schreiber/AP)
The World Marathon Majors series is pointless and does not accomplish what it has set out to do. Most world-class marathon runners that are focused on peaking for the Olympics and World Championships and are dealing with recovery or injuries are not able to compete in enough events to earn the points required to compete for the World Marathon Majors prize purse, so they don’t bother. There typically remains a field of just a handful of East Africans that compete to the end, which is not edge-of-your-seat sporting competition to say the least.



