Running USA’s Top 10 US List of the Decade
And the #1 Moment is…
By Ryan Lamppa, Running USA wire
Over
the past decade (2001-10), U.S. distance running has produced
many highlights including world titles, Olympic and World Championship
medals, world and U.S. records as well as major marathon
victories, and this progressive resurgence, led by the return
of training groups, has made the U.S. the third best distance
running power behind Kenya and Ethiopia, a ranking that many,
or perhaps most in the sport, would have called a “pipeline
dream” in 2000 when the U.S. sent only one athlete per gender
for the Sydney Olympic Marathon. In this ten year period, there
have been a host of “best moments” by U.S. runners, and below
is my Top 10.
#10
2008
Hall Pops 2:06:17 Marathon at London – #2 U.S. Performer All-Time
At the Flora London Marathon in April against a stellar field, Ryan Hall
of Mammoth Lakes, Calif. ran another impressive marathon to finish
5th in 2:06:17, only former course and world record holder Khalid
Khannouchi has run faster (twice) as an American. In his third
marathon, the Team Running USA athlete continued his
development as he prepped for the Beijing Olympics. The top six
men broke 2:07, the first time that has ever happened at the
same marathon on the same day. Winner Martin Lel of Kenya defended
his London title with a course record 2:05:15.
#9
2007
Goucher Garners First U.S. 10,000m Medal at World Championships
At the World Championships in Osaka, Japan in late August, Kara Goucher,
29, ran a smart race under challenging conditions – warm and
humid weather as well as pushing and shoving in a tight, large
pack – to earn a surprise bronze medal in the 10,000 meters.
Over the final laps, Goucher battled Briton’s Jo Pavey and New
Zealand’s Kim Smith and the three-time NCAA champion at
Colorado produced the best kick and a less-than-two-second edge
over Pavey, 32:02.05 to 32:03.81, for the coveted hardware and a
spot on the podium. Goucher’s medal was the first for the U.S. at the
distance in eleven World Championships.
#8
2007
Hall Sets U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials Record
With seeming ease, Ryan Hall,
25, floated over the 5-loop Central Park course to become
Olympic Marathon Trials champion on November 3. His
awe-inspiring 2:09:02 performance set a Trials and USA Championship
record and against one of the best U.S. marathon fields assembled,
it was the largest men’s Trials victory margin ever: 2 minutes,
5 seconds. On the challenging course, the Stanford grad ran a
huge negative split: 1:06:17 (first half) vs. 1:02:45 (second
half), 3 minutes, 32 seconds, and the first sub-2:10 at the
Trials and USA Championship.
From
5K to 35K, Hall ran each successive 5K faster than the
previous one. His progression went: 5K – 16:51, 10K – 15:35, 15K –
15:26, 20K – 15:12, 25K – 15:05, 30K – 14:48 and 35K – 14:28. His
final 5K – where he celebrated the last 400 meters – was 14:57.
#7
2002
Drossin, De Reuck Win Silver, Bronze at World Cross plus Team Silver
At World 8K Cross Country Championships in Dublin, Ireland, Deena Drossin won the silver medal and teammate Colleen De Reuck,
the bronze medal, to lead Team USA to the silver medal. The
runner-up team placing tied the highest U.S. women’s WXC finish
since 1992 and two individual medals by U.S. women had not
occurred since before the IAAF assumed control of the event in
1973 (and has yet to happen again). This multi-medal haul
opened the eyes of many in the U.S. and world and marked an early
sign of an American distance resurgence. Two weeks later, Drossin
(now Kastor) set a world 5K road record (14:54) at the Carlsbad
5000.
#6
2010
Solinsky Smashes U.S. 10,000m Record – 26:59.60!
On Saturday, May 1, Chris Solinsky
smashed the 9-year-old U.S. 10,000 meter record with the first
sub-27 minute 10,000 clocking by an American with his historic
26:59.60 at the Payton Jordan Cardinal Invitational on the
Stanford campus. Solinsky, 25, a Wisconsin grad, pulled away from
the deep field with a commanding 1:56 final 800 meters to win
unchallenged in his debut at the distance.
(Chris Solinsky photo by Victah)
In
perhaps the greatest 10,000 on U.S. soil, two national records
(also Canada) and a collegiate record were set and eleven men
broke 28 minutes with the first eight finishers all setting PRs. For the
year, Solinsky’s time also held up as the second fastest
10,000m time in the world.
#5
2008
Flanagan Earns Olympic 10,000m Bronze Medal and AR at Beijing
At the Beijing Olympics on August 15, Shalane Flanagan
won the bronze medal in 30:22.22, shattering her own U.S.
record and equaling the best-ever U.S. women’s performance in
the event. Earlier in the week, the 2004 Olympian had suffered
from food poisoning. Flanagan’s track medal was the first by an
American male or female, at a distance longer than 800 meters,
since Lynn Jennings’ 10,000m bronze in Barcelona 1992, which was also
a U.S. record at the time. Tirunesh Dibaba (ETH) and Elvan
Abeylegesse (TUR) won the gold and silver medals with
impressive times under 30 minutes, 29:54.66 and 29:56.34,
respectively.
#4
2007
Lagat’s Historic 1500m/5000m World Title Double
In Osaka, Japan, at the World Championships, Bernard Lagat
became the first runner ever to win the 1500m/5000m double,
and only the third in the history of global championships –
Hicham el Guerrouj (2004) and Paavo Nurmi (1924) also won
Olympic doubles. In addition, Lagat, 32, a two-time Olympic
1500m medalist for Kenya, won the first gold medals at both
distances for the U.S. by one athlete.
#3
2006
Deena Does It! Sub-2:20 Win at London
On April 23, Deena Kastor
convincingly won the Flora London Marathon with a sterling
2:19:36, breaking her 2003 U.S. record (2:21:16) and making her
the 4th fastest woman all-time and the 8th woman to break 2:20 (and
first American woman). The Team Running USA athlete – who also ran
the fastest women’s marathon time of the year – maintained a
metronomic 5:20 pace throughout and split each half in 1:09:48.
Brava, Deena.
#2
2009
Keflezighi Wins 40th ING New York City Marathon
The winless drought ended in New York as Meb Keflezighi,
a two-time Olympian, became the first U.S. champion of the
storied New York City Marathon since 1982 (Alberto Salazar)
when the UCLA grad broke away in the final miles from four-time
Boston Marathon champion Robert Kipkoech Cheruiyot. Keflezighi,
34, also won his first-ever marathon and first national marathon title
(20th USA title overall) as well as $200,000; his
only-in-America performance was historic and poignant.
Post-race, Meb read the Top 10 on the Late Show with David
Letterman and shared a float ride with Miss America at the
Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade.
#1
2004
Olympic Marathon Medals for Kastor and Keflezighi
At the Athens Olympic Games in August, Meb Keflezighi and Deena Kastor
won silver and bronze marathon medals respectively. On warm
race days over a difficult point-to-point course, the dynamic duo from
Mammoth Lakes executed near perfect race strategies to earn the
first Olympic Marathon medals for the U.S. since 1976 (men) and
1984 (women). The U.S. was the only country to win more than
one Olympic Marathon medal in Athens. Their collective
achievement was the “Moment of the Decade” not only because of
its historic importance, but also because it showed the value
of group training and served to inspire and motivate other top
Americans to “train hard and dream big” which led to other great
moments such as the above. Like Frank Shorter’s Olympic Marathon
victory in Munich 1972, their double medals were a true watershed
moment for U.S. distance running.