Allyson Felix, Lauryn Williams and Laura Roesler help bridge track's credibility gap
The two sprinters who submit to frequent doping tests and the 16-year-old middle-distance runner are just what track and field needs at Olympic trials.
EUGENE, Ore.--If the U.S. Olympic track team for the Beijing Games is composed of athletes as flat-out fast as Marshevet Hooker, as natural and unspoiled as 16-year-old Laura Roesler and as upstandingly honest as Allyson Felix and Lauryn Williams, maybe there's hope for a sport that has seemed intent on destroying itself through a never-ending series of drug scandals.
Hooker, Felix and Williams are sprinters, all with NCAA or world or Olympic medals in their trophy cases. They won the crowd's admiration Friday because they're so powerful and accomplished -- and because they're rebuilding the credibility the sport lost the last decade while drug cheats and chemistry dominated the conversation.
Felix and Williams deserve special plaudits for voluntarily participating in a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency program that subjects them to an extraordinary number of drug tests so they can prove they're clean.
"I was worried at first they were taking too much blood," Williams said, "but I've gotten used to it. It doesn't affect my training."
Roesler, barely 16 and running in a pink tank top she bought at Target because "that's all I really have," won the crowd's heart with a last-gasp push that got her to the next round of the women's 800.
Her hair in French braids and her nails painted hot pink, she gutted out her preliminary heat with the confidence of a veteran, finishing in 2 minutes 4.03 seconds and winning a place in today's semifinals.
A junior-to-be at Fargo South High in Fargo, N.D., she idolized "pretty much all of" her competitors.
"It's awesome to be here and get to see them live," she said.
She gets to race with them again, and even if she does not win, if her journey ends today, she has already won so much -- and given optimism to those who follow the sport.
So did Hooker, who ran a world-leading but wind-aided time of 10.76 seconds Friday to win her second-round heat in the women's 100-meter dash.
She did it despite a stutter-step out of the unfamiliar starting blocks and despite having had barely two hours' rest since winning her preliminary-round heat, in which she excited a track-savvy crowd at jammed Hayward Field by running a 10.94.
After each round, the 23-year-old's smile was as big as the margin by which she led a formidable field -- as big as her home state of Texas, where both of her parents played college basketball and she played basketball before she began focusing on track.
Asked what she could do with a legal wind, she laughed.
"There's no telling. Only God knows," said Hooker, who had a tailwind of 3.4 meters per second to speed her along.
"I'm happy with it, but that wasn't the final. There are two rounds to go."
Those two rounds that promise to be spectacular, perhaps leaving a world or Olympic medalist out of the top three spots and off the Beijing team.
Although Hooker had the tailwind, her strength and stamina appeared purely natural.
"She's fast. Real fast," said Torri Edwards of Los Angeles, who won her first two heats in 11.16 and 10.85.
"Hopefully, she's tired by the time the final comes."
Eight of the 16 women who advanced to today's semifinals ran faster than 11 seconds. Among them was Edwards, who finished second in the 100 at the 2004 Olympic trials but was disqualified from the Athens team after she tested positive for a banned stimulant.
Hooker, Felix and Williams are sprinters, all with NCAA or world or Olympic medals in their trophy cases. They won the crowd's admiration Friday because they're so powerful and accomplished -- and because they're rebuilding the credibility the sport lost the last decade while drug cheats and chemistry dominated the conversation.
Felix and Williams deserve special plaudits for voluntarily participating in a U.S. Anti-Doping Agency program that subjects them to an extraordinary number of drug tests so they can prove they're clean.
"I was worried at first they were taking too much blood," Williams said, "but I've gotten used to it. It doesn't affect my training."
Roesler, barely 16 and running in a pink tank top she bought at Target because "that's all I really have," won the crowd's heart with a last-gasp push that got her to the next round of the women's 800.
Her hair in French braids and her nails painted hot pink, she gutted out her preliminary heat with the confidence of a veteran, finishing in 2 minutes 4.03 seconds and winning a place in today's semifinals.
A junior-to-be at Fargo South High in Fargo, N.D., she idolized "pretty much all of" her competitors.
"It's awesome to be here and get to see them live," she said.
She gets to race with them again, and even if she does not win, if her journey ends today, she has already won so much -- and given optimism to those who follow the sport.
So did Hooker, who ran a world-leading but wind-aided time of 10.76 seconds Friday to win her second-round heat in the women's 100-meter dash.
She did it despite a stutter-step out of the unfamiliar starting blocks and despite having had barely two hours' rest since winning her preliminary-round heat, in which she excited a track-savvy crowd at jammed Hayward Field by running a 10.94.
After each round, the 23-year-old's smile was as big as the margin by which she led a formidable field -- as big as her home state of Texas, where both of her parents played college basketball and she played basketball before she began focusing on track.
Asked what she could do with a legal wind, she laughed.
"There's no telling. Only God knows," said Hooker, who had a tailwind of 3.4 meters per second to speed her along.
"I'm happy with it, but that wasn't the final. There are two rounds to go."
Those two rounds that promise to be spectacular, perhaps leaving a world or Olympic medalist out of the top three spots and off the Beijing team.
Although Hooker had the tailwind, her strength and stamina appeared purely natural.
"She's fast. Real fast," said Torri Edwards of Los Angeles, who won her first two heats in 11.16 and 10.85.
"Hopefully, she's tired by the time the final comes."
Eight of the 16 women who advanced to today's semifinals ran faster than 11 seconds. Among them was Edwards, who finished second in the 100 at the 2004 Olympic trials but was disqualified from the Athens team after she tested positive for a banned stimulant.
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