Russell and Lewy-Boulet Record Successful Tune-Ups
at Stanford Invitational
FOLSOM, CA (April 7, 2008) - When approximately 125
women line up for
the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team Trials - Women's Marathon in
Boston, Mass. on
Sunday, April 20, several Pacific Association/USA Track
&
Field
(PA/USATF) athletes will be among the top contenders
favored to earn a
spot on the U.S. Olympic Team. The top three finishers in
the Trials race
will qualify for the 2008 U.S. women's Olympic marathon
team going to
Beijing, China, provided each has achieved the Olympic "A"
qualification
standard of 2 hours, 37 minutes or faster. Athletes at the
Trials, which
will run the day before the 112th Boston Marathon, will
compete for
$260,000 in prize money and bonuses.
PA/USATF athletes Blake Russell (Pacific Grove, Calif.) and
Magdalena
Lewy-Boulet (Oakland, Calif.) finished fourth and fifth,
respectively, at
the 2004 U.S. Women's Olympic Marathon Trials in St. Louis
-- the
bridesmaid spots for fulfilling their Olympic dreams. Both
athletes
return to the 2008 Trials with unfinished business. They will
compete in,
perhaps, the most competitive field ever to line up for the
Trials race.
Last Friday, April 4, Russell and Lewy-Boulet had
successful final
tune-up outings for the Trials at the Stanford Invitational
track meet.
In the 10,000-meter race at Stanford, Russell placed
second in 32
minutes, 14.91 seconds. Lewy-Boulet was third in a
personal record time
of 32:33.02.
Kate O'Neill (Palo Alto, Calif.) is a relative newcomer to
PA/USATF ranks
and to the marathon distance, but she has Olympic
experience (2004) at
10,000 meters, and now has a spectacular debut marathon
on her resume.
Forty-six-year-old Linda Somers Smith (Arroyo Grande,
Calif.) is not
expected to contend for a team spot at the Trials. The 1996
Olympian,
however, will compete in the 2008 Olympic Trials having
qualified for six
U.S. Women's Olympic Marathon Trials races since its
inaugural running in
1984. Somers Smith placed 31st in the Olympic Games
marathon in Atlanta.
Russell, Lewy-Boulet, O'Neill, and Somers Smith are
among a strong
contingent of PA/USATF women who have qualified for the
Trials. Among the
181 U.S. women who have qualified, PA/USATF and USATF
Colorado each have
18 qualifiers -- tied for the most among all 57 of USATF's
geographically-based Associations. California leads all
states with 26
qualifiers.
To qualify for the Trials, women had to record a marathon
time equal to
or better than USA Track & Field's qualifying standards:
2
hours, 39
minutes flat ("A" standard, Trials travel expenses paid) or
2:47:00 ("B"
standard, travel expenses not paid). The qualifying period
for the Trials
was January 1, 2006 through March 23, 2008.
Russell, 32, ran the boldest race at the 2004 Women's
Olympic Marathon
Trials, despite the fact that it was only her second marathon.
She built
a commanding early lead and held it for almost 18 miles
before eventually
finishing fourth in 2:30:32 behind the top three (Colleen De
Reuck, Deena
Kastor, and Jen Rhines). Russell is coached by legendary
Bob Sevene
(Seaside, Calif.), who guided American standout Joan
Benoit to a gold
medal in the first-ever women's Olympic Games marathon
in Los Angeles in
1984.
Russell said the nightmare of getting passed by Rhines in
the final half
mile at the '04 Trials, and missing an Olympic berth by one
place, still
lingers. But training alone along the beautiful Monterey
Peninsula
coastline, she has had a lot of time to reconcile her
disappointment, and
plan for the future.
"I don't think anything really went wrong four years ago. I
made a few
rookie mistakes," Russell said as she described how she
ran the entire
race while taking only a couple of sips of water. "But it was
one of
those days when you feel really good and you want to go
with it."
Said Sevene: "Blake was a marathon rookie in 2004. I think
she would have
made the team if she took [water]. She went out too fast. But
she has a
lot more experience now. I'm very pleased with her recent
training."
Russell followed her 2:30:32 Trials' performance with a
2:29:10 personal
record at the 2005 Chicago Marathon (a time that puts her
among the top
15 U.S. women ever on a non-aided course). In 2006, she
picked up U.S.
national 15K and cross country long course titles. Last
February, Russell
placed 6th at the USA Cross Country Championships and
earned a spot on
the U.S. world cross country team, but she declined a trip to
the IAAF
World Cross Country Championships to focus on her
marathon trials
preparations.
Sevene, who originally hails from the Boston area, believes
that the
relatively flat Olympic Marathon Trials course in Boston
favors runners
such as Russell who have a marathoner's strength, plus
good leg speed
honed on the track. Russell's track credentials include a
very fast
31:35.25 for 10,000 meters.
The Trials' course, created specifically for the event,
contains five
loops-an initial loop of about 2.2 miles that tours historic
Boston,
followed by four loops of approximately six miles each
through Boston's
Back Bay, across the Charles River. and into Cambridge.
The race starts
and finishes near the traditional Boston Marathon finish line
on Boylston
Street.
"I think it's going to be very fast provided the weather
cooperates,"
said Sevene. "I'm going out on a limb and say it's going to
take a 2:28
(time) to make the team. I think it's going to be a wonderful
race."
In 2004, for the first time at the same Women's Olympic
Marathon Trials,
three women ran sub-2:30. Among the 2008 Trials
qualifiers, less than a
handful have ever run under 2:29: U.S. record holder Deena
Kastor
(2:19:36), Joan Benoit Samuelson (2:21:21), 2004 Trials
champion De Reuck
(2:26:35), and Marla Runyan (2:27:10). But, the history of the
Marathon
Trials demonstrates that U.S. athletes rise to the occasion
in
spectacular fashion. For example, at the 2004 women's
trials, 10 of the
top 15 finishers ran personal records.
"You can't count anybody out," said Kastor (Mammoth
Lakes, Calif.), the
2004 Olympic Games bronze medalist in the women's
marathon who is the
top-seeded competitor going into Boston. "You have to be
prepared for
anything. There's so much time for something to happen in
the marathon.
And, you can count on everybody showing up on race day to
give it their
best."
Like Boston's weather in April, it's difficult to predict how a
marathon
trials race will play out. For 34-year-old Magdalena
Lewy-Boulet that
means sticking to a tried-and-true race plan that nabbed her
an
oh-so-close fifth place at the 2004 Trials. Her coach,
well-respected
Jack Daniels, oversees her preparations.
"My motivation may be different, but the way I approach the
race is still
about the same," said the former University of California
Berkeley
All-American who is married to another Cal All-American,
Richie Boulet.
"I want to make my (almost three-year old) son, Owen,
proud. I want to
show Owen what hard work is. I'm going to run my own
race, and,
hopefully, the shape I'm in will get me on the team."
Lewy-Boulet feels that the '08 Trials field is just as
competitive, if
not more so, than four years ago. That means she will, most
likely, need
to improve upon her 2:30:50 personal record that she ran at
the last
Trials. Lewy-Boulet, however, has demonstrated that she
knows how to peak
for big races.
Kate O'Neill is a Boston-area transplant who moved to
California several
years ago and trains with Team Running USA in Mammoth
Lakes, Calif. Last
October, she made a sensational debut on the marathon
scene with a third
place 2:36:15 at an unseasonably hot LaSalle Bank
Chicago Marathon. The
27-year-old, seven-time NCAA All-American at Yale
University will have a
hometown crowd behind her in Boston. Although O'Neill's
marathon
experience is limited, her strengths make her a favored
contender. In
2004, she placed third at the USA Olympic Track &
Field
Trials at 10,000m
and competed in the Athens Olympic Games.
For some women, simply lining up on the starting line for
the 2008 U.S.
Olympic Team Trials - Women's Marathon will signify an
"Olympic" dream
come true. For PA/USATF's Shaluinn Fullove, a former track
and field and
cross country competitor at Stanford University, qualifying for
the
Trials was a remote possibility only three years ago. In the
early spring
of 2005, the 30-year-old Palo Alto, Calif. resident was
diagnosed with
thyroid cancer. After receiving a thyroidectomy and radiation
treatments,
Fullove eventually resumed serious training. On March 3,
2008 Fullove
qualified for the Trials at the Kaiser Permanente Napa
Valley Marathon,
fulfilling her dream.
Who are the PA/USATF Qualifiers?
Qual. Time Name Age Residence
2:36:15 Kate O'Neill, 27, Palo Alto
2:41:05 Linda Somers Smith, 46, Arroyo Grande
2:41:14 Christine Lundy, 37, Sausalito
2:42:35 Brooke Wells, 23, San Francisco
2:42:38 Magdalena Lewy-Boulet, 34, Oakland
2:43:31 Michelle Gallagher, 22, Daly City (now resides in
Flagstaff, AZ)
2:43:50 Giovanna Mandy, 29, Truckee
2:44:16 Lisbet Sunshine, 44, San Francisco
2:45:27 Caroline Annis, 27, San Francisco
2:45:34 Jill Boaz, 41, Los Osos
2:45:56 Midori Sperandeo, 41, Gold River (now resides in
Laguna Niguel)
2:46:03 Allison Kerr, 32, Vacaville
2:46:04 Shaluinn Fullove, 30, Palo Alto
2:46:08 Betsy Keever, 33, San Francisco
2:46:20 Jennifer Pfeifer, 36, Folsom
2:46:30 Mary Coordt, 38, Elk Grove
2:46:53 Megan Daly, 29, Menlo Park
32:31.90 Blake Russell, 32, Pacific Grove
(track)
For more information about the 2008 U.S. Olympic Team
Trials - Women's
Marathon, visit
www.usatf.org/events/2008/OlympicTrials-
Marathon-Women"
Also, the Boston Athletic Association (the Local Organizing
Committee for the Trials) has an extensive web site at
www.bostontrials2008.com.
The Pacific Association is the largest member association
of USA Track & Field (USATF). We serve northern
California and northwestern Nevada. USATF is the National
Governing Body for track and field, long distance running,
and race walking in the United States. For more information
about the Pacific Association, visit our web site at
www.pausatf.org.