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Day One Session 2 Recap - DyeStat

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DyeStat.com   Jul 23rd 2014, 6:06pm
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Ecuador's Tenorio doesn't waste 2nd chance

 

By Doug Binder, DyeStat Editor

 

Far from home, Angel Tenorio knew she had been wronged in the first round of the women's 100 meters at World Juniors on Tuesday in Eugene.

 

She was disqualified for a false start. And the replays showed that she did nothing wrong. 

 

Tenorio was distraught. She is a medal contender in her event, one of the greatest female sprinters in South America -- perhaps on her way to being the best ever.

 

Hours later, there was a knock at her door. A protest filed on her behalf had been upheld. She could run again, at the end of the night, by herself. 

 

The crowd at Hayward Field stayed, through an electric 10,000 meters final, and watched the sprinter they all knew had been wronged. 

 

Tenorio sped to 11.27 by herself -- she needed something faster than 11.77 to advance -- and the crowd at Hayward Field rallied around her.

 

"The crowd is incredible," Tenorio said through a Spanish-language interpreter. "What I felt here I've never felt anywhere else. They supported me and I'm not an American athlete. I had the undivided support of the crowd."

 

The second session Tuesday brought the first medals. Ugandan Joshua Kiprui Cheptegeiwas able to get away from two Kenyan pursuers and win the 10,000 meters while an orchestra played on the infield and a crowd of more than 6,000 watched.

 

For the American team, Kaylin Whitney and Ariana Washington safely moved through the first round of the 100 meters. Whitney was slow out of the blocks and ran 11.49, but that was more than enough to move on. Washington, also, seemed to be holding something back. 

 

In the multis, the U.S. took a hit when Shaina Burns was disqualified for stepping on the line on the curve of the 200 meters. Regrettably, Burns didn't know she had made a mistake until she stopped to talk with reporters. Meanwhile, Ashlee Moore moved into seventh position. 

 

In the decathlon, Harrison Williams and Gabriel Moore sit 10th and 12th after the first day.


- MORNING SESSION -

Day One Morning Session at World Juniors

 

By Doug Binder, DyeStat Editor


The world is a very big place with a lot of talent and diversity. On the first day of IAAF World Juniors on Tuesday at Hayward Field, some of America's best teenagers got a taste of high-quality international track and field the likes of which they hadn't seen before.


Grant Fisher, Foot Locker champion and adidas Dream Mile winner, who will be a senior at Grand Blanc HS in Michigan, was disappointed after finishing ninth in the 1,500 meters despite a PR 3:49.62. He was jostled repeatedly and ultimately was not able to respond when the back half of the back passed him with 600 to go. The winner of his heat ran 3:41.35.


But Fisher is 17 and is two years younger than most of the runners in his event. Patrick Joseph, a collegian from Virginia Tech, ran 3:49.00 and didn't qualify either.


"Going in I knew that a lot of these guys had sub-four minute (mile) equivalent PRs and fast times, but every race I go into I go in trying to win," Fisher said. "I'm happy to be here representing the U.S.A and to compete against all these different countries it's really an honor. It's humbling to think that you're pretty good in the U.S. but when you come to these meets it definitely let's you know where the rest of the world is at."


Raevyn Rogers, New Balance Nationals Outdoor champion, does not lack for confidence. But 300 meters into her 800-meter prelim she was tripped up from behind, a startling and rhythm-rocking bump that she was not able to recover from.


Top sprinters Trayvon Bromell and Kendal Williams, and pole vaulters Desiree Freier andBonnie Draxler, and Georgetown freshman Sabrina Southerland (800), are safely through after their first appearances at World Juniors. So are Misana Viltz (13.59) and Nick Anderson (13.61) in the men's 110 hurdles.


Rebekah Wales and Megan Glassmann were both eliminated in qualifying of the women's javelin.


The competition in Eugene is a considrable step up from last year's World Youth Championships, where the age limit is 17.


Heptathlete Ashlee Moore ran a sparkling 13.59 in the 100 hurdles to open the meet but then shuffled back to fifth place after a 5-8 high jump. Shaina Woods is 17th after two events. Decathletes Harrison Williams and Gabriel Moore stand 16th and 17th after three events.


For all of Eugene's history of hosting major track meets, the 2014 World Juniors marks the first time that "TrackTown, USA" has hosted a global championship. And the local organizing committee's success this week could go a long way toward Eugene's hope to secure the 2019 World Championships. (The final presentations for that bid happen this fall).


The gathering this week in Eugene comes after a successful global World Cup in Brazil and amid geo-political upheaval. Donetsk, Ukraine, site of last year's World Youth Championships, is less than 50 miles from the downed MH-17 Flight.


Track and field, like soccer, is an expression that is universally understood.




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