USA Distance Project
Athlete Journals
February 10, 2009:Today we post an update and a bit of philosophy from Team USA Minnesota athlete Carrie Tollefson, who is eager to race after a long layoff due to injury. She writes about a professional runner's need to keep "other hats" close at hand to wear while injured and to build a secure future. Good advice for anyone! |
What will it take to turn distance running into a major American sport? The short answer: A group of top-level young athletes with the star power to give the sport more mass appeal.
That’s the idea behind the USA Distance Project, a newly launched initiative of USA Track & Field to increase the ranks of competitive long distance runners with a network of camps to provide nurturing training environments. The object: to produce more world-class marathoners and distance stars.
There are three such camps: one in California, one in Minnesota, and one in North Carolina. Each has selected teams of post-collegiate athletes, based on their past accomplishments and their future potential. The oldest of the camps, established in 2000 in Mammoth Lakes, California, has already produced two Olympic medallists, Meb Keflezighi, the men’s silver medalist in the 2004 Olympics and Deena Kastor, who won the women’s Olympic marathon bronze medal that year. Deena has also won the London and Chicago Marathons.
The other camps are Team USA Minnesota, based in the Twin Cities, and the ZAP Fitness Center, based in the mountains of North Carolina. New York Road Runners is the presenting sponsor of the USA Distance Project.
You can follow the progress of the USA Distance Project’s stars and stars-to-be by reading journals kept by the athletes and carried exclusively on New York Road Runners’ websites: nyrr.org, fast-women.com, and mensracing.com. These entries offer insights into the personalities, passions, and day-to-day experiences of USA Distance Project athletes—our current and future stars. Team Running USA has submitted their introductory entries, which you will find on the left. Let us know what you think. Your feedback will encourage the runners to continue to share their lives.
USA Distance Project athlete Deena Kastor won the 2006 London Flora Marathon in April. Photo Courtesy of PhotoRun.
Latest Journal Entries
02/10/09
01/29/09
01/29/09
01/26/09
01/26/09
01/23/09
01/23/09
01/22/09
ZAP Fitness Center Journals
01/22/09
11/13/08
01/20/09
01/20/09
11/14/08
01/16/09
01/16/09
10/02/08
01/23/09
03/25/08
Team USA Minnesota Journals
01/22/09
01/29/09
01/26/09
12/02/08
11/25/08
12/17/08
01/23/09
1/7/09
01/26/09
01/29/09
02/10/09
12/09/08
12/09/08
Team Running USA Journals
12/15/08
11/17/08
12/15/08
12/29/08
1/8/09
01/20/09
12/09/08
12/17/08
11/11/08
12/29/08
12/29/08
