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©
2003 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Metcalf
seventh in Masters race
Tate
Metcalf, owner/manager of Sisters Athletic Club, decided three months ago
that at age 35 it was time to put his body to the test on the track again.
So he registered for the 800
meters at the U.S.A. National Masters Track and Field Championships held
August 4-9 at Hayward Field on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene,
and began training.
The results were downright
impressive for the fitness professional, who is also an assistant track
coach at Mountain View High School in Bend. Despite not racing since 2000,
Metcalf made the finals and placed seventh in a time of 2:03.7 in the
35-39 year old age group.
"I met all my goals, foremost
of which was to actually toe the line in the preliminaries," he said.
Metcalf, who coached two-time
4A girls 800-meter champion Emily McMahon, literally had to practice what
he preaches in order to prepare himself for the meet.
"It was weird being back on
the track as a competitor," he said. "Given my schedule this spring and
the time frame I was operating under, I felt ready physically, but I really
had a hard time mentally."
With no qualifying times with
which to size up the opposition, Metcalf faced a lot of uncertainty in
the preliminaries on Thursday.
"I was in the first heat,
so I had no idea how anyone in the age group would do," he said.
"I wanted to go as slow as
possible to make the finals, but I didn't know what I could get away with."
As it turned out, he ran 2:07
to place fourth in the heat and qualify for the Saturday final.
"My strategy in the finals
was to be as aggressive as possible, so I went out real hard," said Metcalf.
"After 400 meters I was in fourth or fifth and felt pretty good, expecting
someone to fall off the pace."
Everyone finished strong and
Metcalf ended up in seventh place.
"It turned out to be a very
talented field," he said. "If I had been in the 30-34 age group, I would
have finished third."
The winner, David Nash, ran
an exemplary time of 1:55.8, as four men broke two minutes.
The meet featured more than
3,000 athletes from throughout the United States. In Metcalf's race alone
competitors hailed from New York, California, Utah, Indiana, Iowa and
Oregon.
"All of us still think we're
young, so it was a good goal to see if I could still run fast," he said.
Metcalf enjoyed the varied
ages of the competitors involved in the meet.
"It was cool to see 70 and
80 year olds still competing in their age groups," he said.
"It makes me want to keep
at it." |
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