Two-time Olympic silver medalist Adam Nelson, two-time
U.S. outdoor champion and 2004 Olympic fourth-place
finisher Jamie Nieto, and Olympic finalist Brenda Taylor will
speak to kids at Roxbury's Tobin Community Center at 2:30
p.m. on Friday, February 25 as part of USA Track & Field's
new "Be A Champion" program. The trio will address
healthy lifestyles, keeping active, and living with integrity.
They also will answer questions from the students and lead
them in reciting the "Be A Champion" pledge.
The school visit will provide a photo and one-on-one
interview opportunity for local press in advance of the USA
Indoor Track & Field Championships, the final stop on USA
Track & Field's Indoor Visa Championship Series, held
Friday through Sunday at the Reggie Lewis Track & Athletic
Center in Roxbury.
A major initiative by USA Track & Field and the American
College of Sports Medicine, "Be A Champion" facilitates
direct interaction between Olympic medalists and
middle-school aged children around the country, in order to
positively impact their lifestyles and decision-making.
A two-time Olympic and world outdoor championship silver
medalist, Adam Nelson is in the driver's seat to win the title
of Visa Champion and the accompanying $25,000 cash
prize if we wins the 2005 USA indoor title. Since 2000 he
has been the most consistently successful of Team USA's
impressive shot put corps, winning four U.S. outdoor titles,
two indoor titles, the Olympic silver medal in 2000 and 2004,
world outdoor silver in 2001 and 2003, 2001 world indoor
silver medal and the 2001 Goodwill Games gold medal. An
outspoken supporter of good nutrition and the fight against
drugs in sport, Nelson is expanding his own community
outreach in those areas.
Jamie Nieto has been the most successful American high
jumper of the last two years, winning the 2003 and 2004
USA outdoor titles as well as the 2004 USA indoor crown
and the 2003 Pan Am Games silver medal. The #1-ranked
American in 2003 and 2004, Nieto won the Olympic Trials
and went on to place fourth at the Olympic Games, his
height of 2.34 meter/7 feet 8 inches matching the height of
the second- and third-place finishers.
USA Track & Field's 2005 Visa Humanitarian Athlete of the
Year, Brenda Taylor is accomplished on and off the track.
She enjoyed a big year on the track in 2004, improving her
personal best in the 400m hurdles by more than 2 seconds
to 53.36, placing second at the 2004 U.S. Olympic Trials
and taking seventh at the Olympic Games in Athens. Off the
track, the 2001 Harvard graduate and NCAA champion
made youth outreach a mission, working with more than
1,000 kids ages 7 through 18 as part of her "No Obstacles"
program to teach kids how to set and achieve their goals.
Taylor also works with local athletic teams to send the
message that academic and athletic success go
hand-in-hand, helping youth athletes to apply successful
training strategies to academics.
For full athlete bios of Nelson, Nieto and Taylor, visit
www.usatf.org
THE MEDIA ARE INVITED TO ATTEND THIS UNIQUE
EVENT.
Who: USA Track & Field Olympians Adam Nelson, Jamie
Nieto and Brenda Taylor
What: USA Track & Field "Be A Champion" school visit
When: Friday, Feb. 25 @2:30 p.m.
Where: Tobin Community Center, 1481 Tremont Street,
Roxbury. (617) 635-5216
For more information on Be A Champion, visit:
http://www.usatf.org/news/view
For credentialing information on Friday's school visit, contact
Jill Geer, USATF Director of Communications:
508-605-0595; jill.geer@usatf.org