GENZEBE DIBABA EYEING FAST TIMES, POTENTIAL WORLD RECORD AT PREFONTAINE CLASSIC
By Chris Lotsbom, @ChrisLotsbom
EUGENE,
Ore. (29-May) — When Genzebe Dibaba takes to the track here at Hayward
Field for the 5000m at the 41st Prefontaine Classic tomorrow, the
24-year-old will have one focus: run much faster than her personal best
of 14:28.88, and hopefully come close to the world record of 14:11.15.
For the Ethiopian star and sister of current 5000m world record holder
Tirunesh Dibaba, the thought of adding the title of World Record Holder
to her already stellar resume brings a discreet smile and confident
stare. Yes, it is a very tall task. But Dibaba is up for the monumental
challenge.
“I cannot say the exact second or microsecond [I
will run], but my aim is to run my personal best whatever the time will
be. I have my own time [in mind], my body will tell me I can run the
fastest time ever for 5000m,” said Dibaba through a translator. When
asked a follow-up question about if she was hinting at bettering the
current world record, her eyes popped with a gaze of resolute
determination.
“This is my dream, breaking the world record is
the dream for my lifetime,” she said, adding that she believes it is
within grasp, perhaps tomorrow or at another IAAF Diamond League
meeting sometime soon.
At the Prefontaine Classic, Dibaba will
be up against one of the strongest 5000m fields in history. Dibaba owns
a pair of gold medals from the IAAF World Indoor Championships, and set
an indoor 5000m world record of 14:18.86 last February in Stockholm.
While her credentials are noteworthy, she will be accompanied by some
very fast and distinguished athletes hailing from East Africa. The
Kenyan contingent includes Olympic silver medalists Sally Kipyego and
Vivian Cheruiyot, former NCAA champion Betsy Saina, and 2012 World
Junior champion at 1500m Faith Kipyegon. Viola Kibiwot and Irene
Cheptai are also in the field. Fellow Ethiopians set to toe the line
include reigning World Junior champion Alemitu Haroye and Sentayehu
Ejigu; the latter holds a personal best of 14:28.39.
Of course,
not to be forgotten in the shuffle is American record holder Molly
Huddle, who clocked a time of 14:42.64 last year and ran an American
record 14:50 on the roads at last month’s B.A.A. 5-K.
With so
many top-notch athletes, a fast time is all but guaranteed. The meet
record stands at 14:33.96 set by Cheruiyot in 2011, while the IAAF
Diamond League record and current world leading mark is a surprising
14:14.32 run by Ethiopian Almaz Ayana on May 17, in Shanghai.
Ayana’s
recent time is motivation for Dibaba. Not only is she driven by her
competitors, the wiry Ethiopian is fueled by an intrinsic fire to run
faster every time she steps on the track. She strongly believes that
she’s in far better shape than her 14:28.88 personal best indicates,
and does not count out her sister’s world record mark.
If
recent performance is any indication, Dibaba’s 14:48 win at the
Carlsbad 5000 road race last month is a solid sign. There she came
within two seconds of Meseret Defar’s 5K world record for the distance
(14:46).
“The challenges are big, of course all the top 5000m
runners are here competing together. But whatever it is, I’ve prepared
myself in a good way, and I have my own plan to run as fast as
possible,” she said.
Speaking to reporters, Dibaba is all
business. While some of the other athletes in attendance smile and
converse freely with reporters, Dibaba stays focused, eyes straight
ahead and voice only a tad louder than a whisper. She will not let the
slightest distraction take away from her goal of performing on the
track.
Though her outward appearance may not have showed it,
Dibaba’s answers to questions hinted at a giddy excitement ahead of
tomorrow’s race. Aware of the meet’s history and lore, she reference
her sister’s tradition of racing well in Track Town USA. Tirunesh
earned three wins in her last three races at the Prefontaine Classic: a
5000m victory in 2013 (14:42.01); 10,000m win in 2012 (30:24.39); and
5000m triumph in 2010 (14:34.07).
“Being here is very important
for me. It’s my first time of course, and the weather is good, not cold
and not too warm, very comfortable, and I’m feeling very very good and
very competitive,” she said. “I have a good feeling for Eugene because
my sister has run fast here and it is a track in which the 5000m
runners run very fast times. That is why I am so excited to run here,
and hopefully run a better time here.”
Having never raced at
the Prefontaine Classic could be both an advantage and disadvantage for
Dibaba, said American miler Jenny Simpson. The 2011 World Champion at
1500m said that experience is valuable here, especially knowing that
there will be a shot of adrenaline when stepping onto the track in
front of a boisterous, capacity crowd. Yet as Simpson displayed in her
first time racing here in 2009, inexperience could also be a blessing
in disguise: competing in her University of Colorado kit, Simpson took
second in the 1500m, setting an NCAA record of 3:59.90 when only
anticipating a time in the 4:04 range.
“You don’t get bogged
down with the pressure and importance of the moment or the meet. Do I
think it’s an advantage, I don’t know,” Simpson told Race Results
Weekly. “Someone like her who has [raced all over the world], I think
this is part of the rhythm of her life. So I don’t know if it’s
necessarily an advantage, but that being said, I’m here and I know tons
of my family and friends are going to be watching on NBC, and this is
my first race of the season. As an American, this is one of the few
domestic meets I’ll run, and there is an element of pressure there
[competing on home soil] that doesn’t exist for an athlete in her
situation. Maybe I’m a bit in denial that there is an advantage for
her!”
After 12 laps tomorrow, Dibaba will race down the
homestretch in front of a packed West grandstand, a time of 14 minutes
and change likely reading on the clock. She’s competed in world
championships and the Olympic Games, but running at Hayward Field is
something special.
“All my possibilities will be in this race
too. Hopefully in the very near future I can break the world record,”
she said, again emphasizing the near future. Putting her expectations
in check, though, she continued: “The most important thing is not
worrying about the world record. It will be done in the near future.
The only thing I don’t have is a world champion and Olympic champion
[medal] so my big, big target is to win this as sport’s champion in the
Olympic Games. That is my big target.”
PHOTO: Genzebe Dibaba of Ethiopia in advance of the 2015 Prefontaine Classic
You must be logged in to post a comment.