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วันเสาร์ที่ 14 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

National Indoor Middle distance Usa High School Track Records - What it Takes to Be the Best

After receiving my 2009 All-Time World Indoor List of the records and best performances compiled by Ed Gordon, I asked myself, "What are the best United States high school middle length indoor records?"

This inquire popped into my mind because I had just completed an description on the 2009 Simplot Games, the premiere high school indoor meet in the West, and one of the top gatherings of prep talent in the nation.

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Gordon's 221-page book is an foreseen, variety of every world indoor description with an full, listing of best times following the world-record performances. This sort of publication is a gold mine of data for a someone like me, who just happens to be a member of the Track and Field Writers of America (Tafwa).

Having been a track fan, follower and participant for more than 58 years, reading the records brought back some great memories for me. Even the high school list is too long to publish all of the records in Gordon's compilation, so I focused on the middle length events because that is my area of knowledge and expertise.

Two factors should be carefully in sharing these impressive high school performances with you. First, there are very few indoor competitions compared to outdoor competitions, so there are a lot fewer opportunities to break records. Second, indoor tracks can vary from an old time 11-lap track made up of cinders like I used to run on, and a modern 8-lap, 200-meter track made up of banked-boards or an artificial, blend surface. That said, here are the athletes whose stars are still shining:

First is Alan Webb, who competed for South Lakes High School in Reston, Va. Webb holds the indoor records in three events-the 1000-Meter in 2:23.68, the 1500-Meter in 3:43.27 and the Mile in 3:59.86, all set in 2001. The 1500 description was set enroute to the Mile record. Running a sub-4 microscopic mile as a prep runner is no mean task, and doing it indoors is even more difficult.

Before he graduated from high school, Webb would also set the national prep description in the outdoor Mile (3:53.43) and outdoor 1500 Meter (3:38.26). Ultimately, he would set the American description in the outdoor Mile (3:46.91) in 2007.

Another running legend, Gerry Lindgren of Rogers High School in Spokane, Wa, holds two of the records-the 3000 Meter in 8:06.3 and the 2 Mile in 8:40.0, both set in the same race in 1964, 45 years ago and never bested the best of the best since. After graduating from high school in 1964, Lindgren would gain worldwide consideration by beating two seasoned Russian runners to win the 10,000-Meter event in the Us-Ussr Track Meet in Los Angeles.

While running for Washington State University, Lindgren would win 11 Ncaa championships and to this day remains only 1 of 2 runners to ever beat Steve Prefontaine in an Ncaa Championship, winning the 1969 Ncaa Cross-Country individual title when Prefontaine complete 3rd.

Lindgren would finally share the world 6-Mile description (27:11.6) with Billy Mills, the 1964 Olympic 10,000-Meter Champion and Gold-Medal winner.

Dave Merrick of Lincoln-Way High School in New Lenox, Il set the 3-Mile description by running 13:37.0 in 1971. Brad Hudson of South Eugene (Or) High School set the 5,000-Meter description with a 14:29.28 in 1971. To of course appreciate Merrick's indoor record, you only need to know that he ran back-to-back-to-back miles at a 4:32 pace; that is a lot of laps on a small track.

Two other records are of note. Michael Granville of Bell Gardens (Ca) High School ran 1:50.55 in the 800 Meter in 1995, and Greg Gibson of Connell (Wa) High School ran 2:10.1 for the 1,000 Yard in 1972.

Among the girls' records, no name shines brighter than Mary Decker of Orange (Ca) High School. Decker still holds the 800 Meter (2:01.8) and 880-Yard (2:02.4) records set in the same race in 1974. Those two indoor marks were world records at the time; she also set the 1,000-Meter world description (2:26.7) that same year as a prep runner.

Decker (now Mary Decker Slaney) was very popular, very talented and a fierce competitor on the track. Decker would go on to set 36 national records and 17 world records. She is the only American runner, man or woman, to hold all American records from 800 to 10,000-meters at the same time.

Decker still holds the American records for 800 Meters, 1,500 Meters, 1 Mile, 2,000 Meters and 3,000 Meters.

Another high school indoor record-holder who would come to be even more famed was Lynn Jennings of Bromfield High School in Harvard, Ma. Jennings set the 1,500-Meter mark by running 4:18.9 in 1978.

Jennings would go on to win 3 World Cross-Country Championships, 9 U. S. National Cross-Country Championships, and come to be the bronze medalist in the 10,000 Meters at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona, Spain. Her Olympic time (31:19.89) in the 10,000 Meters set an American record. Her American road-race description for the 10,000 (31:06) still stands.

Melody Fairchild of Boulder (Co) High School holds two national indoor high school records-the 3,000 Meter in 9:17.7 and the 2 Mile in 9:55.92, both set in the same race in 1992. She would go on to come to be a repeat Foot Locker National High School Cross-Country Champion and still remains the policy description holder. Fairchild was the first high school girl to break 10 minutes for 2 Miles.

Other indoor girl records were set by:

Diana Richburg of Lansingburgh High School in Troy, Ny in the 1,000 Yard-2:26.3.

Sarah Bowman of Fauquier High School in Warrenton, Va in the 1,000 Meter-2:43.40.

Debbie Heald of Neff High School in Miranda, Ca in the Mile-4:38.5.

Cathy Schiro of Dover (Nh) High School in the 3 Mile-16:20.9.

Brianna Jackucewicz of Howell North High School in Farmingdale, Nj in the 5,000 Meter-16:43.02.

Copyright © 2009 Ed Bagley

National Indoor Middle distance Usa High School Track Records - What it Takes to Be the Best

วันอังคารที่ 10 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Lord of the Arabian Skies

Dubai is a celebrated, rich and sublime land. So is Burj Al Arab, the world's tallest and most lavish hotel on its soil. Both are unparalleled leaders in their own spheres. If Dubai is the monarch of free-trade and infrastructure in the new millennium, then so is Burj Al Arab the lord of hotel industry. They both are unconquered celebrities. One provides the entire world an chance to be successful. While the other, one of the best architectural wonders of all times, displays its grandeur and artistry at the Gulf sea coast.

Measuring 321 m above the seabed, where it was constructed on a small man-made island, the hotel is arguably a very immense structure. The bellowing-sail that it looks like as was the brainchild of the Uk based construction giant, Ws Atkins, who are well known for taking up similar feats elsewhere in the world. They have been actively providing planning, designing, engineering, scheme supervision and consulting services since 1938, when Sir William Atkins had laid their foundation. Burj Al Arab is one of the most ambitious projects they have undertaken until now.

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If you look from the hotel supervision viewpoint, running Burj Al Arab is a daunting task. immense manpower and planning are required to look after the lavishly built 202 lavish hotel rooms on 60 floors. These are no lowly dwellings anyway. They are a part of one of the best hotel accommodations made ready ever. If you were to fly in from a western location such as the Usa, it won't be a pleasing taste at first, stepping out in the heat of Dubai. However, driving over the sandy landscape and seeing at the magnificence of Burj Al Arab from your Rolls Royce is enhancing. The romance of traveling starts making beats from hereon.

Inside the hotel, you will taste an unbound colourfulness phenomenal you. There is so much of gold splattered all around, that you might begin believing Dubai was the sole owner of all the gold artifacts on earth. They have a caring staff seeing after each of your needs from the occasion you have checked in there, which indicates the high standards of assistance they are seeing forward to offer. There are isolate check-in counters on each of those 60 lavish floors, thus providing their customers with unparalleled freedom.

And these living spaces are not just like what you will find at any other five or even six star hotels. The smallest one occupies an area of 169 quadrate metres (1,819 quadrate feet), and the largest one covers 780 quadrate metres (8,396 quadrate feet). The cost of staying in these heavenly suits is equally staggering. You will need to cough out anything from K to over K per night. Still more expensive are the Royal Suites, which cost you 28K per night. The total charge in making of the hotel was never made group by the owners. It has remained a guarded underground until this date.

Burj Al Arab is without doubt the lord of the Arabian skies, and one of the best attraction in this part of the world for the travellers to experience. It also symbolizes Dubai's quest for more wealth and advancement. The quest that the face world would love to be part of. Also underground under is Dubai's desire of being an admired host. A host who could be seen draped in ethnic Arabian values and western influences, both at the same time. From commoners to celebrities, all have experienced this great fusion of cultural diversities. Hope you also get to have a glance of the same in the very near future.

Lord of the Arabian Skies