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Happy Holidays – NoSome Days Off!
The entire sport of athletics was out-of-office this week, which means the holidays are also the quietest part of the CITIUS MAG calendar. While many pro athletes are spending a rare moment at home with their families, the committed amateur is using this hobby as an excuse to grab an hour of respite.
For both camps, this is a good time of year to reflect. This is the first ‘normal’ Christmas that I have been able to enjoy since 2019 and I have fully leaned in, by overindulging in every holiday vice. But still, at the beginning of the year, I set the made-up goal of averaging 7 miles a day and barring disaster, I will achieve that.
Now that it’s about time to set some new New Year’s resolutions, I’m going to continue preaching sustainability – a little bit is better than nothing at all. Going to the gym for an hour lift can be intimidating. If we don’t have time to do the whole thing then we procrastinate until we don’t go at all. It’s better to do 25 push-ups and a few bodyweight squats than nothing. That’s at least how I’ve stayed in good enough shape to write a weekly newsletter. Happy goal-setting!
Year In Review – CITIUS MAG Staff Picks
This was a good year to cover track and field. Although CITIUS MAG was founded in 2017 as a blog, it only really started one year ago when Chris left his post at Sports Illustrated to fully commit to this thing. The team watched a lot of track this year, maybe too much! And we tried plenty of new things along the way. But it feels like we are starting to carve out a nice little niche for ourselves, while still actively finding our place in the sport.
When it isn’t a newsletter, podcast, interview, or live show, we are constantly talking about the sport in what is easily my most active text group. Admittedly, we are fans first. We had a lot of fun covering the sport this year and to recap it, I asked the team their opinions in handing out superlatives.
Best Race 🏆
The men’s 100m final at Worlds. It was the first time I felt the new Hayward Field was jam-packed and the whole crowd knew we could be in for something special. Kerley dropped that 9.76 in the semis and made us all wonder what he had in store for the final, or if anyone would pull off the upset a la Marcell Jacobs in 2021. We ended up with a U.S. sweep – we knew Kerley won right away but we didn’t know the next two spots so everyone was scoreboard-watching as the results trickled in. We went nuts. — Chris Chavez
Men’s 1500m final at World Champs. All the big players in it with 600m to go, huge upset with Jake over Jakob. — Mac Fleet
The last lap and final straightaway of Gidey vs. Obiri in the 10,000m at Worlds is about as much as you could ever ask for in a race. — Kyle Merber
It wasn’t a race but Kara Winger winning the Diamond League final, setting the American record after medaling at World Championships! 🔥🔥🔥 — Jasmine Todd
Sharon Lokedi’s surprise victory in her New York marathon debut was one of the most dramatic, unexpected performances of 2022. Other folks may have run faster or won by smaller margins, but Lokedi’s victory in NYC was a special combination of defying expectations, providing sustained drama, and occurring on one of the largest stages in road racing. It was essentially up for grabs for most of the last 10 kilometers, and some of the sport’s heaviest hitters trading surges over the Central Park hills made for gripping television. That the least credentialed of the major players ending up on top made it all the sweeter in the end. — David Melly
Sydney running the WR at Worlds, or Jakob Ingerbrigsten in the prelim when he was goofing off on the homestretch. — Katelyn Hutchison
Aaron Sahlman winning NXN is fresh in my mind, but it’s hard not to point out how incredible it is. Imagine the significance of winning your first-ever high school cross-country race. Now make that race the biggest event in the sport for high schoolers. That’s exactly what Aaron Sahlman did. He ran an incredibly well-executed race, making two signature moves when he needed them most to take down the deepest cross country field in high school history. — Gary Martin
I know this is a CITIUS favorite but it has to be the men's 1500m final with Jake Wightman taking down favorite Jakob Ingebrigtsen. The drama! The shock! The family ties with Jake's Dad on the call! Everything I love about sport. — Dana Giordano
Best Celebration 🎉
The infamous tackle celebration from the World Champs Men's 100m Final — Jasmine
Noah tearing his shirt off after winning the 200 at Worlds. — Katelyn
World Record, World Champion, and a backflip! Mondo does it all just one centimeter at a time iykyk. —Dana
Absolutely has to be TeeTee Terry and the women’s 4x100m after taking gold in Eugene. — David
Noah Lyles hawking down Erriyon Knighton in the homestretch and then looking across at him as he crosses the line. You’ve gotta love a good rivalry, right? — Gary
Most Underrated 🤐
Kenny Bednarek. Olympic silver medal, DL final winner, World Champs silver medal, 6 x DL winner. — Mac
Tori Franklin after winning first medal for the U.S women's triple jump. — Jasmine
Alison Dos Santos: while he is the 2022 World Champion in the 400mH there is a target on his back with a full-strength Karsten Warholm. Look out for the world record to fall again in 2023. —Dana
Chase Ealey. Has to be the best season by a female U.S. thrower in recent memory – maybe ever! World indoor silver, undefeated outdoors, World champion, Diamond League champion, and 8 competitions over 20 meters despite entering this year with a 19.68m personal best. The throws got more and better coverage this year than they have in the past, but they deserve more! — David
Trey Cunningham put together a pretty incredible season but is a bit overshadowed because the other two best athletes in the world for his event are also from the United States. But looking at his season, Cunningham was undefeated in the 110mH up until U.S. Champs where he took 2nd. He also capped it off with a silver medal at the World Champs final. — Gary
Lay Johnson. —Katelyn
All season long there was this idea that the 800m was wide open, but once again Emmanuel Korir delivered. The Olympic Champion added a World title, the fastest time of the year and another Diamond League final to his resume. He isn’t one to push the pace, but he has the talent and 400m chops to scare Rudisha’s record. —Kyle
I think Joshua Awotunde is here to stay. Before this year’s World Championships, we started getting used to a podium that consisted of some combination of Ryan Crouser, Joe Kovacs and Tom Walsh. Awotunde is just 27 years old. He registered three throws over 22.00m at the World Championships after having only ever done it once before in his life. He got it done when it mattered most and it came as a surprise to many. More trips to get lit at Denny’s may be in his future.— Chris
Most Improved 📈
Abby Steiner dropped her 100m from 11.32 to 10.90 and her 200m from 22.59 to 21.77, then made her first global team and won two relay gold medals. —Mac
Alaysha Johnson and MaryBeth Sant both stepped away from track and came back running PBs this year and representing Team USA. — Jasmine
Emily Sisson. Sure, she ran 15:12 in the 5000m in college, dominated the 10,000m at the 2021 U.S. Trials, ran under 68 minutes in the half 3 times, and debuted in the marathon with a 2:23:08 6th place finish in London 2019. But she also dropped out of the 2020 Olympic Marathon Trials, pulled out of New York in 2021 with an injury she picked up in Tokyo, and entered Chicago this year at #9 on the U.S. all-time list behind three other active marathoners. So while Sisson made her 2:18:29 performance in Chicago look easy with a masterclass in patient, well-executed racing, it really was a massive improvement at a distance that had not always been kind to her before this year. — David
Tobi Amusan is my most improved athlete of the year. She rose to the occasion with a huge performance at World Champs, running 12.12 over 100mh and lowering her PR by .28 seconds in the semi-final! This performance also broke the world record of 12.20, previously held by Kendra Harrison. She then proved it wasn’t a fluke by winning her first World Championship and running a wind-aided 12.06 in the final. I may be a distance guy, but even I can see the significance of what Tobi Amusan accomplished this season. —Gary
I’m torn between Sydney McLaughlin improving her personal best in the 400m hurdles by .78 seconds in a year or Eliud Kipchoge taking 30 seconds off his own marathon world record. — Chris
Best Coach ✍️
Mike Holloway, no words needed. —Jasmine
NC State Coach Laurie Henes – not much better than coaching the NCAA Women's winning team and individual champion in Katelyn Touhy. She has HOW many athletes sub 16 in the 5k?? — Dana
Tokyo 2021 and Eugene 2022 represented a beautiful passing of the torch from one big star to another – Allyson Felix and Sydney McLaughlin – and both are Kersee athletes. And with Athing Mu, Brandon Miller, Keni Harrison, and Jenna Prandini joining his group, it’s entirely possible that the legendary coach will end up being the coach of the year in 2023 as well. — David
I have to go with Dathan Ritzenhein. OAC has a star-studded lineup of elite athletes and they consistently produced some of the best results of the season from American-based clubs. We saw Joe Klecker take home an American title in the 10k, as well as a 9th-place finish at the World champs. Alicia Monson ran the 2nd fastest 5k in American history and placed 2nd at US Champs in the 5k. Geordie Beamish flashed his incredible kick in a huge 3k victory in Millrose games, Ollie Hoare threw down multiple impressive miles (including a 3:47!), and Sage Hurta shaved 3 seconds off her 800m PR en route to 8 sub 2:00 performances and a 1:57 PR. —Gary
Best Social Media👩💻
Every time Eric Jenkins does a monologue. — Mac
If Chris Benard posted more… but he doesn’t so Kenny Bednarek. —Jasmine
TeeTee Terry always has me laughing. —Katelyn
Gary Martin’s Twitter is an absolute gem, and I’m not just saying that because he’s part of the CITIUS MAG blog family now. He’s a funny guy with a bright future in the sport – and Boston and Philly sports fans can always bond over our shared hatred of New York. — David
Keira D’Amato is holding it down and has struck the perfect balance between trying without really trying at all. She is transparent in everything shared and can engage fans authentically so that they feel like they really know her. —Kyle
Scott Fauble has blessed my Twitter feed with countless pictures of quality burritos, as well as thoughtful commentary and ratings of those burritos. —Gary
I’m still laughing at this TikTok/reel posted by Kenny Bednarek. —Chris
Favorite Photo 📸
Johnny Zhang’s photo of Grant Holloway at World Indoor Championships. — Mac
Johnny Zhang was robbed of World Athletics Photo of the Year with his Grant Holloway shot from Belgrade, Serbia. I need that one blown up and signed for my office. — Chris
Johnny Zhang’s photo of Grant Holloway in the 60mH indoors. It’s an incredible shot that perfectly encapsulates Holloway’s dominance over the distance. And I still don’t understand how someone can build that big of a lead over the best in the world over only 60 meters. — Gary
Jenna Prandini passing the baton to TeeTee holding her wrist to make sure the exchange happens. — Jasmine
This Justin Britton photo from Europeans of Gina Lückenkemper gash in her leg. — Kyle
Rai jumping on Trevor. — Katelyn
Biggest Controversy 🗣
Devon Allen’s DQ in the World Championship Final. Reaction time in the blocks needs to be reevaluated asap! — Jasmine
The Devon Allen blocks at Worlds still has me heated. — Katelyn
Devon Allen being DQ’d! I’m still mad and I hope you’re still mad about it too. If punishing an athlete for having too good of a reaction time isn’t controversial, then I don’t know what is. —Gary
USATF salaries by far. — Mac
The saga of Ferdinand Omanyala and other athletes getting their visas approved to make it to Worlds. He flew from Kenya and went straight to his race at Hayward to make it through his prelim. I’ve never not felt like garbage after a flight.—Kyle
It feels like forever ago but Poopgate was 2022 and I don’t think it was ever fully resolved so coming in 2023 will be CITIUS MAG’s first true crime podcast. We’re examining stool samples to get to the bottom of this mystery. — Chris Chavez
2023 Wish 🧞♂️
We need more Diamond League races without rabbits or pace lights. — Mac
I want to see more celebrations for wins! I want athletes to enjoy the process and not think about the next race immediately! — Jasmine
I want to see CITIUS take over the world 😎 — Katelyn
Faith Kipyegon finally getting the world record in the 1500m. Kipyegon now has two Olympic and two World titles in the event along with the #2, #5, and #10-13 all-time marks in the event and she’s still only 28 years old. She took a couple of serious cracks at it this year, but it seems like her biggest limiting factor is that she doesn’t often have company in the final laps of the race. With some pressure from other rising stars like Gudaf Tsegay, she could soon become the first woman to break 3:50 in the event. — David
I am most excited to see how to road to OTQ plays out in the marathon - I know this is looking WAY ahead but the steady drumbeat of the chase for athletes both pro and amateur aiming for a spot on the starting line is good for the sport. — Dana
I would love to see Sydney McLaughlin go after a fast 400 time. She’s already proven her dominance over the 400mH and she’s flashed incredible ability in the 4x400m, so it would be super cool to see what she could run if she focused on the 400m for a season. It’s also pretty crazy that Sydney is only 23 and we’re already discussing a switch to another event because she’s conquered her main one so quickly. — Gary
Which meet organizer wants to break the bank on a 400m race featuring Sydney McLaughlin, Shaunae Miller-Uibo, Marileidy Paulino, Femke Bol, Sada Williams, Fiordaliza Cofil and Abby Steiner? The track and field community would thank you. This brings together 400m specialists, 200m specialists and 400m hurdle specialists all together to take a huge swing at Marita Koch’s 400m world record of 47.60, which has stood for way too long! (Since 1985!) Find us a billionaire willing to offer $1 million to the winner – maybe that will get some people over their selectiveness when it comes to racing. — Chris Chavez
2023 Athlete to Watch 👀
Throwing my bias into the ring I'm most excited to see Heather MacLean have a healthy year. US women's distance is at its highest level and ready for one athlete to dominate. My prediction is that the 1500m US record of 3:54.99 goes down. — Dana
I am going to keep watching Noah Lyles. — Mac
Jessica Woodard in the women’s shot put! — Jasmine
Athing Mu after making that coaching change. — Katelyn
I’m really excited to watch Hobbs Kessler. In his first full-season pro, he ran some really good races but didn’t quite improve on what he ran at the end of his high school career. He’s one of the most talented young distance runners in the sport though and he’s due for a big year. — Gary
I had a lot of fun watching Botswana’s Letsile Tebogo shine at the World U20 Championships in Colombia, where he celebrated super early en route to gold in 9.91s. He’s reportedly on his way to Oregon in the coming months so maybe we’ll see how other college stars take to his Bolt-esque antics. — Chris Chavez
Favorite CITIUS Moment 📱
Shelly-Ann Frasier-Pryce backyard interview at the CITIUS HQ. — Mac
Running to the CITIUS house in a boot with a cane for an emergency podcast. Amazing that my heel healed! —Jasmine
When we had Grant over sipping wine in our house. And just in general having athletes come in and out of the house all week. — Katelyn
While it is almost impossible to pick one moment, it has to be watching the men's 1500m final with the CITIUS squad at WCs. —Dana
The “I got lit at Denny’s” line from Josh Awotunde. — Kyle
The CITIUS MAG Live interview with Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce was an all-time highlight of the best of both CITIUS and track and field. If we could afford her, we would definitely give SAFP her own talk show on our network! — David
Kyle’s rundown of how NCAA qualifying works because it was the first time I finally understood what KOLA points were. — Gary
I didn't expect there to be so much online chatter about the mixed zone after Sha'Carri Richardson failed to qualify for the World Championships and didn't stop for long to speak with most members of the media. However, while a 30-second clip is what most people saw, she actually did stop to speak briefly with CITIUS MAG's Katelyn Hutchison and Jasmine Todd, as well as RealTalk's Tiara Williams. A few years ago, this stop probably wouldn't have happened due to the lack of diversity in the track and field mixed zone. It's encouraging to see that progress is being made, and I'm excited to see Katelyn and Jasmine emerge as leaders in this space. The athletes are super comfortable with them. Katelyn and Jasmine are new to this space and I'm excited to watch them improve and bring their own flair to the way the sport is covered. — Chris Chavez
Favorite Interview 👥
Errioyn Knighton home visit in Tampa Bay. — Mac
It’s always a pleasure interviewing athletes like Sha’Carri and Athing. — Katelyn
There is nothing better than an in-person interview and I loved speaking with Vanessa Fraser about her transition away from Bowerman TC in Orgeon to starting a new chapter in San Francisco working and running. — Dana
Chatting with Michigan State grad Morgan Beadlescomb as he turned pro was a great time – he’s super fun and funny, and he’s got a bright future ahead of him. I could easily see him taking the Joe Klecker route as a pro – he never got an NCAA title, but I wouldn’t be surprised to see him become a regular fixture of U.S. teams very soon. — David
This is a tough one so I'll go with two. Michael Johnson at Worlds was maybe one of the best interviews that we put together this year because it was less focused on current events/performances or a look back at his career. We recognized that we could do stuff like that at any other point but while celebrating the sport at its biggest stage of the year, we had an audience and we wanted to float some potential solutions and ideas for the many problems that the sport faces. — Chris Chavez
Talking with Emma Coburn after she won her 10th US title about why it was the most special of them all. — Kyle
Catching up with Amy and Alistair Cragg
Former Olympians Amy and Alistair Cragg have led the North Carolina-based training group Puma Elite to a strong first year with a young crop of international talent. Having spent some time with the team earlier this month during the Cross Champs in Austin, it was quite evident that they’re building a great program with a fun culture and a lot of enthusiasm.
They took some time over the holidays to share their thoughts about 2022 with The Lap Count.
As 2022 winds down and you look back on the team’s results how would you rate this first full year for the team?
We are most proud of the results the team achieved while laying down the foundations for bigger dreams in years to come. In looking at our results through this lens, are athletes absolutely smashed it beyond expectation.
Analyzing your own performances, is there an aspect of your role that you did particularly well? Is there something that you hope to improve?
There are always spots to improve. There isn’t an aspect of the sport, our team, or the process that we are not trying to improve. What we did well… we’d have to say that we are particularly proud of our patience in not skipping steps in development for the athletes while looking for quick results that could compromise their long-term development.
The Puma Elite squad just added a bunch of new talent to the roster. What are the main selling points that you try to convey to young athletes as to why they should join? Are there certain characteristics that you look for that would make a good fit?
Puma has been amazing in their support, innovation, and family-style approach to the business side of the sport so that has made recruiting much easier. The more experienced athletes on our team have created an incredible team culture and are laying down marks that are attracting other talent. We hope this continues to be the driving force behind athletes wanting to be part of Puma Elite. As coaches who have chased dreams, made sacrifices, felt successes and a ton of heartache in our sport, we tend to be brutally honest with anyone who we recruit and who we coach.
We work hard. Extremely hard. We take tremendous care of our athletes… only to allow them to work harder. True heartache in the sport comes from never doing everything you can to get the most out of yourself. We want athletes who dream of being great, but we mostly want athletes who are willing to lift every stone to find out where that greatness might be hiding. Allie, Jess, Ehab and Amon all, most certainly, brought their shovels with them and they have been 'stone-flipping' all fall. It has been fun to watch them commit to the process and begin their journeys.
How would you describe your coaching styles to someone that isn’t familiar? Both in terms of training and personality.
We’d certainly be described as a strength-based training group, but we bleed John McDonnell in intensity, balance, and expectations. Our coaching styles have also been greatly influenced by Jerry Schumacher and Ray Treacy. Our advice and guidance as ex-athletes have been molded by training partners such as Meb Keflezighi, Dan Lincoln, Ryan Hall, Sarah Hall, Deena Kastor, Elise Cranny, Courtney Frerichs, Morgan Uceny, Anna Willard, Karissa Schweizer, Molly Huddle, Kim Smith, Shalane Flanagan, Des Linden, Evan Jager, Moh Ahmed, Sean McGorty… We could name many more coaches and athletes who influenced us because of how lucky we were to have so many good experiences in the sport, so, our team personality is developed by all those who have come before and shared their personalities and experiences with us. We reference these coaches and athletes just about daily. There isn’t one specific way to do it. John, Jerry, and Ray all did it very different ways, and they do/did it amazingly.
With so many competitive teams to root for — why should fans follow and cheer for Puma Elite?
We hope that it's done through our athlete’s successes and their enjoyments in the sport. They are all great young people who live and die for finding their pathways to greatness. They are a wonderful group of people each with amazing stories of their own. Puma Elite will always be about them, and it will be their stories that bring people to support and cheer for our team and hopefully get out there and run themselves.
Rapid Fire Highlights🔥
According to the Stride Report, Chris Solinsky has left the University of Florida and will be joining his former coach Jerry Schumacher at Oregon.
Have you been enamored by the success of the Northern Arizona University team and want to know the secrets? Help support the publishing of Matt Baxter and Ron Mann’s new book.
After four years with the Brooks Beasts David Ribich has shared that he is no longer with the team.
The Bahrain Royal Night Half Marathon was won in 58:58 by Sabastian Kimaru Sawe and Tigist Assefa in 1:07:40.
Mitch Ammons didn’t run in college, but found the sport after a long battle with a drug addiction. He ran 2:16 at CIM to qualify for the Olympic Trials.
In very British news, Melissa Courtney-Bryant set a new Parkrun 5k record of 15:31. The weekly Saturday morning 5k series takes place in over 2,000 locations across the world, and I actually had no idea that there were 56 events in the United States until reading the Wikipedia page thirty seconds ago.
Jakob Ingebrigtsen will not be running the World XC Champs, but he is going after the indoor 3000m record in Madrid on February 22nd.
John Babington who coached the likes of Joan Benoit Samuelson, Lynn Jennings, and Melody Fairchild, has been permanently banned by the US Center for SafeSport.
Molly Seidel and Gavin Kuhlenbech won the GrindFest — a special Milwaukee progression run tradition. Athletes start at 6:10 pace and gradually pick it up 6-8 seconds every few laps until there is no one left.
Thanks so much to Puma for sponsoring this week’s newsletter! Check out our recent CITIUS MAG podcast with Pat Tiernan and Fiona O’Keeffe as we have some good laughs discussing their seasons.
Fantastic review, team. The breadth and diversity of the experience and perspective you now have onboard promises an awesome future for Citius (Citrus??). Great, great, great for the sport. Loved the Michael Johnson interview. So much wisdom.
Chris, How can have a woman's dream 400m without Athing Mu. When she ran it in 2021, she had three sub 50's against collegians and was never pushed. She also had the fastest split in the 4x4 Olympic all-star team. Don't sleep on Athing.