Woody Kincaid, Lopez Lomong and Matthew Centrowitz get the Olympic 5k standard on a surreal night – OregonLive.com
Woody Kincaid, Lopez Lomong and Matthew Centrowitz get the Olympic 5k standard on a surreal night OregonLive.com
Bowerman Track Club runners (left to right) Matthew Centrowitz, Lopez Lomong and Woody Kincaid pose in front of the scoreboard after taking down the …
Woody Kincaid called the atmosphere Tuesday at Nike’s Michael Johnson Track “surreal,” and it was that.
With an estimated 2,500 spectators ringing the track on a cool, damp evening, the track partly in shadow, giant trees in the infield preventing an unobstructed view of the action, Kincaid, Lopez Lomong and Matthew Centrowitz got what they came for.
The three Bowerman Track Club runners crushed the 2020 Olympic standard in the 5,000 meters of 13 minutes, 13.50 seconds in what was billed as the “Portland 5,000.”
Canadian Olympian Mohammed Ahmed kept the pace well under the standard. Kincaid, Lomong and Centrowitz stayed with him.
Kincaid bolted past Lomong in the final 120 to finish first in 12:58.10, obliterating his personal record of 13:12.22. He was followed to the finish line by Lomong in 13:00.13 and Centrowitz in 13:00.39.
Kincaid, who starred collegiately at the University of Portland, was having trouble processing it afterward.
Asked if he felt in 12:58 shape coming when he arrived at the track. Kincaid looked incredulous and said: “I don’t know if I feel that I’m in 12:58 shape now.”
Of the three, Kincaid’s performance most stood out. Lomong is a two-time Olympian who swept the 5,000 and 10,000 at this summer’s USA Track & Field Outdoor Championships. Centrowitz is the reigning Olympic champ in the 1,500.
Both Centrowitz and Lomong will be part of the U.S. Team for the World Outdoor Championships in Doha, Qatar, which begin Sept. 27. Kincaid finished third in 5,000 at the USATF Outdoor Championships, which would have qualified him for the U.S. team had he met this year’s world championships qualifying standard in the qualifying period. He had not.
It won’t be a problem next year, now that Kincaid has taken care of his Olympic qualifier.
“If you watched the last mile of that race, I lost all form,” Kincaid said. “I lost everything. It was just one step after another. There was nothing left in the tank after that.”
He said the spectators, standing around the track in lane five, in some places three and four deep, pushed him.
“Honestly, if that crowd wasn’t here, I run 13:20,” Kincaid said.
Lomong is focused on the world championships and trained through this race. But knowing the kind of shape he is in, he said he figured he might as well knock out his Olympic qualifier.
“Why not?” he said. “Why not just come and do it. It’s fantastic.”
Centrowitz was stepping up in distance, he said, mostly because he is building up his strength for the 1,500 in Doha. He and BTC coach Jerry Schumacher have been tailoring his workouts accordingly.
“I have to be able to run a good 5k if I want to be able to medal at these world championships,” Centrowitz said. “So, I told Jerry, ‘Just train me like a 5k guy for the month of August, and we’ll sharpen up in September.’ That’s what we did.
“Luckily, we set up a race for these guys to get the standard. It’s great that I have the (5,000) standard for next year, but I don’t think it changes anything. My main focus is still the 15 and medaling at the world championships.”
In The Match, a team competition between the U.S. and Europe in Minsk, Belarus, a number of local athletes had winning performances over the past two days.
Among them, Elise Cranny of the BTC in the women’s 3,000 (9:00.70), Josh Thompson of the BTC in the men’s 1,500 (3:38.88), Skyview High grad Kara Winger in the women’s javelin (212 feet, 0 inches), University of Oregon grad Damarcus Simpson in the long jump (26-9 ¾), Kate Grace of the BTC in the women’s 1,500 (4:02.49), Mel Lawrence of Bend in the women’s steeple chase (9:33.24) and Ben Blankenship of Oregon Track Club Elite in the men’s 3,000 (7:57.48.) Europe won the team competition.
Here are the results from The Match.
— Ken Goe
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