Screwy Qualifying System Leaves Men's Third in Doubt
Yesterday, Olympic hopefuls crowded the start line in Orlando, Fla. for a shot at being one of six American runners representing the nation at this summer's games in Paris. And the winners are:
Men
- Connor Mantz - 2:09:05
- Clayton Young - 2:09:06
- Leonard Korir - 2:09:57
Imagine you apply for a job, go through a tough selection process, then get told: "You're hired. Welcome aboard, unless we find someone better."
Such is the case with Leonard Korir. Mantz and Young already ran automatic qualifying times under the magic number 2:08:10, begging the question of why bother with marathon trials if somebody somewhere else who didn't compete against the same field can just wander in with the correct time and snap up your spot. (Granted, you won't find many 2:08 marathoners wandering around the 50 states, but it's the principle of the thing.)
Leonard Korir hoping no 2:08's show up.
O'Keeffe Breaks U.S. Women's Record
Women
- Fiona O'Keeffe - 2:22:10
- Emily Sisson - 2:22:47
- Dakotah Lindwurm - 2:25:31
In the corny simplistic women's race where the first three finishers go to Paris, O'Keeffe rocked the house in her marathon debut. A debut, an Olympic qualifying record, and summer in Paris.
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