Written by: Martin Dugard
Posted: Tuesday, 01 July 2008
Babbitt writes to remind me that "Mondays with Marty" really doesn't have quite the same punch if I'm not filing until Tuesday. Alas, he's right. I'm going to start writing my missives on Sunday night so that they post early Monday morning. From the feedback I've been getting, it seems that a number of you have begun to check in on a regular basis, and I owe you the courtesy of being prompt. So hang with me, I'm getting into a nice rhythm with all this.
I'm back east right now, dropping my son off at college. The
melancholy mood I've had over the last four weeks, however,
has been replaced by the awareness that: a) he's gonna be alright; and,
b) the summer of competition has begun. What do I mean by that? I mean
the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials kicked things off in fine
fashion with a ripping women's 10,000 meter finals last week. Then
Michael Phelps broke that world record in the 400 I.M. the other night,
followed by Katie Hoff's own record performance, and then on to the
Landis verdict, with much more to come all week long, followed by the
Tour de France start on Saturday.
Just an aside, but did you see
that look of wonder on Hoff's face when she looked up at the scoreboard
and saw what she'd accomplished? It's moments like that, those sweet
uncontrived moments of bliss, that makes the Olympic season so human.
It inspires me like nobody's business, and is such a wondrous departure
from the politics and business that so often comprises everyday sports.
So here's the cool thing. Normally an endurance sports junkie
gets a little juju from the Tour and then has to quit the
up-at-dawn-for-mega-hours-of-cycling cold turkey once Le Tour ends. Not
this year. This year we take a week off to catch our breath and then
head right into the Olympics. Man, I'm telling you, the next two months
are going to be bliss. And for me, it doesn't end there, because we go
straight into cross-country season, which goes all the way through
Thanksgiving, and the Christmas season kind of takes care of the end of
the year. It's all good.
Back to Landis. Some accused me of
throwing him under the bus when I wrote quite bluntly a while back that
I thought he was guilty (particuiarly the reporters at VeloNews, whom I
thought should have shown a little more journalistic impartiality). I
can see what people meant by that, if only because Floyd and I had
become friendly. But at the end of the day, I had to write it as I saw
it, as much as it pained me. I don't think the arbitration finding
against him validates my conclusion in any way. Rather, I think it
finally puts paid to two years of strife and hardship for Landis. Time
to move on. I would hope that he gets hired by a solid team, trains his
way back into shape, and starts earning a living once again. My
comments weren't personal, as I told Floyd, just an opinion.
Back
to the Track and Field trials. Now that I've waited until Tuesday to
post, I can write of Bernard Lagat's explosive victory in the men's
5,000. His 13:27 was a solid effort, showing that he's still planning
to peak for Beijing. Of a little sadness was Adam Goucher's dropping
back in a race where needed an "A" effort. I was hoping that he could
join his wife, Kara, who qualified with a second place finish in the
10,000. Here's keeping my fingers crossed that he can qualify in the
men's 10, as well.
Onward. USA Today reports that Tyson Gay's
name was changed by some sort of internet search replace service to
allude that he was, in fact, gay. "Homosexual Runs Wind-Aided 9.86
seconds to make Olympics," read the headline on one conservative
Christian website. This, apparently, is the same search/replace
function that has changed any references to "black" to
"African-American," so that a baseball pitcher hitting the black corner
of the plate was recently said to have hit the "African-American"
portion.
You gotta love that. OK. Let the games begin. We've got
a summer of endurance sports fun coming down the pipeline. I can feel
the inspiration coming at me already.
Keep pushing... always.