Some final thoughts and numbers (always with the numbers) on Katie Miale’s gutsy effort last night
at the USATF 20km racewalk at Drake Stadium. Below are Katie’s 1600-meter
splits. I was eager to type all 50 lap splits (I could still do that, if there is a groundswell of support for such
minutia … and if you are REALLY interested, each lap split can be found at www.usatf.org), but I figured the
1600-meter splits tell the story a bit more succinctly. The second half of the
race was truly a slog for Katie, but she hung in there and finished. More
telling are the numbers below the 1600-meter splits. Despite relatively favorable
conditions, all but one of the 11 finishers – including race winner and
American record holder Maria Michta-Coffey – had slower finish times than their
entry seed/qualifying times. And Katie’s delta wasn’t even the greatest – four racewalkers
raced slower than their seed times than Katie did. This is not to say that
Katie had a “good” race or that she raced “well” – I like a positive spin as
good as the next guy, but I also don’t peddle in such Pollyanna gibberish. But
the numbers are stark and the racewalkers, for the most part, walked slower
than anticipated. I don’t pretend to be a racewalk expert or even a keen
observer, but a few theories:
1. It was sneaky humid. Hey. Des Moines in late
June could have been MUCH worse – the last time we were here, for USATF
Juniors, the real feel at race time was 90 degrees, at 9 p.m. But last night,
despite the comfortable feeling for non-racers, the walkers were soaked in
sweat over the final laps and the humidity level crept up on them.
2. Track.
Most 20km racewalk events are on a closed road loop. Along with being
mind-numbing, 50 laps and all those turns may have added a lot of torque to
their hard churning legs and led to slower times.
3. Night race. Most long
racewalk events (20km, 50km) are held in the early morning rather than the
early evening. Like all finely tuned athletes, racewalkers are a creature of
habit. They’re used to plying their trade in the early morning hours in empty
stadiums or equally empty and desolate road loops. Racing at night might have
thrown them off. Again. These are just theories from a guy who still learning about
the funky little outpost of track and field known as the racewalk.
Which brings me to the final point: We love being known as a
“racewalk school” – whatever that means! We are proud of our racewalkers, past
and present, and we welcome the opportunity to support current and future
racewalkers. This is not lost on the racewalk community, and it was noted
repeatedly both last weekend at USATF Juniors (Lauren Harris) and this weekend
(Katie Miale). NCAA Division I track programs don’t usually support
racewalkers. Racewalking is not an NCAA event. But Marist is a fine school, and
we want to afford the opportunity for all athletes to get a great education at
a great school, and we’ll support our excellent racewalkers in whatever USATF
events they qualify for, now and in the future. So if they want to call us a “racewalk
school?” I’m OK with that!
USATF Outdoor
Championships
Friday, June 22, 2018
Drake Stadium
Des Moines, Iowa
Women’s 20,000-meter
racewalk
11. Katie Miale 2:01:07.87
1600m splits
1: 8:51 (8:51)
2: 17:53 (9:02)
3: 26:45 (9:02)
4: 35:51 (9:08)
5: 45:25 (9:34)
6: 55:10 (9:45)
7: 1:05:05 (9:55)
8: 1:14:53 (9:48)
9: 1:24:51 (9:58)
10: 1:35:09
(10:18)
11: 1:45:38
(10:29)
12: 1:56:14
(10:36)
Finish: 2:01:07.87
(4:52.13)
Race finishers
Differential between
seed time and finish time
1st place:
+3:12
2nd place: +0:32
3rd place:
+6:02
4th place:
+3:01
5th place:
+1:54
6th place:
-1:12
7th place:
+10:41
8th place:
+4:10
9th place:
+5:04
10th place:
+6:49
11th
place: +4:39 (Katie Miale)
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