May 31, 2022
I didn't go to the Pre this past weekend even though the option was on the table. The mind is willing, the aging body is weakening. A month ago I had high hopes of seeing the new stadium and watching what looked on paper to be a bang up kick-off to an incredible track Spring and Summer only 500 miles south of Vancouver Island where I live. But Covid has taken a toll on this aging human specimen and blood clots in my right leg have made driving that distance a challenge for me and possibly a danger for others on the road if I can't find the brake when I need it because of a very numb right foot. My potential co-driver, Jon Little, was caught up in a law suit in North Carolina, trying to prove that his client had been sexually abused by her swimming coach when she was a minor. The jury didn't quite believe it and Jon only arrived home a day before we could have left for Eugene.
The upside was a very nice and unexpected visit from one of my former athletes, Tara Storage, U. of Dayton (2002) and Olympic Trials qualifier in the marathon with her 2 hr 39 min. performance. She has also represented the US in the world half marathon championships in Italy back in the day. Tara and her fiance, Faustino came to the island for a quick visit and we spent the day together getting reacquainted and seeing a few sites on the east and west coasts.
So I was relegated on Saturday to watching the races from Eugene on the tube from the comfort of my living room. I had already notified the organizers that my press credentials would not be used. That hopefully would assure them that a second attempt to go there for the NCAA's, the US trials, and/or the Worlds would be legit. Problem though is there are different organizations to apply to for each of these events.
We had promises of world record attempts to be made on the men's 10,000, women's 2 miles, a show down in the women's and men's 100 meters, the two best men's milers in the world would go head to head, the best women's miler would be there, a women's record attempt at 800, and a pole vault event featuring the two best vaulters in the world and the same in the men's shot and women's discus. How could you go wrong going to see this? You couldn't. But unfortunately some of the hopes got dashed by the weather. It was cool and blustery. On Friday events got shuffled and some Saturday throwing got changed to Friday night. Ultimately there was a lot of hope, and it was still a great meet, just not any of the promised records. Is that what track needs to get the world's attention? I don't think so. Maybe the organizers were hoping that would turn the unknowledgeable heads toward the event, but is that necessary to keep a sport on the map? It shouldn't.
People still come to watch a baseball game where there are incredible numbers of records in the books, but I never heard of anyone going to a game or watching on TV it to see a record set since Roger Maris was going for 61 home runs more than fifty years ago. Truth is, you don't know what you're going to get when you go to a ball game, you just go there to watch the game, to be in the moment with your heroes, or your children and maybe that's all we need to do to enjoy our sport.
What I did miss about not getting to the Pre was the interaction with the athletes at the press conference, the meetings with old friends at the meet, the post race views of athletes after the oxygen returned to their brains, sitting with my blog colleague Roy Mason and remembering some of the old days and events of the past, eating at Track Town Pizza and seeing who shows up there or at the bar across the street with the same attractions in the evening. I missed seeing friends on the way to the meet in Seattle, Portland, Beaverton, Albany. I didn't miss crossing the US Canada border and proving to my host country Canada that I was Covid free and didn't have to go into a quarantine status.
The most controversial thing in this meet or any big meet now is the use of pacing lights. Do they matter? Here are a few comments on the subject.
" I agree with you about the pacing lights. It puts such a priority on pacing rather than head-to-head competition. I have never run with such lights but when I watch I spend way too much time looking at the lights, a real distraction. Just because you can do such a thing does not mean you should." Bill
To continue:
The events of Uvalde, Texas makes my disappointment inconsequential. It was in my mind constantly and still is. All those children who will never get a chance to do the things we all have done in our lives. To run a race, hit a ball, swim, read a great book. To fall in love. To see their children grow. Never a chance to experience the joys as well as the sorrows of life. Their poor parents who will carry this trauma for the rest of their lives, if only there were a way to help them. The trauma of the people who had to go in and identify and remove those children, to clean them up and prepare them for burial, even the cops who will be asking themselves the rest of their lives why they failed to react better. The children who survived who will carry those nightmares in everything they do. And we as Americans who will keep hearing these stories and forgetting them. I couldn't remember many of the past shootings when the news people started listing them and saying how many were killed in those other massacres. I think this puts me in the group who wishes to see the ban of assault guns in the US as a beginning to an eventual disarming of the American public. We could still fight, steal, or kill, which is a part of Darwinian evolution but without the horrendous side effects and consequences that these weapons provide.
Some thoughts about your terrific posting:
1 comment:
George,
Nice recap on the Pre meet. Great performances despite the weather.
What a tragic day in Uvalde, Texas. It's hard to process this kind of evil. Of course from the first news of the killings the corporate media have blared the horror 24/7 as emotions are exploited to leverage more restrictions on good citizens. Those who challenge the prevailing media narrative are branded insensitive and uncaring. That's how it works.
It was kind of surprising in a Texas school that no teacher or admin had a permitted carry pistol or that there was no armed LEO as a school resource officer present. Policies must vary among school districts. Even more stunning was the maddeningly slow response of local police. Details are still unfolding. The day after the Uvalde massacre, a civilian with a legal concealed carry pistol stopped a would-be mass shooter dead in his tracks in Charleston, West Virginia. A man was speeding in a parking lot near a graduation party. When asked to slow down, he became agitated, left and returned later, opening fire with an AR style rifle. A woman bystander carrying a lawfully owned pistol shot and killed the attacker. No other people were injured. The Charleston police chief said she saved dozens of lives. The dead perp had a criminal record. He probably got the rifle from his homies. Mass media response on the event, save for Fox News, its Charleston affiliate and passing mention in USA Today, crickets...
https://wchstv.com/news/local/victim-hospitalized-in-charleston-shooting
Regarding so-called "assault weapons," the propaganda term was coined by Josh Sugarmann, a policy wonk for the Violence Policy Center back in the late 1980s to conflate military selective fire, fully automatic rifles with constitutionally protected semi-automatic rifles commonly owned by tens of millions of Americans. Disingenuous politicians, the gun ban lobby and the media have run with it ever since to confuse the general public. Rifles of any description, including AR style rifles (AR stands for Armalite the original manufacturer) are used in maybe 2 percent of firearm related murders. Hammers are used more often to kill people. Seventy-five percent of gun related homicides are criminals killed by other criminals in gang turf and drug wars. By comparison various studies estimate defensive gun use by civilians from 600,000 to over two million times a year, most without a shot being fired. Handguns are more frequently used, but rifles, including ARs, have often been employed to stop a threat. As for a proposed national gun ban, there are over 20 million legally owned AR style rifles in circulation. That's a significant subset of the many tens of millions of semi-automatic rifles in civilian hands. An Australian or New Zealand style "buyback," forced confiscation with less than market value compensation for guns the government never sold to anyone, would be a catastrophically expensive and massive failure on many levels.
We have over 22,000 federal, state and local laws governing the acquisition and use of firearms, and the street thugs, drug cartels, terrorists and random crazies still demonstrate a marked disdain for official words printed on government stationery. The blame should be assigned to the perpetrators and not America's 100 million law-abiding gun owners.
Thanks for the opportunity to respond, George. Always enjoy your track and running posts.
Jim Mosher
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