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2007-10-21

2007 Wishes Did Come True

Story written by EPelle

I made five requests of 2007 when putting together my wish list for this athletics season (blog entry), and by most accounts, I didn't waste precious space hoping for things further than the imagination could stretch. Though Marion Jones still bugs me, Trevor Graham still annoys me, and BALCO has continued living on despite the archaic form it has taken on the current events chart, I nearly struck pay dirt with the first item on my agenda, namely getting closer to a semblance of having clean sport and knocking some of the haughty riders off their horses -- including Jones and Graham.
  1. Clean sport. Athletics is closer to it than at this time last year, with Jones caught with her hands in the cookie jar, some (but not all) of her medal collection returned to the rightful recipients, and Graham facing an insurmountable battle with the U.S. Justice Department over lies, lies and even more lies. Bulgarian disgraces Venelina Veneva and Vanya Stambolova were both found to have been in violation of anti-doping rules and one athlete, France's Naman Keïta, accepted responsibility for having made his mistake. There was not much trouble turning the murky waters into wine with the public, metaphorically speaking, as fan support seems to have been relatively unchanged by negative press and nearly untouched by the positive events which unfolded in 2007 -- though I'd have wished that Tatiana Lysenko, the world-record holding Russian hammer thrower, could have avoided making news in this department. Veneva had long been suspected of drugs usage by her competitors following suspicious activities which saw Veneva take long absences from main stream competition, obtain good marks in obscure competitions inside of Bulgaria where the belief that drug-testing -- if it exists -- is at a bare minimum, then hit the championships with more power and better marks than she had at any other time of the season.
    "As [the way] she has set up her seasons and suddenly appeared at championships, I have understood that there was something shady. That she has finally gotten caught is an unbelievable relief, but one had hoped that it could have occured earlier," says Kajsa Bergqvist.
  2. Alan Webb did stay injury-free in 2007, but I still felt for guy following his 2007 IAAF World Championships performance when he'd been bitten by a flu-like bug which seemed to take his finishing kick and transform his legs from the Ferrari-backed motor he'd packed in there prior to his first heat to a local gym rat pushing uphill on a treadmill going nowhere fast. Webb never competes for "also ran" showings, and he laid it all down on the line in Osaka -- keeping himeslf in there from start to nearly the finish over the three laps and 300 metres which made up his 1.500m event in Japan. Webb proved in 2007 that he could keep things tightened under the belt in the middle distance department, focussing on the 800m (1.43,84 PB), 1.500m (3.30,54 PB) and mile (3.46,91 PB) events to set new best marks in each of the those, lead the world at the latter two, and set a national record in the mile; he recorded the year's second-fastest 800m. Webb seemed spent by the time his final was run, however, and had a less than successful follow-up on the Grand Prix circuit before closing out his season with a road mile victory in New York. All-in-all, however, he broke a long-standing record in Steve Scott's mile best, and outkicked Mehdi Baala on his home turf in prime time and under the lights in Friday Night fashion.
  3. Stefan Holm decided to stay with the sport in 2007 and continue on through Beijing in defense of his Olympic title. I had wished for Holm to win his first IAAF World Outdoor Championships gold medal, but one Donald Thomas would steal the thunder this season -- taking the world's highest available honour in his first-ever competition at that level. Holm finished out of medal contention with a fourth-place effort in Osaka. The season-ending best mark in the event -- 2,35m, which was shared by Thomas, Jaroslav Rybakov, Holm and Kyriakos Iannou -- was lower than I'd expected, but noteworthy about the "down" high jump year is that 30 athletes cleared 2.30m outdoors -- including seven by Russians and five by Americans. That left a lot of guessing at nearly every meet this summer as to which of those folks would win what, where, how and under which circumstances, and, almost as important as who would win the global title, who the number-one ranked athelte will be is completely up for grabs, too -- though Thomas seems to have the advantage in head-to-head battles. Thomas had a losing record against Holm, and "close" records against Linus Thörnblad and Tomas Janku, but Thomas beat Holm in their World Athletics Final clash, as did he Janku and Thörnblad. However, Thomas did lose to Thörnblad in Shanghai where neither Holm nor Janku competed. André Silnov, the 2006 European Champion, tied Thomas at 1-1 on the season due to Thomas no-heighting in Shanghai. Thomas's lone loss to Victor Moya was atoned for at the world championships. Holm had five losses on the outdoor season -- four of which were in his final four competitions.
  4. The world did not see Kenenisa Bekele at his best in the 2007 IAAF World Cross Country Championships in Mombassa, Kenya. Scorching humidity and heat ended the reign of the Great Bekele, who did not complete the race following a late charge to take the lead, and threw his track and field season off as well. For once, Bekele was made human over the hills, and scooped up times and marks on the track which scraped any hopes of him doubling at the IAAF World Championships in an equally hot and humid Osaka. Bekele had commanded my total respect for disabling competitors upon demand and playing catch with fire since his initial double-double IAAF Cross Country World Championships victories in 2001, and in the winter of this year, he became the first man to break 4.50 over 2.000m indoors, running 4.49,99 at the Norwich Union Grand Prix. His competitors, however -- many of whom were his compatriots -- gained new-found hope and life in believing they could make a challenge of defeating the weaker, non-dominant Kenenisa Bekele a reality over 25 laps to be run at 21.40 on a hot August evening, the 27th of August -- first and foremost Sileshi Sihine, who stuck it to Bekele in a masterful and memorable final lap, but one which saw Bekele turn back the charge and create a silver-medalist out of Sihine again following their identical finish two years earlier in Helsinki, which followed their identical finish at the Athens Olympics as well. Sihine has collected three silver medals and a bronze at either the World Championships or Olympic Games. Bekele was able to record the year's three-quickest outdoor 3.000m times, running 7.25,79 - 7.26,69 and 7.29,32. Bekele's world-leading mark is the eighth-fastest of all-time, and he's the sixth-fastest ever at the distance.
  5. The final golden moment of 2007 was to have been Kajsa Bergqvist jumping over 2,09m either indoors or out. She didn't. Kajsa had trouble hitting 2,00m this outdoor season as she found it difficult to balance ground training her coach, Yannick Tregaro, had wished for her to endure versus getting in quality meets which she believed would help her reach her season's potential, which she felt was certainly higher than the 2,02m she recorded in Torino. Bergqvist would separate from Tregaro's group following the World Championships. Bergqvist had my hope button alive with talk of improving her world record in 2007, but it was Blanka Vlašic who made headlines this season. Bergqvist made it clear in no uncertain terms last winter that she was going to make an assault on the 16-year-old world indoor record of 2,07m held by Heike Henkel, and she eclipsed that mark with Henkel in attendance, jumping 2.08m in Arnstadt on 2006-February-4. She then made a pact to give a go at seriously attempting to take down Stefka Kostadinova's 2,09m from Rome set 19 years earlier. That perfect-day, best-ever jump was not to unfold outdoors in 2006, leaving Bergqvist even more loaded and focused from having missed nearly a year-and-a-half following her ruptured achilles injury suffered in the spring of 2004. What Bergqvist hadn't had time to see as she struggled in chartering for green pastures in the world record pursuit was that Vlašic had found incredible focus and determination during the indoor season, and was able to translated that to a near-undefeated outdoor campaign, topping the yearly list at 2,07m, and also jumping 2,06m, twice clearing 2,05m and finishing two other competitions with 2,04m victories; she toppled the 2,00m barrier in an incredible 17 competitions in 2007. Her lone defeat was a second-place finish at the Oslo Golden League to Yelena Slesarenko, who at that early time, was in contention for the $1.000.000 Golden League jackpot. Vlašic had the misfortune of having her only loss of the season come in the Golden League, and also missed out on the jackpot. Russia's Anna Chicherova as well as Italy's Antonietta Di Martino brought their "A" game to the World Championships, where I'd hoped that clearing 2,04m would only yield a bronze to the third-best of the group. Both athletes cleared 2,03m, with Chicherova taking the third spot on the podium. The most women ever to clear 2,00m in an IAAF World Championships final before Osaka was three, but five women in Japan went on to attempt 2,03m -- with four successful over 2,00m. Slesarenko had the misfortune of finishing fourth in 2,00m, with compatriot Yekaterina Savchenko the fourth over the same height -- making that three Russians over 2,00m in the same competition. Bergqvist finished tied for seventh with a best of 1,94m.
A thousand other small wishes came true throughout the 2007 season as well, with Asafa Powell setting a new world record in the 100m (9,74) and me having had the opportunity to meet Xavier Carter in person (Glasgow). I had also hoped that Carolina Klüft could finally break the European record in the heptathlon. She was able to manage that in Osaka, amassing 7.032 points and becoming the second-best performer of all-time behind American Jackie Joyner-Kersee.

I'd also hoped for a season of faster times and good marks, and 2007 did not disappoint in that category, either, with Allyson Felix running excellent 200m (21,81) and 400m (49,70) times in Europe and Osaka, and a stellar 48-flat relay leg on the winning 4x400m at the IAAF World Championships. Tyson Gay blazed an incredible 9,84-19,62 at his national championships, and U.S. collegian Walter Dix screached to 9,93 - 19,69 times whilst in university competition.

Finally, not to continue touting my Swedish team, but Johan Wissman's 400m exploits this summer -- culminating in a seventh-place finish at the World Championships following a national-record 44,56 in the semi-finals -- was one of those hidden gems which made wishes worth making and dreams worth having.

Now that the season is virtually concluded (although there was a 10,10 100m recorded last week at the World Military Games), I'll have time to finally sit back and reflect on what was truly inspiring, and which athletes I believe can provide me the greatest entertainment value leading up to Beijing.

Until then, I'm going to enjoy cross country and the road races around Europe. I hate to admit this, but I am a bit "tracked" out.

2007-01-22

2004 Olympic Bronze Medalist Cioncan Killed

Story written by EPelle

Romanian Maria Cioncan, who twice fought galliantly against Kelly Holmes at the Athens Olympics three years ago - finishing with a bronze medal in the 1.500m, was killed instantly yesterday in a car crash in Bulgaria as she traveled home from a training camp.

Cioncan's coach, Stefan Beregszaszy, was travelling separately in another vehicle, and confirmed the news to the IAAF soon thereafter. The shocking news spread quickly within the Romanian Athletics Federation, with Gabriela Szabo, a member of its managing board, stating to Romanian news agency Mediafax yesterday that the federation did not know Cioncan had been traveling through Bulgaria.

The 29-year-old, who was one of seven women in the 1.500m to set personal bests in the Athens final, ran a lifetime best of 3.58,39 in the Olympic final, one of the most exciting races in the Olympic Games as only the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona producing three or more sub-4 finishes.

Kelly Holmes won the final - her first of two gold medals - in 3.58,90. Russian Tatyana Tomashova finished second in 3.58,12. Six women in all broke 4.00,00 in the blazing final, with Poland's Anna Jakubczak, running 4.00,15 for seventh.

Cioncan won her semi-final heat in 4.06,69, forcing the second heat to send all seven of its qualifiers to the final with taxed legs as each of the athletes in semi-final two ran faster than Cioncan did in winning her heat. She also ran 4.06,68 to win heat three of the qualifying rounds.

Cioncan had
placed seventh in the 800m final five days before the 1.500m final, running 1.59,62 - her second sub-2.00 clocking of the Olympic Games.

Cioncan improved drastically in time and place in the 1.500m from her 2003 IAAF World Championships, where she placed ninth in the final with a time of 4.02,80.


A Romanian 800m and 1.500m national champion, Cioncan first broke on to the world scene with a showing at the 2001 IAAF World Indoor Championships, where she placed ninth in her heat with a 4.17,47 clocking, and made the semi-finals, clocking a 2.00,72 to place fifth in her heat.

She failed to make the final two years later in Birmingham, running 4.14,52 for fourth in her heat.


Cioncan won the European Cup A Final Super League in the 1.500m in 2002 (4.03,74) and won the 800m three years later in Florence (2.00,88).

Cioncan's excellent mark at the 2004 Olympic Games put her name in the rich Romanian tradition of middle distance running along the side of Natalia Marasescu, Paula Ivan, Doina Melinte, Maricica Puica, Szabo and Violetta Szekely.

Though her time was an excellent mark among the all-time greats to ever run the event - Cioncan had the fifth-best Romanian mark - she recorded "only" the 15th-best performance among her countrywomen.

The Olympic bronze was Cioncan's crowning moment as an athlete, and she helped use her notoriety to bring justice to greater causes.

Cioncan participated in the Opening Ceremonies of the 2004 Special Olympics in Bucharest - the National Games - held at Iolanda Balas Soter Stadium by carrying the "Flame of Hope" to the cauldron with Special Olympics Romania athlete Andrei Nita.

The event was attended by a host of dignitaries, including legendary national sportswoman Iolanda Balas Soter, the stadium’s namesake.

Cioncan's presence will be missed on the field as well as with her personal charitable endeavors.

2004 Olympic Women's 1.500m Final:

  1. Kelly Holmes (Gbr) 3.57,90 (Personal Best and National Record)
  2. Tatyana Tomashova (Rus) 3.58,12 (Personal Best)
  3. Maria Cioncan (Rom) 3.58,39 (Personal Best)
  4. Natalya Yevdokimova (Rus) 3.59,05 (Personal Best)
  5. Daniela Yordanova (Bul) 3.59,10 (Personal Best)
  6. Lidia Chojecka (Pol) 3.59,27 (Season Best)
  7. Anna Jakubczak (Pol) 4.00,15 (Personal Best)
  8. Elvan Abeylegesse (Tur) 4.00,67
  9. Carmen Douma-Hussar (Can) 4.02,31 (Personal Best)
  10. Natalia Rodriguez (Spa) 4.03,01 (Season Best)
  11. Olga Yegorova (Rus) 4.05,65
  12. Hasna Benhassi (Mor) 4.12,90

Cioncan's 1.500m Progression:

  • 2005 -- 4.07,39, Firenze, 19-June
  • 2004 -- 3.58,39, Athens, 28-August
  • 2003 -- 4.02,80, Paris Saint-Denis, 31-August
  • 2002 -- 4.02,10, Bucharest, 09-June
  • 2001 -- 4.12,24, Funchal, 30-June
  • 2000 -- 4.06,20, Bucharest, 06-August
  • 1999 -- 4.14,00, Göteborg, 31-July

2007-01-21

American Miler Webb Wins at the Armory

Story written by EPelle

American miler Alan Webb had a red bull's eye in the form of a number “one” printed on his race number yesterday at the New Balance Games at the New York Armory, and drew the inside lane around the red banked track.

He was first on the line and sporting a new look - a shaved head, and was the first athlete of the field of 11 home to the finish line on the sixth anniversary of his birth into the elite ranks.

Webb was the most distinguished athlete in the race, and the centre of attention - having retured to the exact spot to the exact day where, six years earlier, he made USA history by becoming the first high school athlete to run under four minutes indoors (3.59,86). Any move the 24-year-old was to make would be closely monitored and countered, it was thought.

However, the 2005 IAAF World Championship 1.500m finalist (ninth) and American 2-mile record-holder displayed excellent strength and took on his pursuers with relative ease over the mile, clocking 3 minutes 56,7 seconds (
race video) - a new personal best indoors, and his second sub-4 in as many races this young 2007 indoor season.

“It’s a personal record indoors,” quotes The New York Times, “and it’s only January. It’s the first time I’ve won in New York since high school. I couldn’t believe it. It’s just what I wanted. It’s not perfect, but it tells me I’m moving in the right direction. The competition gets more and more competitive.”

Kenyan Eliud Njubi, who had run 3.58,78 in Arkansas last weekend, was second in 3.58,64, and had no zip in his legs to catch Webb on the final lap.

“I was always right on Alan’s tail, and I thought I could beat him. But when I started moving on the last lap, my turnover wasn’t good and I couldn’t go. But I’m happy with my race, even though I lost.”

Webb responded by stating, “I was ready for him. I wasn’t going to let him pass me. I’m moving forward.”

Webb is definitely moving forward - one race at a time - as he pursues his dream of winning a medal in Osaka, Japan at this summer's IAAF World Championships, and takes that further to the Olympic Games in Beijing next summer in hopes of turning his flame out in 2006 and his tactical errors of 2004 great learning opportunities, but distant memories.

Skipping the 2006 indoor season was meant to provide Webb more strength work as he contended with cross country courses and longer interval training in an effort to build his stamina to a level where he could respond to moves and kicks despite not feeling ready to cover a move.

Webb suffered a bout with anemia during the late winter months and was forced to miss the USA Cross Country Championships, but he recovered enough to demonstrate excellent strength preparations when he set a 10.000m personal best of 27.34.72 at Stanford University on 30-April.

His achievement was short-lived, however, as he then never fully recovered from a hamstring strain following his phenominal victory over American Dathan Ritzenhein, with Webb pushing it through two more races before missing the bulk of the season - one which he had planned on using to run "very fast".

Webb finished his 2006 season with a solo mile victory in Ireland fighting the wind and the elements.

The great testament to Webb's strength was in his even-split running yesterday, as he knocked off times of 58,7-60-60-58 around the banked track - chopping nearly one second from his previous best, a 3.57,52 (2004), and eclipsed his previous Armory best (3.59,49) by almost three seconds as he improved his best placing up one spot from a runner-up finish in 2004.

Irishwoman Mary Cullen took the women's race in 4.32,29 over American Sarah Hall (4.32,68) and Canadian Carmen Douma-Housar (4.32,78).

The 2007 indoor season will be a pure joy ride for Webb, as he ticks off the next three week-ends with mile races at the Reebok Boston Indoor Games, the 100th Millrose Games at Madison Square Garden - where he will face American Bernard Lagat and Australian Craig Mottram - and the Tyson Invitational in Fayetteville, Arkansas, USA.

Previous Webb entry: Alan Webb to Return to the Armory (
blog link)

Select Results of 2007 New Balance Games Mile

Elite Men:

  1. Alan Webb, Nike, 3.56,70
  2. Eliud Njubi, Westchester Track, 3.58,64
  3. Adrian Blinco, New Balance, 4.00,21
  4. Josh McAdams, New Balance, 4.00,59
  5. Andy Baddeley, New Balance, 4.01,17
  6. James Thie, NYAC, 4.01,66

Elite Women:

  1. Mary Cullen, Reebok, 4.32,29
  2. Sara Hall, Asics, 4.32,68
  3. Carmen Douma-Hauser, New Balance, 4.32,78
  4. Hilary Stellingwerff, New Balance, 4.32,90
  5. Marina Muncan, New Balance, 4.35,43
  6. Katrina Wooten, New Balance, 4.35,52

High School Boys:

  1. Chris Moen, Walter Johnson, 4.16,76

High School Girls:

  1. Danielle Tauro, Southern Regional, 4.46,13

2007-01-17

Symmonds Becomes 284th US Sub-4 Miler

Story written by EPelle

First-year elite athlete Nick Symmonds of the Oregon Track Club became the 284th American sub-4 minute miler on Saturday, winning the Washington Preview Meet in Seattle, Washington, USA in 3 minutes 56,72 seconds.

Symmonds, whose previous personal best was a 4.03,85, won the race by nearly six seconds on the 307m unbanked, oversized track. Americans Courtney Jaworski (4.02,50) and Mike McGrath (4.04,08) finished second and third.

Symmonds, who graduated from Williamette University in the spring of 2006, was a seven-time NCAA DIII champion, winning both the 1.500m and 800m in 2003, 2005 and 2006, and winning the 800m in 2004.

Though he has shown promise as a 1.500m runner, Symmons' broke through last season in the 800m, winning his fourth-consecutive NCAA DIII 800m title, and finishing second at the USA Track and Field Championships, running 1.45,83 - a new personal record, school record and NCAA DIII record.

Khadevis Robinson won the race - his third national title - in 1.44,13, with Jebreh Harris finishing third (1.45,91). Symmonds sat comfortably behind the first half of the race, and moved from seventh to second as he picked runners off with a back-stretch move to the top of the home stretch curve.

Symmonds has done particularly well running in Oregon, as his outdoor personal mile best was set at the 2003 University of Oregon Twilight Meet.

Americans are now comparing Symmonds to David Krummenacker, the 800m/1.500m specialist who won the 2003 IAAF World Indoor Championships (1.45,69).

Symmonds has the 400m speed a good miler needs, possessing 48,15 (2006) speed over the one lap distance - a keen turnover component for a miler in a kicking situation.

He showed excellent ability last season with a 3.40,91 at Stanford in June - a time which demonstrated he was capable of running a 3.58 outdoor mile should he have been able to manage the pace over the full 1609 metre distance which is the mile.

"Its a big relief to break four (minutes)," Symmonds said to the Statesman Journal (link).

"It's phenomenal," said Willamette track and field coach Matt McGuirk. "When he came in his freshman year at Willamette, he ran a 1,000 meters in 2:27, and I new he was a sub-four-minute-runner."

"A lot of people out there say, 'I could have been a sub-four-minute-miler,' but didn't.

"He did," concluded McGuirk.

A product of Bishop Kelly High School in Boise, Idaho, USA, Symmonds was named 2006 NCAA Division III Male Scholar Athlete-of-the-Year - an award selected by the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association.

Symmonds was also named to the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Men’s All-Academic Team for NCAA Division III.

Symmonds graduated from Willamette with a 3,27 cumulative grade point average while majoring in chemistry. He was one of 79 student-athletes chosen for the U.S. Track and Field and Cross Country Coaches Association Men’s All-Academic Team.

Each All-Academic selection was honored for earning a cumulative GPA of 3,25 or higher, while achieving an NCAA qualifying standard in one or more events during the 2006 season.

After graduating from college in May, Symmonds began training in Eugene, Oregon under coach Frank Gagliano, the long-time Georgetown University coach (and one of America's premiere coaches) who then made a move to Palo Alto to coach the Nike Farm Team, and then headed to Oregon with Vin Lanana.

"It's been great training under Gagliano. I'll train under him as long as he'll let me."

"I have no excuses to run slow now," Symmonds said. "I just train and take care of my body."

Click here for a list of the Track & Field News chronological order USA sub-4 list (last updated 2005-February).

2006 University Season:
  • 3.49,23 Willamette Opener (4-mar)
  • 1.49,57 Oregon Preview (18-mar)
  • 0.48,15 Charles Bowles Inv (24-mar)
  • 3.45,75 Willamette Inv (7-apr)
  • 0.49,1h NWC Champs (21-apr)
  • 1.57,73 NWC Champs (21-apr)
  • 4.04,75 NWC Champs (22-apr)
  • 0.49,56 NWC Champs (22-apr)
  • 1.55,39 NWC Champs (22-apr)
  • 1.47,34 TN Distance Classic (13-may)
  • 3.50,57 NCAA DIII Qualifier
  • 1.51,42 NCAA DIII Qualifier
  • 3.49,24 NCAA DIII CHAMPION
  • 1.49,59 NCAA DIII CHAMPION
2005 University Season:
  • 3.52,77 Willamette Opener (5-mar)
  • 1.54,62 Oregon Preview (19-mar)
  • 3.47,04 Williamette Inv (2-apr)
  • 0,49,0h Oregon Mini Meet (9-apr)
  • 0,49,99 NWC Champs (22-apr)
  • 1.57,38 NWC Champs (22-apr)
  • 0.48,41 NWC Champs (23-apr)
  • 1.52,60 NWC Champs (23-apr)
  • 1.48,82 Ken Foreman Inv (14-may)
  • 3.58,24 NCAA DIII Qualifier
  • 1.52,67 NCAA DIII Qualifier
  • 3.54,20 NCAA DIII CHAMPION
  • 1.49,87 NCAA DIII CHAMPION
2004 University Season:
  • 1.52,0h Oregon Mini (10-apr)
  • 1.57,12 NWC Champs (24-apr)
  • 1.55,51 NWC Champs (25-apr)
  • 3.50,91 Ken Shanon Inv (8-may)
  • 0.48,84 Willamette Last Chance (22-may)
  • 1.51,29 NCAA DIII Qualifier
  • 1.50,87 NCAA DIII CHAMPION
2003 University Season:
  • 4.02,47 NWC 4-Way (15-mar)
  • 1.51,18 Oregon Preview (22-mar)
  • 3.57,63 Willamette Inv (5-apr)
  • 3.54,1h Oregon Mini (12-apr)
  • 1.57,43 NWC Champs (25-apr)
  • 1.55,03 NWC Champs (26-apr)
  • 3.54,92 NWC Champs (26-apr)
  • 4.03,85 U of O Twilight Mile (3-may)
  • 1.51,29 Stanford Qualifier (9-may)
  • 3.55,04 NCAA DIII Qualifier
  • 1.50,48 NCAA DIII Qualifier
  • 3.46,66 NCAA DIII CHAMPION
  • 1.49,51 NCAA DIII CHAMPION
Nick Symmonds' yearly in-season bests (Willamette homepage):
  • 2006: 48,15 - 1.47,83 - 3.45,75
  • 2005: 48,41 - 1.48,82 - 3.46,49
  • 2004: 48,84 - 1.50,87 - 3.45,55
  • 2003: 00,00 - 1.49,51 - 3.45,81 - 4.03,85y