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Top Women's Mile on Tap at New Balance Games - RRW

Published by
Matt Scherer   Jan 16th 2008, 5:03pm
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TOP WOMEN'S MILE ON TAP AT NEW BALANCE GAMES
By David Monti
(c) 2008 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved

NEW YORK (16-Jan) -- Saturday's New Balance Games at the Armory Track and Field
Center here will feature a top women's mile, a tasty appetizer for the great
middle distance races which will follow at the Reebok Boston Indoor Games and
the Millrose Games over the next two weekends. There are also invitational miles
for men, and high school boys and girls.

Race director Ian Brooks has assembled a strong international women's field,
and nobody has more experience running the mile on the Armory's fast 200m banked
Mondo track than Canadian Carmen Douma-Hussar. She will be making her sixth
start in this event since 2002. She won the race in 2005 and has only once
finished lower than third.

"The Emerald Nuts Midnight Run showed me that I am on the right track,
fitness-wise," Douma-Hussar reported via e-mail, referring to her victory at the New
Year's Eve
four mile road race in Central Park where she shattered the course
record. "I had spent some time cross training on the eliptical in December
because of a sore foot and it's a little harder to tell how fit you are when cross
training. Overall, my training over the last couple of months is much the same
as the training that I did before I won three years ago (due to sore knee), so
maybe having a little niggle is key for me!"

Her top rival should be Russia's Liliya Shobukhova, the former world indoor
record holder for 3000m. Shobukhova will be making her New York City debut to
kick off her indoor season. In 2006 she was the IAAF World Indoor 3000m silver
medalist, and her 4:22.14 mile personal best speaks for itself.

Also in the field are Americans Sara Hall and Jen Rhines. Hall, the wife of
Olympic Trials Marathon champion Ryan Hall, has been training at altitude in
Flagstaff, Ariz., where she has been staying with her friend Alicia Shay. She's
looking forward to a strong indoor season and would like to compete at the IAAF
World Indoor Championships
to sharpen herself for her outdoor track season.

"I am excited about coming to the New Balance Games because it was the perfect
place to kick of my season last year," Hall wrote in an e-mail message. She
was second by a whisker in last year's race to Irishwoman Mary Cullen. "I know
it will be a great race to start gaining momentum going into the Olympic year.
I am feeling physically stronger than I ever have at this point in the season,
and am looking forward to getting out on the track."

Rhines, who finished seventh at the IAAF World Championships in the 5000m last
August, will be running her first race at the Armory. "I'm looking forward to
kicking off the indoor season and what better place to start than in New York,"
Rhines wrote via e-mail. "I have never raced at the Armory but I've heard
great things about it and I'm looking forward to seeing what it's all about."

What Rhines is likely to find is a wildly enthusiastic crowd of both spectators
and high school competitors who pack the meet every year. More than 5000
athletes are expected to take part; the meet is scheduled to last about 11 hours.

# # # # #

Here are the fields for the invitational miles at Saturday's New Balance Games
and a list of previous winners:

WOMEN (with personal best times):
1. Carmen Douma-Hussar, Canada, New Balance, 4:26.76
2. Sara Hall, USA, Asics, 4:32.24i
3. Hilary Stellingwerff, Canada, New Balance, 4:28.62
4. Liliya Shobukhova, Russia, Adidas, 4:22.14
5. Amy Mortimer, USA, Reebok, 4:34.54i OT
6. Jen Rhines, USA, Adidas, 4:41.04i OT
7. Megan Metcalfe, Canada, New Balance, 4:31.91i
8. Marina Muncan, Serbia, New Balance, 4:34.67i
9. Nikeya Green, USA, Reebok, 4:14.39 (1500m)
10. Jo Mersh (née Fenn), Great Britain, Adidas, 4:09.54 (1500m)
11. Amanda Bales, USA, NYAC, 4:38.98
12. Kassi Andersen, USA, Nike, 4:44.49i OT
13. Colleen Newhart, USA, Unattached, 4:52.61i OT
14. Jessica Minty, USA, New Balance Boston, 4:46.49i

MEN (with personal best times):
21. Eliud Njubi, Kenya, Westchester TC, 3:56.84
22. Andy Baddeley, Great Britain, New Balance, 3:51.95
23. Adrian Blincoe, New Zealand, New Balance, 3:54.40
24. Josh McAdams, USA, New Balance, 4:00.59i
25. Rob Myers, USA, Nike, 3:53.78
26. Ryan McKenzie, Canada, Nike, 3:58.52
27. Neville Miller, USA, NYAC, 4:04.86i OT
28. Abiyot Endale, Ethiopia, Westchester TC, 4:13.20i (3:58.9 road)
29. Tim Dunn, USA, NYAC, 3:48.27 (1500m)
30. Stephen Chemlany, Kenya, Westchester TC, 4:08.49i
31. Egor Nikolayev, 1988, Russia, Adidas, 3:48.27 (1500m)

i = Indoor mark; OT = Mark achieved on oversized indoor track

PREVIOUS WINNERS:
1996: Erik Nedeau, New Balance, 4:11.54; Alisa Hill, Unatt., 4:48.88
1997: Andy Keith, New Balance TC, 4:06.21; No women's race contested
1998: Larry Weiss, NYAC, 4:08.52; No women's race contested
1999: Richie Boulet, New Balance, 3:57.89; Sinead Delahunty, New Balance (IRL),
4:31.96
2000: Mark Carroll, Unattached(IRL), 3:54.98 MR; Regina Jacobs, Clifbar/HSI,
4:21.79 MR
2001: Leonard Mucheru, New Balance (KEN), 3:57.90; Amy Rudolph, Reebok, 4:28.47
2002: Leonard Mucheru, New Balance (KEN), 3:55.54; Amy Rudolph, adidas, 4:34.15
2003: James Thie, NYAC (GBR), 4:02.05; Hayley Tullet, New Balance (GBR),
4:27.46
2004: Elkanah Angwenyi, New Balance (KEN), 4:02.73; Hayley Tullett, New
Balance/GBR, 4:27.28
2005: Elakanah Angwenyi, KEN, 3:59.38; Carmen Douma-Hussar, New Balance (CAN),
4:28.43
2006: Elkanah Angwenyi, Nike (KEN), 3:57.47; Hayley Tullet, New Balance (GBR),
4:29.23
2007: Alan Webb, Nike, 3:56.70; Mary Cullen, Reebok (IRL), 4:32.29

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