Fitness test the day before 10,000m

[i]Britain’s Kate Reed, competing in her first Olympics, finished 23rd in 32:26.69 but said she was asked by UK Athletics chief Dave Collins to run a 2km time-trial the night before the race in order to prove her fitness.

The 25-year-old had been suffering from an achilles problem but she said the decision badly affected her performance.

“Dave Collins wanted to make sure I wasn’t going to let the team down, I guess he didn’t want any bad performances,” Reed said.

“But to put somebody through that the day before their first ever major international is absolutely appalling.” [/i]

from http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/olympics/athletics/7564070.stm

OA defend treatment of Reed

1 hour ago

British Olympic chiefs have defended their treatment of 10,000m runner Kate Reed, who was forced to prove her fitness with a gruelling test event on the eve of her final.

The 25-year-old condemned her handling by the British team, and UK Athletics performance director Dave Collins in particular, as “appalling”.

A British Olympic Association spokesman defended the decision, saying: “The athlete in question has been on and off running for the last few weeks and has had immense medical support prior to the BOA training in Macau, at the training camp and here in Beijing including scans, manipulations and acupuncture.”

He added: “She was give a painkilling injection and asked to run 2,000m at reasonable pace, agreed with her coach, to ascertain that she could actually perform in the race and whether the painkilling injection worked.”

Reed passed the trial and in Friday night’s race finished 23rd out of 31 runners - fellow Briton Jo Pavey came in 12th - and afterwards blamed the test for tiring her out.

Reed said: "Dave Collins wanted to make sure I wasn’t going to let the team down, I guess he didn’t want any bad performances, but to put somebody through that the day before their first ever major international is absolutely appalling.

"It has been a childhood dream to come to these Olympics, it’s all I’ve ever wanted my whole life. It’s not at all how I imagined it, I wanted to go home, I was in shreds.

"If it hadn’t been for my coach, and my mum and dad phoning from back home, I don’t think I would have made it, I was an emotional wreck and shaking like a leaf. It was just too much.

“I dosed myself up with painkillers two hours before, put on my long socks and said a long prayer that I could get through it.”

http://ukpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5gf9Ou21ewJ5bU23hC3aK7dv3KhBw

that is simply idiotic. You NEVER test it out first because if you need a painkiller, the test will NEGATE it before you need it!

Ummmmm…isn’t having one of your athletes be present and NOT RUN at the Olympics a bad performance too?

Colins didn’t want a bad performance he wanted a super bad performance. What a set of morons!!?

Poor Kate was distraut and knew this test would ensure in a below par performance.