Wariner in Australia

Wednesday, 13 February 2008 Wariner to “buckle down and do serious” with Sydney 200m his Olympic season opener

http://www.iaaf.org/news/kind=100/newsid=43355.html

Jeremy Wariner - 43.45 in Osaka (Getty Images)

Sydney, Australia - World champion Jeremy Wariner said he expects to open his Olympic 400m title defence with a 44-second run at the Melbourne Grand Prix, but will prime his season with a 200m race at the Sydney Grand Prix this Saturday, 16 February.

“I’m hoping to open with my 200m in the mid-20s, maybe even lower and hopefully in the 400m break 45, open up with a nice 44. The last few seasons I’ve opened up with a 44 so hopefully I can continue,” Wariner said on his arrival in Sydney today.

“I’ve done a lot more hard training this year than I’ve done before. Of course this being an Olympic year we’re going to buckle down and do serious…my start can get better so we’ll see on Saturday how it goes in the 200. I’m working on my speedwork, I’m a little stronger than last year and I’m working on my finish.”

Coaching change “not serious”

Wariner shrugged off suggestions that his much-publicised split with long-time Baylor coach Clyde Hart might adversely affect him and was something of a risk, especially in an all-important Olympic year.

“The change hasn’t been serious. It’s just a new coach for me,” he said, referring to Mike Ford, the man who actually recruited him from high school to attend Baylor and has worked for eight years under the venerated Hart.

"I’m still doing the same workouts, so nothing’s changed. I’ve got a workout partner now. The last few years I’ve trained by myself. Having a training partner like Darold Williamson (a 400 finalist at the 2005 Helsinki World Championships) who is on the same level as me is going to benefit me.

“When coach Hart couldn’t make it, coach Mike Ford was there for me at the Olympics. He knows exactly what I’ve done.”

Speed work

Wariner said that while he continues progressively to work every aspect of his race, he believes improving his 200m speed is paramount to his prospects of improving his 400m to World record level.

“Now that we’re training more for the 200 to help my 400, my 200 is getting faster,” said Wariner, who ran a wind-aided 20.41 before arriving at Baylor and has since lowered his best to 20.18.

“For me it is the key to progressing in the 400m,” Wariner explained. "The way my running style is, I think it’s the key. I’m more of a speed runner than a strength runner so I need the speed a little bit, at the same time as I build the strength.”

"It’s a lot of hard work at practice, a lot of over-distance that we do. I try to work harder than what I’m supposed to.”

"My coach wants me to come through in a certain time in practice and I try to come through ahead of it. I try to hold onto the same pace for the rest of the workout just so I can build my strength up.”

"That’s a big part of why I’m strong in my race and why I’m fast in my race.”

“I always try to over-achieve in my training to break the world record and be the greatest 400m runner of all time.”

Onward to 2016

There must be something to that because at only 24, Wariner already has two World titles and an Olympic gold medal at 400. He talked today about competing through to the 2016 Olympics which he hoped would give him a chance to compete before a home crowd.

Before then though he hopes and even expects to have broken another mentor, Michael Johnson’s World 400 record of 43.18. These days Johnson acts as Wariner’s track agent, while another former 400m star, Deon Minor, is his manager.

“I could definitely break 43 seconds. That’s my goal: to be the first one to run 42 seconds,” Wariner declared.

“I’m not going to rush things and try and force everything in one year. I’m going to gradually build up, each year to work on the same things to get better in each part of my race.”

He was less certain about just to race model that historic sub-43 because of his experiences splitting both fast and moderate 200m times in transit, yet emerging with nearly the same end time at 400m.

“Honestly no. One race I ran 20.8 through the 200 and I ran 43.45 at World champs (in Osaka 2007). At Stockholm I was like 21.1 and ran 43.5. I have a range,” he understated.

“If I go slower through the first 200 I know my next 200 is going to be faster of course. A lot depends on the track, the conditions and the field I have.”

While Commonwealth Games champion John Steffensen has advised Athletics Australia he will not compete in Sydney or Melbourne - two of the three meets along with the Australian championships (February 28 - March 2) which are compulsory under the Olympic selection criteria - Wariner said he would respect whomever he runs against.

“Honestly, whenever I run a race it doesn’t matter who I’m running against,” Wariner stressed. “It could be high school kids, it could be the best in the world. I’m always going to run the same race. Every person in the race, I treat them as the same athlete - there’s always a chance they could beat me. Just because they’re not the top five in the world I’m not going to slack off and not run my race.”

Offering a rare insight into some of his training, Wariner was quick to reply to the question of which session is his toughest.

“The workout I hate the most? My over-distance, of course,” he said with a wide smile. "Anything over 400. We gradually build down throughout the season, so we’ll start off doing 1000m. We’ll do two of those.”

"And then work our way down so that by the time we’re about two months away from the US trials we’ll be down running 450s and run 450s for the rest of the year. We do no more than two (450s).”

"We do 10mins recovery between the 1000s. All our over-distance always has the same rest. We pretty much work on a steady tempo.”

"Coach wants us to come through the 400 at a certain pace and from there on try to keep up that same pace or try to pick it up if you can.”

“The pace varies, depending on the weather, what time of season it is, if you’ve got a meet coming up. It all depends. One day we might do a 600 coming through in about 60 for the quarter, one day we might do 58 for the quarter.”

Williamson to act as main test in Sydney but new Aussie hope sidelined

Wariner’s training partner Darold Williamson will contest the 400 at the Sydney meet at Sydney Olympic Park on Saturday, but new local hero Joel Milburn is a highly doubtful starter.

Milburn clocked 45.19 in a huge breakthrough to take an early world lead last weekend, but failed to finish a training session on Tuesday night, pulling up with painful tendinitis on the outside of his right knee.

“There’s probably a 90 per cent chance I won’t run Sydney, just to be cautious, but I’ll be good for Melbourne and the nationals,” Milburn said in anticipation of facing Wariner at the WAT meeting in Melbourne.

McLellan also injured

While Milburn, 21, has been the revelation of the Australian summer season, Queensland’s Sally McLellan, also 21, has posted world class times in the 100m hurdles and, sadly, she too is injured.

Results on an MRI scan today revealed a 3-4cm tear at the junction of the muscle and tendon in the biceps femorus of McLellan’s left leg.

“She’s devastated,” McLellan’s coach Sharon Hannan said after breaking the bad news of the scan results to her young champion.

“The tear is considered low grade but still requires three to four weeks rehabilitation. That’s her domestic season over.”

Mike Hurst (Sydney Daily Telegraph) for the IAAF

printemail

Fast food fuels pursuit of a legend
Jenny McAsey | February 14, 2008

THE world’s fastest man over 400m? Surely it could not possibly be Jeremy Wariner.

He is, to put it bluntly, a bit runtish. Ironically, he exists on a diet of fast food, always searching for a well-known hamburger chain the minute he arrives in a new country.

He was true to form when he landed in Sydney yesterday. And then there is the other thing, one he does not like to talk about - he is white.

“Irrelevant,” he says, although he is the first white man to win the Olympic 400m title since Californian Mike Larrabee in 1964.

Of so little consequence is that fact to him that when asked yesterday if he knew who Larrabee was, he was stumped. “I’ve no idea who that is,” he said. “As an athlete we all have the same ambitions, we all want to be the best, so I don’t see it matters what race you are for that.”

Wariner, still just 24, won the Olympic gold medal in Athens and has also won two world titles. As far as making history, the Texan is more concerned at breaking the world record of 43.18sec, set by his manager Michael Johnson.

He might be a lightweight compared to some of his competitors, but very few of them have got near him in the past few years. So it will be a treat for Australian fans when Wariner runs the 200m at the Sydney Grand Prix on Saturday night and the 400m at the IAAF World Tour event in Melbourne next Thursday.

Unlike 100m world record-holder Asafa Powell, who arrived from Jamaica on Tuesday after badly cutting a knee and minus his luggage, Wariner did an hour of light training at Sydney Olympic Park yesterday, just a few hours after landing from the US.

Watching him work out provides clues to his speed. He is so fluid and rhythmic, his feet gliding over the track. His agent, Deon Minor, says it puzzles him sometimes how Wariner, who is 182cm and weighs 70kg, runs so fast.

“As far as his weight, it shocks me sometimes when I look at him, I say how does this kid run this fast?” Minor said.

“Everyone looks at Jeremy and says he is too thin, he is not going to run that fast, he needs to bulk up. He has put on a couple of pounds, but Jeremy has great foot speed, it is just exceptional.”

To break the world record, he needs to get better over 200m. Saturday will be his first race for five months but he hopes to run a mid- to low-20sec (the world record, also held by Johnson, is 19.32sec), and then run sub-45sec over 400m in Melbourne.

Wariner raised eyebrows last month when he cut ties with coach Clyde Hart, seen as the guru of 400m running. A contract dispute ended their relationship and Wariner is now with Michael Ford, an assistant of Hart’s at Baylor University in Texas.

He ran a personal best 43.45sec last year, making him the third-fastest man over 400m. He wants to break the world record in Beijing, and then be the first man to enter the sub-43sec realm.

His 400m Olympic gold was fuelled by a hamburger the night before the final. He says he has a very high metabolism which readily burns junk food, but he is slowly trying to better his diet.

“My diet is not one to speak of, because a lot of young kids think they can do the same but it is more about how your body is,” he said.

"I have always said don’t change your diet real quick and dramatically, if you are used to one thing, don’t cut it off quick.

“So my McDonald’s is not as bad as it used to be, I am slowly backing off, but I am still eating it of course. I’ve gone from a double cheeseburger to a chicken sandwich.”

Who is his Agent?
Deon Minor? Johnson?
Or how many agents does he have?

I think Minor is his agent and Johnson is his manager.

DM is manager MJ is agent. Am I wrong?

You are never wrong PJ :slight_smile: and in this case you are most definitely correct!

What’s the difference?

Is the agent like the marketing guy and the manager is the PA who looks after the individual, money etc…

LOL… I like the last quote of the article.

Sounds like a very tight hamstring and/or calf muscle. We get this all the time if daily massage isn’t used but you can fix it very quickly by taking the tension out of the contributing muscles.

TopCat, Please explain further as I have had issues with my calf tightness for years and some knee pain as well.

Charlie

Often tightness in the muscles is described by physios as tendinitis. However, after a few days of massage it goes so surely it can’t be tendinitis? In this case you just need the whole area worked out. Usually takes about 6 hours.

6 hours of massage spread out over a few days, yes?

Reduction in “functional length” of the muscle can (will) also set up mechanical issues, including pivoting at the (hip, ankle) joint which can create issues along the chain, ie, knee, producing tendinitis brought on by the sheering effect.

[“functional length” is a bit of mumbo jumbo but not sure how else to explain it, in terms of range reduced by tightness or pain]

Yes unless you have some crazy ass therapist!

yesterday at a luncheon in sydney he impressed me greatly with his down to earth approach and relaxed attitude, he was happy to chat with and sign anything for anyone, thankfully thats one trait he never got from MJ his promotional trip to sydney years ago was a disgrace

Williamson quoted wariner upon arrival to homebush for a session saying “damn how good is this place they have McDonalds across the road from the track”

posted by nanny…
yesterday at a luncheon in sydney he impressed me greatly with his down to earth approach and relaxed attitude, he was happy to chat with and sign anything for anyone, thankfully thats one trait he never got from MJ his promotional trip to sydney years ago was a disgrace

Williamson quoted wariner upon arrival to homebush for session saying “damn how good is this place they have McDonalds across the road from the track”

LOL, that might be the quote of the year. He sure loves his Mcdonalds.

Sounds like NSW could find themselves another sprinter. McDonalds Australia, AA and coaches get on to the marketing.