Men continued from page 9 “I’d have preferred to get the Amer ican record to 3:45 or 3:46 or some thing like that, where no one else could even get close,” El Guerrouj said. What was equally record-breaking in the mile was prep sensation Alan Webb’s time of 3:53.43, which broke Jim Ryun’s 36-year-old high school record by two seconds. “I felt good the whole time,” Webb said. “I wanted this record. I ran great splits; I knew I was on pace.” Two laps into the mile, it didn’t ap pear that any records would be bro ken — American, meet or high school. The race’s pace setters were ahead by too many strides to be effec tive and Webb sat in last place. “The pace setters went out a little too fast,” El Guerrouj said. “To be able to run a 3:49 without pace setters is pretty good.” Webb wasn’t deterred by his situa tion with 800 meters to go either. “I knew the pace would be fast,” Webb said. “I just stayed in contact and played conservative. I waited un til 300 to go, then poured on the gas. ” El Guerrouj was pleased with the turnout at Hayward Field. “This is the first time I’ve seen a public that understands athletics so profoundly,” he said. “The public de serves a great performance. I’d like to promise the crowd that I’ll be back next year to break the world record. ” Twelve runners in the mile field broke the legendary four-minute bar rier, only one runner shy of the meet record, set in 1995. A major coup occurred in the men’s 100 meters, which featured the “world’s fastest man” in Maurice Greene, who had been undefeated at the Pre since 1998. After a controver sial false start disqualified Canadian Bruny Surin, Jamaican Patrick Jarrett and Olympian Tim Montgomery edged Greene by .03 seconds. It was later determined that Jarrett left his starting blocks 0.042 seconds before the starting gun, which proved to be the difference between him, Montgomery and Greene. “Jarrett was two steps ahead of me,” said Olympian Jon Drummond, who finished fifth. “That had to be a false start. Those were two blatant, powerful ‘you-ain’t-catching-me’ steps.” “I didn’t feel anything,” Jarrett said. “The first false start was a blur. I did n’t hear anything. The second time, same thing.” Jarrett’s time of 9.89 seconds will not enter the Prefontaine record books due to a wind reading of 3.7 meters per second, 1.7 over the allow able mark. That same wind had an adverse ef fect on the 800 meters. A loaded in ternational field had its eyes set on the meet record of 1:44.6, set by John ny Gray in 1996. But a strong head wind on the east straightaway threw off the pace of many runners. Burundi’s Patrick Nduwimana came close to Gray’s record, winning in a time of 1:44.9. The Olympic semifinalist surged ahead of the pace setters with 350 meters to go, running splits of 54, then 50 seconds. “The wind was pretty bad on the back stretch,” Nduwimana said. “I can’t complain. At the 200 [meters to go] mark I saw it was 1:17, and I knew I was going to be 1:45.1 wasn’t too worried about time.” Following the 100 meters, the mile and the 800 meters, the rest of the meet was a little, well, ho-hum. Meet record-holder Luke Kipkos gei defended his title in the 5,000 me ters by out-kicking teammates Leonard Mucheru, Abraham Chebii and American record-holder Bob Kennedy. Kipkosgei was six seconds off his meet record with a time of 13:13. Olympic silver-medalist Terrence Trammell won the 110 hurdles in a time of 13.34 seconds. The only men’s event inside the oval — the discus — was won by Lithuanian Virgilijus Alekna on his final throw of220 feet, 5 inches. The cast of world-class athletes will now travel to Athens for the nexL installment of the Grand Prix track and field series. . Women continued from page 9 “I knew this was going to be one of my toughest races ever,” Favor Hamilton said. “To win it here is overwhelming.” Favor Hamilton erased the mem ory of her Olympic fall and a close loss in last year’s Pre Classic 1,500 with an easy victory. After running the race in 4:06.93, nearly three seconds faster than second-place Lyudmila Vasilyeva of Russia, Fa vor Hamilton threw her arms up in triumph as the Hayward Field crowd gave her a standing ovation. Maria Mutola was another ath lete with ties to Eugene who tri umphed Sunday. Mutola, a native of Mozambique who lives and trains in Eugene, beat out a field in the 800 that included her own sis ter-in-law, and she ran the fastest time in the world this year. Mutola has competed in 11 straight Pre Classic meets, and she hasn’t lost since her first attempt at the Pre back when she was a high school student in Springfield. “I always know the Eugene fans are behind me,” Mutola said. “I’m really happy to know that things are going so well.” Marla Runyan completed the tri fecta of Eugene distance winners. Runyan, a Eugene resident, easily won the 3,000 with a kick over the last lap that put her ahead of Kathy Butler by two seconds. Runyan said she was slightly disappointed about not breaking the Pre Classic record, but she en joyed the meet all the same. “To win at the Pre touches my heart,” Runyan said. “I knew the meet record wasn’t going to hap pen today, so I just tried to run as hard as I could and get the win.” Even if the local athletes stole the Pre Classic spotlight, some world class Olympians caught a piece of Sunday’s action as well. In the 100 hurdles, American hurdling star Gail Devers lost to Ja maica’s Deloreen Ennis-London in the day’s closest race. Ennis-Lon don’s time of 12.68 seconds was only .01 seconds faster than Dev ers’ time. The biggest star to compete Sun day, Marion Jones, won her event with a whimper instead of the usu al bang. “The world’s fastest woman” won the 200 in 22.26 sec onds, but her time was thrown out because of wind. She beat Ja maica’s Juliet Campbell by .49 sec onds for her fourth straight Pre Classic victory. In two field events that lasted al most all afternoon, Americans Amy Acuff and Stacy Dragila out shone their foreign competition to win the high jump and pole vault, respectively. Dragila jumped half a foot higher than her nearest com petitor in the vault, and nearly broke her own world record with three attempts at 15 feet, 51/2 inch es. Her winning mark was 15-11/2, a meet record. “I jumped really well this week,” Dragila said. “I felt good.” Acuff beat out the world’s top high jumper, Sweden’s Kajsa Bergqvist, with a final leap of 6-6. Acuff also beat out some personal demons on the high jump runway. Acuff rushed from Hayward Field after her event to catch a plane for Chicago, where she attended the funeral of her grandmother, Lor raine Ward. “I’ve had a rough couple days,” Acuff said. “My mind’s kind of been in different places. I feel like [Ward] was here with me today.” Acuff’s emotional, gutsy per formance typified the 2001 install ment of the Prefontaine Classic, where those with the most heart, it seemed, came out ahead. Webb continued from page 9 Webb’s current coach, Scott Raczka of South Lakes High School, said he was impressed by Webb’s performance. “He’s obviously very sharp right now,” Raczka said. “He’s able to shift gears as good as any one. And he showed that today.” Webb will shift into another mode, as he did Sunday, as die en ters the collegiate ranks this fall and looks to put American dis tance running back on the map — as the legendary Prefontaine did in the early ’70s. “I wanted that high school record,” Webb said. “I didn’t know if I had it in me today, but I wanted to set myself up if I did. “To compete at this level is very special. I’m excited to see what I can do at the next level.” Make it Happen! Be a Peer Health Educator Fall Term ELTA 407 Teach Classmates about Health Issues Important to You Strengthen Your Resume Through Experience Help Initiate and Design the Activities for the Class Earn 6 Upper Division Credits Call Annie al 346-2843 or Register Online http://healthed.uoregon.edu UNIVERSITY HEALTH CENTER We're m mmtter mf degrees ^