National Post

Lit tracks can help runners hit peak speeds

No plans to incorporat­e at Summer Games

- Rick Maese

As she made her final push toward both the finish line and the history books, Letesenbet Gidey looked over her left shoulder. Gidey wasn’t checking for runners; she was checking the lights, making sure she was well ahead of the flashing green bulbs that had chased her around the track.

The 22- year- old Ethiopian beat the lights and smashed a world record in the women’s 5,000 meters that had stood for a dozen years. Less than an hour later, on the same track last week in Valencia, Spain, Uganda’s Joshua Cheptegei, also racing those flashing lights, broke the men’s 10,000- metre record, which had stood for 15 years.

Advancemen­ts in shoe technology have garnered headlines and stirred controvers­y recently for the way they boost performanc­e. But three vaunted world records have fallen in recent weeks thanks in part to wavelight technology, a system of flashing lights that helps runners keep pace with record times.

There are no plans to use the lights at high- profile events such as the Olympics or world championsh­ips, where runners angle more for titles than for records. But the lights have been deployed in a handful of single- day meets this year at which chasing world records was the primary target, generating buzz among fans, coaches and analysts.

Some appreciate the visual cues when watching on television or a computer. Others worry that the runners are benefiting from an artificial aid that wasn’t available to previous generation­s.

“If our activity is sport, our business is entertainm­ent,” Sebastian Coe, president of World Athletics, the global governing body for track and field, and himself a four- time Olympic medallist, said in a telephone interview. “We want things that add to the entertainm­ent value of our sport. Pacing lights adds to our understand­ing; it gives it a bit of excitement, a bit of jeopardy. That’s really what the sport needs.”

Developed three years ago by Dutch company SPORT Technology, the system was refined and promoted by Jos Hermens, a former distance runner and the chief executive of Global Sports Communicat­ion, which represents some of the world’s best runners, including Eliud Kipchoge and Kenenisa Bekele.

Long known as an innovator around the track, Hermens had been tinkering with the idea for years. He employed a similar system years earlier when he broke his own world record in the one- hour run in May 1976. To aid with his pacing, he set up police lights every 200 meters, synced and timed to flash with the world- record pace.

“I knew if I could see the light, I would be behind the schedule,” he said. “If I didn’t see it, I would be OK.”

The new system was designed as a visual guide for spectators and television viewers.

But it’s also a valuable training aid and competitio­n tool that helped Gidey and Cheptegei in their recent assaults on the record books. Cheptegei, 24, also broke the men’s 5,000-metre mark, which had stood for 16 years, in August (12:35.36) at a Diamond League event in Monaco that featured the wavelight technology.

The lights are positioned along the inside of the track and can be programmed for any pace. The system features different colours, which could be employed in a variety of ways during training. For the recent world record runs, the green lights indicated the world record pace. They trailed flashing blue bulbs, which illuminate­d the way for a human pacer.

For the first half of their record-breaking runs, Gidey and Cheptegei benefited from human pacemakers. Also referred to as rabbits, pacemakers are often used in world record attempts, running ahead to establish speed and block any wind. Gidey and Cheptegei ran the remainder of their respective races solo, accompanie­d to the finish line by only the flashing lights. While the blue bulbs might have aided Cheptegei’s pacers, he downplayed their impact on his 5,000-metre record.

“My mind was not actually on the wavelight,” he told Letsrun.com in August. “After the pacemakers were going, I was not after the light. It was Cheptegei and the world record.”

But others see clear benefits, and Gidey and Cheptegei showed remarkable consistenc­y throughout their lengthy runs. For Cheptegei’s 10,000- metre record ( 26: 11.00), except for his final 1,000-metre stretch, every other 1,000-metre split was within a second of 2: 37, a metronomic mark that would be difficult to replicate with just a watch.

The steady pacing allowed Cheptegei to break the 10,000- metre mark by 6.53 seconds, barely seven weeks after he bettered the 5,000 record by two seconds. Gidey’s run in the 5,000 last week ( 14: 06.62) shed nearly five seconds off the record.

Molly Huddle, a two- time Olympian from the U. S., watched the runs online and could immediatel­y see the benefits.

“It’s so hard to find pacing for the level of running needed to get things like world records,” she said in an email, “that I think it’s an exciting piece of technology that can help record setters in many different categories have a visual incentive to chase when they are alone on the track after pacers step away.”

 ?? JOSE JORDAN / AFP via Gett y Imag es ?? Letesenbet Gidey waves an Ethiopian flag after breaking the 5,000-metre world record on Oct. 7, with the help of wavelight technology.
JOSE JORDAN / AFP via Gett y Imag es Letesenbet Gidey waves an Ethiopian flag after breaking the 5,000-metre world record on Oct. 7, with the help of wavelight technology.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada