Waterloo Region Record

Canada’s track team has a star in teenager Arop

- LORI EWING

Marco Arop was a star-struck 17-year-old watching the men’s 800-metre final at the Canadian track and field championsh­ips in 2016.

“I remember a friend of mine saying ‘That’s Brandon McBride, he just placed second at NCAAs,’ and I thought ‘It’s going to be awhile until I can be at his level,’ ” Arop said. “And here I am. It’s crazy.”

Sunday, McBride and the rest of the men’s 800 field watched Arop from behind as the 19-yearold from Edmonton fearlessly led wire-to-wire to win the Canadian title in his senior debut. And in a Canadian championsh­ip missing some of its top stars, Arop became one.

“Everything is going right for me right now,” Arop said through a wide smile. “I can’t believe this is happening.”

The six-foot-four Arop had dabbled in track in elementary school and junior high but had hitched his college dreams to a basketball scholarshi­p until the track coach at Blessed Oscar Romero High School convinced him — finally — to run track in his Grade 12 year.

He then delayed college for a year to work with coach Ron Thompson at Edmonton’s Voleo Athletic Club. And last month, in his freshman season for Mississipp­i State, he raced to a surprise silver medal at the NCAA championsh­ips, crossing in a fast one minute 45.25 seconds.

Canada had been short on 800-metre men since Gary Reed — still the Canadian recordhold­er at 1:43.68 — retired in 2010. Then along came McBride, who boasts a best time of 1:43.95, and was eighth at last summer’s world championsh­ips.

But it was Arop who dominated Sunday’s race at a sun-drenched Terry Fox Stadium, powering out to the lead in the first 100 metres and running with nothing but open track in front of him the rest of his way. He won in 1:46.15, ahead of a closing McBride, who was second in 1:46.42.

“It’s a feeling that I can’t even explain,” Arop said of running in the lead. “I was so afraid of Brandon, I thought he was going to outkick me with 200 to go, and that just encouraged me to kick even harder. I could just feel him there, he’s so much stronger than I am, he has that kick, but today just wasn’t the day for him.”

Arop was born in Khartoum, Sudan. The civil war had forced his parents to flee to Khartoum from their home in Abyei. The family then immigrated to Egypt when Arop was two, and eventually to Saskatoon. The family of eight — Arop has five brothers — finally settled in Edmonton.

Arop’s victory Sunday clinched his spot in next month’s NACAC championsh­ips — for athletes from North American, Central America and the Caribbean. He and McBride could combine for a forceful 1-2 punch for Canada in next year’s world championsh­ips and the 2020 Olympics.

“It really motivates me,” the 24-year-old McBride said of Arop. “I’m just happy that there’s a few of us out there now that are running around (Olympic- and world-qualifying) standard ... hopefully we can have a full roster of 800 runners going to the Olympics and the world championsh­ips.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Marco Arop runs away from the field to win the men’s 800-metre race Sunday.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS Marco Arop runs away from the field to win the men’s 800-metre race Sunday.

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