Daily News (Los Angeles)

Fisher takes control with eyes on the Paris Olympics

- By Scott M. Reid sreid@scng.com

SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO >>

For decades, tourists have come to this south Orange County town each March to celebrate the return of the swallows to Mission San Juan Capistrano, the nearly 250-year-old stone church that is the birds' landing spot after a 6,000 mile flight from Goya in northern Argentina.

In recent years, March has seen another migratory pattern to San Juan Capistrano that has also attracted global attention.

America's best distance runners and world class athletes from around the planet flock to The Ten, a high performanc­e distance carnival at J Serra High School, less than five minutes up via Camino Capistrano from the Mission, and the promise of ideal race conditions to reach Olympic Games, Olympic Trials or World Championsh­ips qualifying standards in the 5,000, 1,500 and especially 10,000-meter runs.

The star of Fast Times at J Serra High has been Grant Fisher, American distance running's leading man.

At The Ten in 2022, Fisher, a former NCAA champion at Stanford, shattered the American record at 10,000 with a 26-minute, 33.84 second clocking, the fastest time ever run by a man born outside of Africa. In his slipstream that night runners from Canada, Australia and Scotland also broke their national 10,000 records.

Fisher once again headlines The Ten tonight, the fastest seed in a field of 36 runners from 16 countries and includes nine Olympians, 10 World Championsh­ips participan­ts as well as Northern Arizona's Nico Young, the former Newbury Park High star who last week swept the NCAA indoor 3,000 and 5,000 titles.

Fisher has set six American records at four different distances since February 2022. But as Fisher, 26, enters this Olympic season in the prime of his career he is not focused on the clock.

“It's not about chasing time,” he said. “It's about chasing medals.”

As in medals in the 10,000 and/or 5,000 at the Olympic Games in Paris later this summer.

A generation ago Fisher's comments would have been considered laughable, given the U.S. men's nearly 50-year absence from the Olympic medal stand in the 5,000 or 10,000 between 1964 and 2012. But with a resume that includes a fifthplace finish in the Olympic Games 10,000 in Tokyo, fourth place in the 10,000 at the 2022 World Championsh­ips in Eugene, and an 8:03.62 2 mile at the Millrose Games last month, the third fastest time ever recorded indoors, few if any would dispute Fisher's status as bona fide medal contender at both 5,000 and 10,000 in Paris.

“I've been really close to getting a medal but have never got one,” Fisher said referring to the Olympic Games and World Championsh­ips. “The margin is so small” between fourth or fifth and medaling “that you have to optimize everything you can to get to that level.”

Closing that gap, Fisher said, is what ultimately led to his decision last October to leave the Bowerman Track Club, the Nikefunded, based Eugene high performanc­e training group that had been his home since he turned pro in June 2019, a move that shocked U.S. track.

“I'm sure to some people on the outside it looked like a risky decision,” Fisher said. “And to some people it might have looked like a risky decision if I had decided to stay.”

Fisher's departure is but one in a series of high profile exits from BTC in recent months that have left the U.S. sport transfixed and raised questions about the future about the most successful American training group this decade. Courtney Frerichs, the Olympic silver medalist in the 3,000 steeplecha­se, Elise Cranny, the American record-holder at 5,000 indoors, and rising star Cooper Teare have also recently left the group.

Earlier Matthew Centrowitz, the 2016 Olympic 1,500 champion, and Olympians Gabriela DeBues-Stafford, Woody Kincaid and Marc Scott left BTC.

DeBues-Stafford, a Canadian, left the club last April complainin­g about the continued connection of Shelby Houlihan, the American record-holder in the 1,500 and 5,000, with BTC despite being banned for doping was a distractio­n. Houlihan was banned for four years in June 2021 after testing positive for a banned anabolic steroid.

“Last summer, a fellow athlete received an antidoping ban, and this event was deeply upsetting,” DeBues-Stafford wrote on social media. “I have said this publicly before that learning this news in mid-June almost derailed my Olympics. It was a small miracle that I showed up in Tokyo in shape to run sub-4 twice in 48 hours and place fifth. Going into the fall, I did my best to put this event behind me, and focus on all of the positives this group has to offer, as I truly did and do love this team. However this event and its ongoing aftermath continued to be a major distractio­n and stress for me. For the sake of my athletic performanc­e and mental health, I needed to move on.”

Other BTC members were upset with Nike's decision to move the group from the company's world headquarte­rs in Beaverton to Eugene so BTC head coach Jerry Schumacher could also coach the University of Oregon's cross country and track teams. Some BTC members complained about having to relocate from the affluent Portland suburbs to a small college town or that Schumacher, now coaching two teams, wasn't able to devote as much time to the pro group as he had before the move.

“It was a very hard decision. I had a lot of success there,” Fisher said of BTC. “I'm friends with all the guys there still. It was a difficult decision leaving friends behind.

“Things had been working great.”

A medal was within reach with 200 meters to to in the Olympic 10,000 final but Fisher couldn't respond when Ethiopia's Selemon Barega, the eventual winner, broke the race open around the final curve. Still Fisher his fifth place seemed to promise even bigger things.

He became the first American to break 13 minutes for the 5,000 indoors the following winter, taking nearly eight seconds off Galen Rupp's previous standard with a 12:53.73 race in Boston. A few weeks later Fisher running in The Ten knocked nearly 11 seconds off Rupp's eight-year old American record at 10,000 to become at 26:33.84 the seventh fastest man in history. Only Fisher and Rupp, at 19th, among the top 68 runners on the world all-time 10,000 list were born outside of Africa.

That summer Fisher was fourth the Worlds 10,000 and then appeared headed for a medal in the Worlds 5,000 final until he got tangled up with BTC training partner Mohammed Ahmed of Canada with 120 meters remaining, nearly tripping and then, having lost his momentum, fading to sixth place. Before the season was over Fisher added the outdoor 3,000 (7:28.48) and 5,000 (12:46.96) to his American record collection.

But Fisher struggled to a fourth-place finish in the U.S. Championsh­ips 10,000 last July. An MRI taken after the race revealed a stress injury to his femur.

“The injury took out a really important chunk of the season,” he said. “I was very dejected. The MRI was right after the 10K so I had to pull out of the 5K. The doctors I talked to said `yeah, your season is over.'”

Yet despite being limited to cross training for several weeks, Fisher broke his American record at 3,000, running 7:25.47 for third place at the Prefontain­e Classic, the Diamond League final in Eugene last September, finishing ahead of Olympic 10,000 champion Barega.

“It showed myself that even missing out on a [chunk] of training I could still compete with those guys,” Fisher said. “It was encouragin­g, proving to myself that I was still ready to compete with the big guys.”

His determinat­ion to find the little things would enable him to beat the big guys was the tipping point in his decision to leave BTC a month later.

Fisher relocated to Park City, Utah and its 7,000-foot elevation although much of his training build-up in recent weeks has taken place in Flagstaff with track workouts in Cottonwood, Arizona. Fisher has resumed training with Mike Scannell, his coach at Michigan's Grand Blanc High School. Cottonwood is roughly halfway between Flagstaff and Phoenix, where Scannell now lives.

“It's definitely been an adjustment,” Fisher said. “Still I think it's worked out quite well.”

Fisher opened his Olympic season at New York's

Millrose Games February 11, out front, driving the pace in the 2 mile in a relentless style reminiscen­t of the late Steve Prefontain­e, not yielding to Josh Kerr, the reigning World 1,500 champion from Great Britain and Scotland, the final 300 meters. Fisher held on long enough behind Kerr's world record shattering 8:00.67 to become the third fastest man ever at the distance, just missing dipping under the previous world record of 8:03.40 set by Mo Farah, the only man this century to win the Olympic 5,000 and 10,000 titles in back to back Games.

Five days later Fisher narrowly missed reclaiming the American indoor 5,000 record from Kincaid with a 12:51.84 victory in Boston.

“I was really happy with that race,” Fisher said referring to the 2 mile. “I was really happy with the indoor season as a whole. It's good to rub shoulders with Josh, who's a really strong, powerful guy. But both of us have our sights set on bigger things later in the summer.”

To put Fisher's 2 mile into further perspectiv­e consider who now sits beneath him on the all-time list: Ethiopia's Kenesia Bekele (8:04.35), the three-time Olympic and five-time World champion, and Haile Gebrselass­ie (8:04.69), a twotime Olympic champion and four-time World champion, Morocco's Hicham El Guerrouj (8:06.61), holder of the world 1,500 and mile records for the past quarter-century, and Kenya's Eliud Kipchoge (8:07.39), the two-time Olympic marathon gold medalist.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States