Andrew Wheating, a 20-year-old from Norwich, Vermont, has made the Olympic team to Beijing in the 800 meter dash. Wheating ran from sixth place to second over the final 100 meters, setting a new personal best of 1:45.03 in the process. He crossed the line with a look of profound shock on his face, to the thunderous cheering of the Hayward Field crowd.
"They really pushed me through that last 100...all I
heard was the crowd," said Wheating, an sophomore at the University of Oregon. "I believe Oregon was 1-2-3 because of this crowd."
Trials champion Nick Symmonds (1:44.10) and third-placer Christian Smith (1:45.47) are also Eugene residents, and will represent the U.S. in Beijing. All three men set personal bests in the race.
Symmonds had a few things to say about Wheating.
"I don't think it would have been quite as loud if (Andrew)
wasn't doing what he was doing. He's such an amazing, untapped talent," he said. "It just
shows that America has amazing talent. We've got a young group of guys going out
to take everyone on."
Wheating ran mostly cross country in high school, and when he started track he thought he would be a long-distance runner.
"I was convinced I was a 5k runner, but my high
school coach saw that I could keep a steady pace through repeat quarter(mile)s," he said. "Then I tried the mile and then he saw that I could do some speed work, so we
tried the 800 and it worked out."
It worked out very well. The entire season, Wheating has relied on his kick to win, but the pre-race predictions (including my own) worried that he would rely too much on that kick. He proved himself equal to the task, swinging around third, fourth and fifth place and into lane four with about 50 meters to go. At that point, he appeared to pause, then he shifted gears and put nearly a half second on third place.
Third place was Christian Smith, who outleaned Khadevis Robinson for the last spot on the team. Smith suffered a burst appendix a little more than a year ago, struggled to recover and was not even favored to make the Trials final. He was the next-to-last qualifier for the Trials, 29th out of 30 entrants.
"Nobody knows how low I
got except for my coach and my girlfriend, walking around the hospital, hunched
over for three months," he said. "I just can't imagine being here, 15, 16 months later."
The favorite Robinson was philosophical about his fourth place showing.
"I
tried to fight for it, but I had nothing left. I had a great ride and now its
time to get back to the drawing board and go from there," he said. "You know, when God
closes one door he opens another. I have to take my hat off to those guys, they
ran really well and deserve to be on the team."
Just three months ago, Wheating was an unknown in the track world. In seven more weeks he will step on the track at the Olympic Games and compete with the best runners in the world.
"It hasn't really hit me yet," Wheating said. "Give me a couple more minutes and
I'll probably shoot up out of this chair and scream 'I made it!'"
-Rob Mitchell