Felix
fixes formula for rare 200-400m Olympic bid
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[February 19, 2016]
By Larry Fine
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Allyson Felix is
honing in on her quest for a rare shot at gold in both the 200 and 400
meters at the Rio Olympics, tailoring her training to simulate the
stress of her bid and leaning some who have achieved the feat.
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A four-time Olympic champion and nine-time world champion in the
sprints, Felix is seeking to become only the fourth athlete to sweep
the distances at an Olympics.
Felix, in New York to compete in the 60-yard dash indoors at the
Armory in Saturday's 109th Millrose Games, attempted the feat at the
2011 world championships where she finished second in the 400 meters
and third in the 200 meters.
"It was a huge learning experience for me because it was my first
time trying to do it," Felix, 30, told Reuters on Thursday. "I
learned that I needed more speed. When I came to the 200 I was
feeling flat, and not like myself."
Felix said her sprinting speed is her strength and she must have
faith that her distance training would provide the endurance she
needs in the 400 to match Valerie Brisco-Hooks (1984) and France's
Marie-Jose Perec (1996).
Michael Johnson became the first men's 200-400 double winner at the
1996 Atlanta Games.
"Obviously, (her coach) Bobby (Kersee) has been my biggest wisdom in
the area and Valerie, she's someone who I’ll continue to talk to.
She's worked with us for years," said Felix, whose coach Kersee
worked with Brisco-Hooks at the LA Games.
"I have a great relationship with her. I’ve picked her brain a
little bit, and I'm definitely going to continue to do that
throughout the year."
An Olympic schedule change has provided more time between the races
in Rio this year but the reigning 200m champion said she needs to
work on quick turnarounds for the Summer Games should she qualify to
represent the U.S. in both distances.
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"Training is going well. It’s intense and it’s heavy right now,"
Felix said. "A lot of running with very short recovery and two races
overlapping. Just being able to do that workload in practice and
have that turnaround is the biggest difference.
"It’s about having intense days back-to-back. I think one of the
biggest concerns is that there is a late night (400) semi-final,
(followed by) an early morning 200 round and late night (400) final.
"So being able to kind of simulate that in practice that’s a big
thing," she said, adding that late night workouts were in the master
plan.
Felix said an encounter with Johnson at last October's Hall of Fame
induction in the Armory further motivated her.
"He was just saying he wanted me to go for it and was interested as
a fan of track and field to see the outcome," beamed Felix. "Of
course, he’s a huge inspiration."
(Editing by Frank Pingue)
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