Monaco Diamond League - Herculis Meeting International dAthletisme 2014

Stars are out for Monaco HJ and 800

Stars are out for Monaco HJ and 800

Jul 16, 2014 by Dennis Young
Stars are out for Monaco HJ and 800
For a variety of vicissitudes (very injured, very sick, left the country, the structure of the seasons), one point of my college career featured a twenty-two month interval between cross-country races. I was incredibly jittery right before the race that ended the layoff, a late-August 6k.

I asked my coach right before the race for some advice and maybe some calming words. Here’s what he said:

Dennis, when you eat a breakfast of bacon and eggs, what’s the difference between the pig and the chicken who put that on your plate?

Uh, no clue.

The chicken… the chicken is involved. But the pig! THE PIG! The pig is COMMITTED!


(I followed up that pep talk with a terrible race.)

I wouldn’t say that any world records are about to be committed Friday in Monaco. But three of them are definitely involved.  Here’s a preview of those events:

Men’s high jump (14:05 Eastern)

ATHLETE DATE OF BIRTH NATION PB SB
BARSHIM Mutaz Essa
24.06.1991
QAT
2.42
2.42
BONDARENKO Bohdan
30.08.1989
UKR
2.42
2.42
DMITRIK Aleksey
12.04.1984
RUS
2.36
2.29
DROUIN Derek
06.03.1990
CAN
2.40
2.40
FASSINOTTI Marco
29.04.1989
ITA
2.28
2.28
HANANY Mickaël
25.03.1983
FRA
2.34
2.34
KYNARD Erik
03.02.1991
USA
2.37
2.37
PROTSENKO Andriy
20.05.1988
UKR
2.40
2.40
TOBE Naoto
31.03.1992
JPN
2.31
2.31
UKHOV Ivan
29.03.1986
RUS
2.41
2.41
ZHANG Guowei
04.06.1991
CHN
2.34
2.34

The Supermen are back.

The Diamond League is fantastic— it’s the closest thing that track has to a PGA/ATP equivalent, a professional federation that puts on meets with consistent hype, crowds, and prize money. But the sandy gears and general intransigence that seem to be an international and timeless feature of track & field and the looseness of the coordination between the meets mean that the circuit is slow to react to phenomena like the Supermen.

It just sucks that we’ve seen these HJ horses hurl themselves into the heavens only four times in the last seventy days. It’s not the athletes’ fault: they’re following the money. The incentive structure is the problem— each meet with the means to offer the prize money is only bound by two structures, its own self-preservation and the rules that the IAAF lays out for the Diamond League.  No self-respecting professional sport would see its historic superstars compete on just four days out of ten weeks in the meat of the season.

But that’s exactly what’s happened with the Supermen.  Cherish watching them— you don’t know when they’ll be in action next.

It’s always safe to bet against a world record. But bet on Erik Kynard to at least tie the American record of 2.40, becoming the second American (after Charles Austin) to join the 2.40 club.


The header on the Diamond League Monaco's homepage is pretty spectacular.

Men’s 800 (2:15 Eastern)

ATHLETE DATE OF BIRTH NATION PB SB
AMAN Mohammed
10.01.1994
ETH
1:42.37
1:43.99
AMOS Nijel
15.03.1994
BOT
1:41.73
1:43.63
BOSSE Pierre-Ambroise
11.05.1992
FRA
1:43.76
1:44.23
CHERUIYOT Ferguson Rotich
30.11.1989
KEN
1:43.22
1:44.30
KAKI Abubaker
21.06.1989
SUD
1:42.23
1:44.09
LEWANDOWSKI Marcin
13.06.1987
POL
1:43.79
1:44.49
OSAGIE Andrew
19.02.1988
GBR
1:43.77
1:45.37
RUDISHA David
17.12.1988
KEN
1:40.91
1:43.34
SOLOMON Duane
28.12.1984
USA
1:42.82
1:43.88
TANGUI Sammy
16.09.1984
KEN
1:49.39
 

The world record is in absolutely no danger here, obviously. But with WR holder DavidRude BoyRudisha* toeing the line, the specter of 1:40.91 looms over the proceedings.

Rudisha might not be the favorite here: Mo Aman and Nijel Amos have been first or second in every DL meeting they’ve run this summer, losing to only each other and Asbel Kiprop. With Rudisha clearly much fitter than he was when he lost to both at Pre, and with personal rabbit Sammy Tangui in tow, things will undoubtedly be spicy.

How you feel about Duane Solomon’s American record chances might depend on your answer to this question: are Charles Jock and Cas Loxsom only in 1:47 shape? If you knock off two seconds for wind from everyone’s times in Edmonton, that puts Solomon at 1:42.92, Jock at 1:47.22, and Loxsom at 1:47.52 (Note: Loxsom is running the 800m in Liege on Wednesday, so we'll know the answer soon enough).

I’d guess that Loxsom and Jock are closer to 1:45-46 shape, meaning that Solomon is primed to smash the 1:42.60 AR held by his coach Johnny Gray.  Solomon actually won this race last year; as much as runners pay lip service to winning, Solomon would gladly lose to Rudisha, Aman, and Amos if it meant breaking the AR this year.

*listen, if Mitch and Gordon are going to start calling Evan Jager “The Cuban”, I’m going to pull nicknames out of my ass too.

Editor's Note: It's because Jager was close to his American Record, but just missed it. You know, so close, but no cigar? Cuban cigars? Do you get it?