Eugene / Stanford: Cheruiyot, Manangoi Duel in Pre Classic Bowerman Mile
The duo of Timothy Cheruiyot and Elijah Manangoi have dominated the world miling scene since Manangoi led a 1-2 Kenyan sweep in the London World Championships 1500. Last year, they flipped 1-2 positions in Track & Field Newsā annual world rankings, which combines efforts at the 1500 and mile. No one has beaten both in the same race in almost two years. but donāt be surprised if a teenager or two steals the show ā as happened in last yearās magical race.
Timothy Cheruiyot, 23, won a second-straight IAAF Diamond League trophy last year, helping him earn his first No. 1 world ranking by T&FN. He topped Manangoi 6-3, including winning his first Bowerman Mile. His 1500-meter best of 3:28.41 makes him historyās No. 7 ever.
Cheruiyot came out of nowhere as a 19-year-old in 2015 to make the Beijing Worlds final, taking 7th. He didnāt make the powerful Kenyan Olympic team for Rio but world-ranked for the first time at No. 6. He has won the last two Kenyan 1500 titles.
Elijah Manangoi, 26, is all set to defend his London World gold, beating Cheruiyot earlier this month at the Doha Diamond League 1500, where this fallās World Championships will be held.
Manangoi has a stellar record, starting with a silver in the Beijing Worlds that propelled him to four straight top-3 world rankings by T&FN. He owns a career 11-9 record over Cheruiyot and is seeking his first Bowerman Mile title ā in 2017 he lost by just 0.04 seconds, the closest in meet history.
Filip Ingebrigtsen, 26, completes the medal sweep from London, his bronze the first in this event for Norway in the Worlds or Olympics. His Norwegian record of 3:30.01 set last summer helped him to his best world ranking by T&FNat No. 5. Heās not the fastest miler in the family ā older brother Henrik owns that record at 3:50.72 (heāll be running a longer race at the Pre Classic this year).
All eyes in Norway ā and the world ā are looking at 18-year-old Jakob Ingebrigtsen, who last summer became the youngest-ever European champion at age 17 with a stunning 1500-meter victory, beating both of his brothers in the process for the first time. The next day he added 5k gold.
Jakob ran his first Bowerman Mile last year in 3:52.28. A year earlier in the Pre Classicās International Mile he ran 3:58.07 to become the youngest-ever sub-4 miler (previous was Jim Ryun with his famous 3:59.0 in 1964).
This year Jakob has set two indoor world Junior (U20) 1500 records, won gold and silver at the Euro Indoors (3k/1500) and was 12th in the World Cross Country Championships in late March.
But Jakob Ingebrigtsen wonāt be the only teen to reckon with. Ethiopiaās Samuel Tefere, 19, was just 18 when he won last yearās World Indoor 1500 in an undefeated season. This winter he claimed the world indoor record of 3:31.04, beating countryman Yomif Kejelcha (the 5k specialist who set the world indoor mile record is confirmed to run a yet unannounced longer race at the Pre Classic).
Tefere was runner-up in last yearās Bowerman Mile in his first race on U.S. soil. He is Ethiopiaās second-fastest ever in the 1500 and earned his first T&FNworld ranking last year at No. 8.
A 2016 win in Rio made Matthew Centrowitz, now 29, the first American Olympic gold medalist since 1908 in the menās 1500 meters. He won his fourth outdoor U.S. 1500 title last summer. His dad, Matt, is a former American record holder in the 5k.
Clayton Murphy, 24, is likely best remembered for his Rio Olympic bronze at 800, the first Olympic medal by an American at that distance since Johnny Gray in 1992. Yet his best distance might be the 1500, as he has been the top American in the last two Bowerman Miles. Murphy has an 800 best of 1:42.93 and this year has lowered his indoor mile PR to 3:53.30, won the U.S. indoor 1k title and has not lost outdoors.
Johnny Gregorek, 27, became the most recent member of the sub-3:50 club, running 3:49.98 indoors in early March ā nearly breaking the American record of Bernard Lagat. His parents (John and Chris) were both national collegiate runners-up at Georgetown, and dad made the 1980 and 1984 U.S. Olympic teams in the steeplechase.
Ayanleh Souleiman, 26, of Djibouti was ranked No. 3 in the world last year by T&FN. Heās a two-time winner of the Bowerman Mile, and his 3:47.32 meet record is also the Diamond League record in the event. He was just 0.05 seconds from a medal in Rio. Souleiman was the World Indoor gold medalist in 2014.
Aman Wote, 35, is the only Ethiopian faster than Tefere in the 1500 and owns national records in the 1500 (3:29.91) and mile (3:48.60). He has been world-ranked twice in the top 10 the last two years by T&FN.
Brahim Kaazouzi, who will turn 29 on June 15, was world ranked No. 4 last year by T&FN. He has yet to a run a mile or any race in the U.S. He is Moroccoās 7th-fastest ever at 3:31.62 in the 1500.
Kenyaās Bethwell Birgen, 30, is set for his sixth Bowerman Mile. The World Indoor 3k bronze medalist lowered his indoor mile PR in January ā outdoors his best is 3:50.42.
Nick Willis is the oldest in the field at 36. He earned Rio bronze after Olympic silver in 2008. His mile PR of 3:49.83 is second only to John Walkerās 3:49.08 in New Zealand history, but in the 1500 he broke Walkerās nearly 30-year-old record with a 3:29.66.
Rounding out the field is 2019 USATF Indoor mile champion Craig Engels. The former Mississippi standout finished 4th in 2016 Olympic Trials 800 and 5th in the 1500. In 2018, Engels finished 7th in the World Indoor 1500 final. His lifetime mile best of 3:53.89 was set indoors this past March.
The Bowerman Mile is named for Bill Bowerman, a legendary figure in track & field history who co-founded NIKE while coaching national championship teams four times at the University of Oregon (1962-70). Among his famous pupils was Steve Prefontaine, whom he recruited and mentored to the Olympics. Bowerman passed away at age 88 on December 24, 1999, and the Pre Classic mile has been known as the Bowerman Mile since then. A compilation of all Pre Classic sub-4 miles and other related statistics is available at PreClassicMiles. Since 2009, the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association has presented its highest award, The Bowerman, to the top male and female track & field athlete.
Bowerman Mile | Personal Best | ||
Ayanleh Souleiman | Djibouti | 3:47.32 | |
Aman Wote | Ethiopia | 3:48.60 | |
Elijah Manangoi | Kenya | 3:49.08 | |
Timothy Cheruiyot | Kenya | 3:49.64 | |
Nick Willis | New Zealand | 3:49.83 | |
Johnny Gregorek | USA | 3:49.98 | |
Bethwell Birgen | Kenya | 3:50.42 | |
Matthew Centrowitz | USA | 3:50.53 | |
Samuel Tefere | Ethiopia | 3:51.26 | |
Clayton Murphy | USA | 3:51.99 | |
Jakob Ingebrigtsen | Norway | 3:52.28 | |
Filip Ingebrigtsen | Norway | 3:53.23 | |
Craig Engels | USA | 3:53.89i | |
Brahim Kaazouzi | Morocco | None (3:31.62 for 1500 = c3:48.55) |
Tickets for the 45th annual edition of the Prefontaine Classic, to be held June 30 at Cobb Track & Angell Field in Stanford, Calif., are available now by clicking here or at gostanford.com/tickets.
Customers may select their exact seats using the pick-your-own map. Tickets can also be ordered over the phone by calling 1-800-STANFORD.
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Prefontaine Classic
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