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American Record Holder Webb Returns To Run Drake Relays Invitational Mile

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American Record Holder Webb Returns To Run Drake Relays Invitational Mile

2009 DRAKE RELAYS RELEASE #19
APRIL 15, 2009

DES MOINES, IOWA ? Alan Webb, who shattered the Drake Relays record in the invitational mile in 2007 and then two months later set an American record, will make his first appearance back to Drake Stadium since his historic run during the Saturday, April 25 session.

The invitational mile will be held at 4:14 p.m. Saturday.

Webb enjoyed an amazing season in 2007, ending the campaign with the fastest times in the world in the mile (3:46.91) and 1,500 meters (3:30.54), and also posted the second-fastest time in the world in the 800 meters (1:43.84), all of which were personal- best times.

On July 21, 2007, Webb set the American record in the mile, clocking 3:46.91 at the Atletiek Vlaanderen meet in Brasschaa, Belgium, to break the mark of 3:47.69 set by Steve Scott in 1982. That time was the eighth fastest time in history.

The early invitational mile field also includes Pablo Solares, the Mexican national record holder in the 800 and 1,500;  Chris Lukezic, who owns a personal best of 3:54.46 set at the 2008 Prefontaine Classic; Moise Joseph of Haiti; Steve Sherer, who was third in the 1,500 at the 2008 and 2009 U.S. Indoor Championships; Pete van der Weshuizen from South Africa; and  Adam Perkins, who was fourth in the 1,500 at the 2005 NCAA Outdoor Championships.

Solares ran the fifth fastest indoor mile time in the world this year at 3:54.52 Feb. 7 at the Reebok Boston Games. Solares was third and Sherer fifth in the mile at the 2009 Millrose Games.

Webb won his first U.S. indoor title in 2007 in the mile before going on a tear during the 2007 outdoor season. On April 28, he ran 3:51.71 to break Scott's mile record of 3:55.26 at the Drake Relays.

On June 24 in Indianapolis, he ran 3:34.82 in the 1,500 to break Scott's 25-year old meet record at the USA Outdoor Championships, where Webb won his third career national title.

The biggest win of Webb's career came July 6 in Paris, when he ran a personal-best 1,500 time of 3:30.54, the fastest time in the world in 2007. On July 16, 2007, Webb set a then personal best in the 800 meters, running 1:45.80 in Malmo, Sweden..

Webb opened the 2007 campaign by winning the mile at the New Balance Indoor Games in a personal indoor best of 3 minutes 56.70 seconds.

Webb was second in the 1,500 at the 2009 U.S. Indoor Championships and ran a 3:57.64 mile at the Reebok Boston Games on Feb 7, which was the sixth fastest indoor time in the United States this year. He had a 2008 outdoor best of 3:55.47 in the mile at the Prefontaine Classic.

He broke that personal best mark a week later running 3:55.18 in Boston, to win the Reebok Invitational. He also won the mile at the 2007 U.S. Indoor Championships.

Webb, 26, won the 1,500 at the 2004 U.S. Olympic Trials and 2005 U.S. Outdoor Championships.

He continued his steady climb up the ranks of the world's best 1,500 meter runners in 2005 by qualifying for the final at the World Outdoor Championships in Helsinki, Finland. He finished the campaign ranked No. 7 in the world by Track & Field News. He ran a 3:48.92 at Oslo, Norway.

Webb also made a huge splash by winning the 10,000 meters at the 2006 Payton Jordan Cardinal Invitational in Palo Alto, Calif., which was the fastest-ever debut by an American at that distance in 27:34.72.

Webb earned the world-class status he promised as a high schooler by winning four major races in 2004: the Home Depot Invitational, the Golden Spike meet in Ostrava, Czechoslavkia, the Nike Prefontaine Classic and the U.S. Olympic Trials. His time of 3:32.73 at Ostrava (at that time) was the second fastest in the world in the 1,500m that year, while his 3:50.85 from the Pre-Classic was the world's fastest mile (at that time) in 2004.

A high school phenom after breaking Jim Ryun's prep mile record for sophomores in 1999, Webb in 2001 became an internationally heralded athlete as the first American high school miler ever to run under four minutes indoors at the New Balance Games with a time of 3:59.86. Then at the Prefontaine Classic  in Eugene, Ore., a well-paced race and a final lap of 55.3 seconds enabled Webb to run a 3:53.43 in the mile, breaking the national high school record of 3:55.3 that was set by Ryun 36 years earlier.

As a freshman at Michigan he won the 2001 Big Ten Conference cross country championship and was 11th at the NCAA Cross Country Championships. An Achilles injury forced him to sit out the 2002 indoor track season but he bounced back to win the Big Ten Outdoor Championships 1,500 and placed fourth in the 1,500 at the NCAA Championships. Webb left the University of Michigan in June of 2002 to turn professional and be coached again by his high school mentor Scott Raczko.

Lukezic, 24, was sixth in the 1,500 at the 2009 U.S. Indoor Championships and 10th at the 2008 U.S. Olympic Trials. He ran 3:56.04 to finish third at the 2009 Reebok Invitational in Boston, Mass., Feb. 7.

As a senior at Nebraska, van der Westhuizen placed 11th in the mile at the 2008 NCAA Indoor Championship. He owns a personal best of 3:59.05 in the mile set indoors in 2008.

Joseph, 27, owns a personal best of 4:03.32 in the mile set in 2001.He was third in the 800 in a personal best of 1:45.74 at the 2002 NCAA Outdoor Championships competing for Florida.  

Sherer, 27, owns a personal best of 3:56.00 en route to winning the indoor mile at the Washington Invitational Feb. 2.

 

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