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Adam Goucher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American cross-country and track and field athlete
Adam Goucher
Personal information
NationalityAmerican
Born (1975-02-18)February 18, 1975 (age 50)
Sport
SportTrack
Event(s)
1500 meters,3000 meters,5000 meters,10,000 meters
College teamColorado
Achievements and titles
Personalbest(s)1500 meters: 3:36.64[1]
Mile: 3:54.17[1]
3000 meters: 7:34.96[1]
5000 meters: 13:10.00[1]
10,000 meters: 27:59.31[1]

Adam Goucher (born February 18, 1975) is a retired Americancross-country andtrack and field athlete. He ran for the United States at the2000 Summer Olympics in the men's 5000 meters. Goucher primarily competed in distance events and is featured inRunning With The Buffaloes, a book revolving around the 1998 season of theUniversity of Colorado cross country team.

Running career

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High school

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Goucher attendedDoherty High School inColorado Springs,Colorado and graduated in 1994. Before he ran competitively in high school, he played basketball.[2] He won theFoot Locker National High School Cross Country Championship in 1993, as well as having personal bests of 1:53 at800 m, 4:18 at1600 m, and 8:55 at3200 m. Goucher's coach in high school was Judy Fellhauer, who was an Olympic Trials qualifier in the marathon.[2]

Collegiate

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While attending theUniversity of Colorado, Goucher won twoNCAA indoor track titles in the 3,000 meter race (1997 & 1998) and an outdoor NCAA track title in 5,000 meters in 1998. After three top ten finishes, he finally won theNCAA Division I cross country title his senior year in 1998. It is during this season in whichRunning With The Buffaloes is written. He also competed in theUnited States Olympic Trials in 1996 and placed 14th in the5000 m.

Professional

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After graduating, Goucher continued to compete with a contract fromFila, running the fastest time for an American in 1999 in the mile (3:54.17), the sixth fastest for 3,000 meters (7:43.31), and third fastest for 5,000 meters (13:11.25). On consecutive days in February 2000 he won both the short (4K) and long course (12K) races at theUSATF National Cross Country Championships under cold, muddy conditions in North Carolina. During 2000, he also made his firstOlympic team, placing first in the Olympic Trials in the5000 m. He was 13th in the5000 m at theSydney Olympic Games, despite serious battles with back troubles.

Goucher's career has been plagued with injury. Despite having continually been ranked as one of the foremost American competitors at distances between1500 m and5000 m, he was prevented from performing optimally at the 2004 Olympic Trials by anAchilles heel problem and thus did not qualify for the Olympic team. The Olympic Trials were a culmination of a very rough period for him and soon thereafter he left Mark Wetmore, his longtime coach and friend, to train withAlberto Salazar in Oregon.

The move proved beneficial for Goucher. Goucher's 2005 season saw him improve his5000 m time to 13:10.19 and take 2nd place at the USA Cross Country 4 km Championships.

In 2006, Goucher ran a 10:50 at the USA Cross Country Championships to win first place in the short course (4 km). He went on to finish 6th in the short course race at theIAAF World Cross Country Championships in Fukuoka, Japan, the highest finish by an American since Pat Porter placed 6th in the 1986 World Cross (12K) Championships. He finished only 8 seconds behind the winner, world-renowned Ethiopian championKenenisa Bekele, the 5k and 10k world record holder. At the 2006Prefontaine Classic, Goucher finished third in the 2 mile with a time of 8:12.7, the third fastest 2 mile ever run by an American.

Goucher's performance at the World Cross Country meet and his 2 mile at the Prefontaine Classic were the highlights of a year that also saw him dipping under 28 minutes for the 10,000 meters with a 27:59.41 at the Van Damme Memorial Meet in Brussels, Belgium.

In 2008, he took part in the US Olympic Trials inEugene,Oregon with hopes of qualifying in the 5k and 10k. His time of 13:56.25 in the semifinal of the 5k was enough to advance to the finals, but after holding the lead for several laps, he dropped out of the race with two laps remaining. He withdrew from the race because he was at a point that he would not be able to run the Olympic A standard if he were to continue with the race. This was done to conserve energy for the 10k. He finished seventh in the 10k final, failing to qualify for the Olympics, but besting his previous 10k personal record by less than a second with a 27:59.31.[citation needed]

Goucher currently resides inBoulder, Colorado, with his wife,Kara Goucher, also a professional runner. They have one son, Colton Mirko. Goucher is co-founder of Run The Edge, a virtual fitness challenge company.

Personal bests (outdoor)

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DistanceMarkDateLocation
800 meters1:50.03May 11, 2002Modesto, CA
1500 metres3:36.64July 17, 2001Stockholm
Mile3:54.17May 30, 1999Eugene, OR
3000 metres7:34.96July 20, 2001Monaco
2 miles8:12.73May 28, 2006Eugene, OR
5000 metres13:10.00July 22, 2006Heusden-Zolder
10000 meters27:59.31July 4, 2008Eugene, OR

References

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  1. ^abcdeAll-Athletics."Profile of Adam Goucher".
  2. ^abChris Lear (May 1, 2001)."Running Times: Learning to Fly".

External links

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Audio interviews

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Video interviews

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1878–2016
Notes
  • 2020 OT: The 2020 Olympic Trials were delayed and held in 2021 due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.
USA Championship winners in the men's5K run
1906–1979
Amateur Athletic Union
1980–1992
The Athletics Congress
1993–present
USA Track & Field
Notes
* Events before 1906 are considered unofficial. Distances have varied as follows: 2 Miles (1899–1931) and odd numbered years since 2015, 5000 meters (1933–1939), 3 Miles 1932, (1940–1986), and 3000 meters (1987–2014) and even numbered years since 2014
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