UCLA athletes compete for shot at Olympics
Upcoming trials will pit 12 Bruins against predecessors, NCAA stars
By Christina Teller
Daily Bruin Senior Staff
A chance for Olympic dreams lies a couple hundred miles north of the UCLA campus. This locale is only fitting as the Bruin track program looks to send 12 of its finest to Sacramento to vie for one of the three coveted spots in each of their respective events.
With the qualifying period stretching from January 1999 through July 2000, these dreams have been formulating long before the end of the school year.
For many athletes in an Olympic sport, the games are their ultimate dream.
“For most collegiate athletes, the Olympic trials are viewed as a stepping stone,” distance coach Eric Peterson said. “Those who are fortunate enough to compete in the trials will be up against a much higher level of competition and the stakes are much higher.
“They’re up against people who have devoted their entire lives to being an Olympic champion,” Peterson added.
Following in the footsteps of many illustrious Bruins-turned-Olympians, the Bruin roster is young and hungry for valuable experience and personal records.
“It’s a good opportunity for UCLA athletes to go and compete at the next level,” women’s head coach Jeanette Bolden said.
It is an athlete like Seilala Sua whose next step is this next level. Having just swept the NCAA championships in both the discus and shot put, Sua is the sixth-ranked thrower in the world.
“She has proven on an international level that she can do it,” throwing coach and men’s head coach Art Venegas said. “She’s already qualified for the Olympics, all she needs to do is get in the top three to make the team.”
Sua, the winningest athlete in UCLA track and field history and the first woman to win a single event at the NCAAs for four consecutive years, is humble about her success. She talks about preparing for the Olympic trials as a part of her regular training schedule.
“I’ve really been working on getting my form down,” she said. “I’ve been lifting weights and I have a few meets before the trials. After those, I’m just going to wait for the trials.”
Despite her taking care of business approach, she is excited.
“I am expecting to win and make the Olympic team,” Sua said.
And rightly so. Sua has dedicated her life to track and field because it’s what she loves to do most. After dominating NCAA competition throughout her collegiate career, she is ready to move on.
Jess Strutzel, 2000 Indoor 800 meter champion, is also looking beyond collegiate competition in the long run. Entered with his time of 1:45.81, the current UCLA record, Strutzel sits behind eight men in the rankings. Up against the familiar competition of Johnny Gray of the Santa Monica Track and Field Club and Derrick Peterson of Missouri, both of whom he has defeated and been defeated by, his chances of making the Olympics is a matter of his performance on that given day.
But the bulk of the Bruin hopefuls have a couple of years ahead of them to garner experience. Having just competed in the NCAA championships at the beginning of June, the athletes got a small taste of what they will be up against in Sacramento.
“At NCAAs, you see a lot of people who go on to the Olympics,” Bolden said. “To me, NCAAs are a prerequisite to the next level of track and field because so many Olympians went through the NCAA system.”
Shekedia Jones, who completed her junior year this spring, faces arguably the toughest competition out on the track. Up against the likes of Marion Jones and Inger Miller in the 200m in addition to former Bruin Gail Devers in the 100m, Jones will face off against some of the world’s finest.
Similarly, high jumper Darnesha Griffith, niece of Bruin-turned Olympians Jackie Joyner-Kersee and the late Florence Griffith Joyner, must vie against former Bruin and high jump extraordinaire Olympian Amy Acuff.
“The approach for someone like Seilala, who has a legitimate chance for a spot, is different from the younger athletes,” Peterson said. “Athletes like Darnesha Griffith, who are improving at a very fast rate, are going to the Trials for an opportunity to compete against some of the best athletes in order to acquire as much experience as they can.”
One person who gained a tremendous amount of experience in a short period of time is sophomore pole vaulter Tracy O’Hara. In only her third year competing in the sport, O’Hara claimed both the 2000 indoor and outdoor national titles and would have clinched the world record in April had her arm not caught the bar at 15-1.
“After she won the indoor championship, we both knew right then that she has the capacity of making the Olympic team,” pole vault coach Anthony Curran said.
Entered with a mark of 14-7 1/4, and ranked fifth on the world list, O’Hara is ready to leap at the pre-trial predictions.
“Now she’s in the top five in the world, and she’s sitting pretty comfortably going into the trials,” Curran said. “She knows she’ll have to perform well. She’s been one to rise to the occasion.”
Despite the enormity of the achievements made by track and field athletes, their world is not as vast as it appears, for they must face the same competition time and time again. This year’s Bruin 12 will encounter a number of UCLA alums in the heat of Sacramento. Acuff, Devers, thrower John Godina and hurdler Joanna Hayes will be among them.
“Going into the Olympic Trials, they automatically know what is at stake and what they’re going to have to do,” Bolden said. “They know the competition is going to be stiff and that they have to perform on that day.”
Anything, Bolden added, can happen on any given day.
“I’ve seen young people come out of nowhere and veterans who haven’t been doing their best show more at the trials. You have to do it on that one day.”
A gold medalist herself, Bolden speaks from firsthand experience. A member of the first place 1984 4x100m relay team, Bolden was both a Bruin and an Olympian.
It’s only fitting that an Olympian will lead her Bruins to the trials.
“I just want them to get a taste of what it’s like,” Bolden said. “They’ll be up against people who they’ve only seen on TV and have been in awe of. I want them to see that this is what it feels to be at the Olympic trials.”
With experience as their coach, the Bruins don’t need to look very far for a source of inspiration as they head up north in hopes of ending up down under.


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