page contents Google

VIN LANANNA HAS A PAIR

Yes He Does. And Vin Lananna Calls Track And Field The Basic Sport.

via iaaf.org

via iaaf.org

 

Who better than TrackTown President Vin Lananna to explain the world’s most basic sport.

Of course it’s track and field. He lives and breathes the stuff.

Because of him Portland hosts the World Indoor Track and Field meet in 2016, the same year the Olympic trials return to Eugene for the third straight time.

Maybe Vin is right about track.

From oregonlive.com:

In the last decade Hayward Field has morphed into the semi-permanent site for the NCAA’s Division I Outdoor Championships. Eugene played host to the 2014 World Junior Championships. Lananna’s TrackTown USA organizing group will stage the 2016 World Indoor Championships in Portland at the Oregon Convention Center. The 2016 U.S. Olympic Trials are back at Hayward for a third, consecutive time.

Three major, post-collegiate training groups have taken root in Oregon, the Bowerman Track Club, Oregon Track Club Elite, and the Nike Oregon Project.”

Don’t forget the 2021 World Championships. Vin Lananna is dialed into the world of track and field operators. He is one.

Call him The Pope of American Track.

Does that make track and field the basic sport? What is track and field?

It’s running and jumping and throwing.

Short distance runs with medium and long distance races cover the ground part.

Jumps go from high, to long, to broad. And a triple jump. One event, the steeplechase, even combines running and jumping in the same race.

Throwing comes with a canon ball or shot put, the spear or javelin, and a weighted plate or discus.

Call it like you see it, sports fan.

Track and field has a certain allure in America.

We’ve seen fast runners transition to the NFL. Receivers like ‘Bullet’ Bob Hayes and Renaldo Neheimih. Some worked out, some didn’t.

The NFL is remorseless like that.

Don’t look for Usain Bolt to walk through any NFL door. Ever. We have to care about track and field on Vin Lananna’s terms without the transition.

International sports complicate things with different languages and customs. Vin Lananna knows his sport well enough to speak those languages. More important, he knows the business side.

From registerguard.com:

“On Thursday in Beijing, site of this summer’s world championships, the IAAF Council voted 23-1 via secret ballot to award Eugene the 2021 meet.

This has all been a long-term vision for the sport of track and field in the United States,” Lananna said. “It started back when we hosted the Olympic Trials in 2008 and 2012, World Juniors in 2014 and in our quest to host the NCAAs for nine straight years. This has all reflected on a community and a state that loves track and field.”

Remember, you love track and field. If Vin Lananna says you love track and field, then you love it.

If he pulled a secret ballot our way in China, we’d better love track and field. And Vin Lananna.

If he got Portland revved up enough to plan a Hyatt hotel near the Convention Center, we’d better love track and field. Was it Vin who got the ball rolling on Hotel Eastlund,too?

The man is a champion of bold thinking. Forward planning.

But is his sport the basic sport of human kind? I’ll agree if he does one thing.

Vin Lananna is an Man of Oregon. He revived track and field for citizens of Oregon. He and Galen Rupp, but Mr. Rupp needs to push a few civic building projects to get equal credit. Olympic gold wouldn’t hurt either.

I’ll call track and field the basic sport of mankind if Vin Lananna makes an effort to influence the University of Oregon to return college wrestling to the campus.

The real Fighting Ducks fighting it out with schools like Ohio State.

You’ll never hear me call track and field activities a means of exercise for real athletes in real sports if he get’s wrestling reinstated.

Wrestling feels like track and field in that everyone thinks they’re better than they are.

Oregon needs to be better and wrestling is an avenue.

Europeans coming to Oregon are all aware of wrestling. That’s their heritage.

They need to see wrestling at Oregon if you expect them to leave satisfied.

Vin Lananna knows the ropes. He knows the people.

From what he’s accomplished in Eugene, Portland, China, and around the world, he ought to flex his muscles and show what the world’s most basic sport can do for wrestling, the world’s other basic sport.

What makes wrestling more basic than track? If someone takes what belongs to you, you either take it back or run off.

Show us some inside moves, Mr. Lananna.

Show the late kick.

Talk to the men of wrestling.

About David Gillaspie

I am a writer. This is my blog story day by day.

Comments

  1. I’ve heard that the plans for the indoor track facility includes a wrestling room.

  2. Hank Hosfield says

    Good stuff, David.

    I got to work with Vin and with TrackTown USA to help put together their bid for both the 2016 indoor world championships, and the bid for the 2019 outdoor world championships that resulted in the 2021 championships. Our Downstream team also created the countdown clock unveiled by the mayor earlier this week in Pioneer Courthouse Square.

    http://portland2016.com/portland-2016-countdown-clock-unveiled/

    I knew that back in 2008 Vin had supported wrestling at Oregon and had suggested that a new wrestling room could be part of a new indoor track facility. I asked him if a wrestling room might still be part of an indoor track facility at Oregon, and he told me he’d be for it. I know that there will be a number of capital improvements made in the creation of an athletic village for the 2021 world championships, most likely including this indoor facility. Whether it holds wrestling is beyond Vin’s pay grade, but it’s an opportunity that wrestling supporters need to seize upon.

    We should seek to frame track and wrestling as elemental human sports, for our global village, but also as hugely important in the state of Oregon–and at the University of Oregon, where they defined Oregon’s early athletic success, Olympic quest, and determined individualism.

    It would be smart if we could also frame those sports together in the minds of the men who matter most for Oregon athletics, Phil Knight and Rob Mullens. Vin more than has his hands full with TrackTown USA. It’s up to us to give these guys compelling reasons to care.

    It’s great that Vin would be an advocate for wrestling. But his is just one of many strong voices that we need to tell our story of wrestling.

    • David Gillaspie says

      That’s getting it done, Hank.

      I see the momentum headed toward that wrestling room with so many recent big name Oregon coaches and athletes.

      Glad to see you on boomerpdx Hank. Thanks for subscribing.

      David