Craig Mottram

Craig Mottram
Personal information
Nationality Australian
Born (1980-06-18) 18 June 1980
Frankston, Victoria, Australia
Height 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Weight 75 kg (165 lb; 11.8 st)
Sport
Sport Running
Event(s) 5000 m

Craig Mottram (born 18 June 1980) is an Australian long distance and middle distance runner who specialises in the 5000 m event.

Early years

Mottram was born on 18 June 1980 in Frankston, Victoria. He attended Geelong Grammar School.

Career

At 6 feet 2 inches, Mottram is unusually tall for a distance runner. He competed in his first Olympic Games at only 20 years of age, in the 5000 metre event at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney: he did not qualify from his heat, but finished in 8th place with a respectable time of 13 minutes, 31.06 seconds. He fared better in his next Olympic competition: with four additional years of experience and athletic maturity, Mottram qualified for the final of the 5000 metre event and finished 8th with a time of 13:25.70 in Athens.

In 2005, he set a course record to win the Great Ireland Run in a third consecutive win at the competition. On 14 August 2005, he reached a career highlight, coming third in the 5000 m event at the 2005 World Championships in Athletics in Helsinki, running the event in 13 minutes, 32.96 seconds. He is the only non-African born runner to receive a medal in that event since 1987.

On 9 March 2006 in Melbourne, in his final warmup event before the 2006 Commonwealth Games, Mottram took ten seconds off the 12-year-old Australian record for the 2000 metres. This distance, not often run at IAAF events, was scheduled specifically to suit Mottram's Games preparation.

On 20 March 2006 at the Commonwealth Games, Mottram came second in the 5000 m event with a time of 12 minutes, 58.19 seconds, beaten narrowly by Kenyan runner Augustine Choge.[1] This race was only the second time that this event was won in under 13 minutes at a championship competition (first one being 2003 World Athletics Championships.)[2] Mottram also ran in the 1500 m event in Melbourne on 25 March 2006, entering the competition as favourite to win. Having worked his way into third position during the race, Mottram was accidentally tripped at the 800-metre mark when English athlete Andrew Baddeley fell behind him, clipping Mottram's heel. Mottram lost 20 metres on the field due to the incident and finished in ninth position.[3]

In June 2006, Mottram set the Parkrun 5 km record of 14min at Bushy Park.[4]

He is a supporter of English Premier League club Sunderland[5] and ran in the Great North Run 2006, wearing a Sunderland shirt.

On 21 December 2006, Mottram set the record for the Tan in a time of 10:08:00. The Tan is Melbourne's most iconic running track, located around the Royal Botanic Gardens. Mottram beat the previous best time of 10:12, also his own, during a Richmond Tigers Football Club trial.

In 2007 Mottram started the year on a high, dominating "the Kenyan Hope" of Boniface Songkok at the Telstra A series in Melbourne. The race was a conservative one before Craig tore the field open with a quick 7th lap before a devastating final 400 m run in 53 seconds. At the Prefontaine Classic In Eugene (Oregon), Craig ran the 5th fastest 2-mile of all time in 8:03.50 leaving in his wake the likes Alan Webb, Tariku Bekele, Matt Tegenkemp, Dathan Ritzenhein and other American hopefuls. After a good start to the season Craig suffered a hamstring strain. This affected his training for the World Championships, where he finished 11th.

2008 was an up-and-down season for Mottram. He won the Melbourne Grand Prix 5000 m and the National Championship 5000 m and 3000 m. He then competed at the 2008 Indoor Championships in Valencia, where he placed 5th in the final. He then contested the Boston Indoor Grand Prix where he won the 3000 m and broke the meet record of Haile Gebrselassie. He hit form after he won the Stockholm Grand Prix 3000 m and placed 4th in the 1 Mile. He also ran a 3:57.90-mile finishing 2nd to Bernard Lagat at the prestigious Millrose games in February 2008.

At the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, Mottram placed 5th in the first heat of the 5000 m in 13min 44.39sec and did not advance to the final.[6] Following this disappointment, Mottram split from coach Nick Bideau, choosing to self-coach.[7]

Due to injuries, he did not compete in the 2009 IAAF World Championships in Athletics in Berlin. That year, after having run for Nike for all of his professional career, Mottram signed a contract with Adidas. He also accepted a coaching offer from Australian distance running coach Chris Wardlaw, who has coached marathon runner Steve Moneghetti among others.[8]

In late November 2009 Craig Mottram made a return from his 12-month absence from racing, clocking 13 minutes and 23 seconds in the opening 5 km leg of the Chiba Ekiden Relay in Japan. This performance put his Australian team in first place, before they dropped to 7th. His time of 13:23 was just outside the event record.

In the 2010 season he won the Great Yorkshire Run in Sheffield, beating home favourite Chris Thompson to the line by just one second.[9] He beat Chris Thompson again on 18 September 2010 by one second in a close finish at the Great North City Games 2-mile event in 8.31.

In August 2012 Craig Mottram competed in the London Olympics 5000m for Australia. He was the fastest Australian at those Olympics, with a 13.40, but was unable to make it into the final.[10]

Personal best times

References

  1. Ellen Whinnett and Shelley Hodgson (21 March 2006). "Craig Mottram's brave run". Herald Sun.
  2. Nick Bowen (21 March 2006). "Craig Mottram's silver medal the best of the Games". Crikey.com.au.
  3. Luke Pentony (26 March 2006). "That's racing". ABC News.
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20071222004315/http://www.ukathletics.net/tvevents/news/article-27/
  5. "Port stars reveal racism still rife".
  6. "Bideau's methods are make or break". The Sydney Morning Herald. 22 March 2006.
  7. http://www.runblogrun.com/2009/02/craig_mottram_to_run_for_adida_1.html
  8. Mills, Steven (5 September 2010). Murray defends Yorkshire 10km title Archived 8 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine.. Athletics Weekly. Retrieved on 6 September 2010.

External links

Video interview

More Videos from the Prefontaine Classic


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