A+ A A-

Herrera happy with pat in the back

NO MEDAL, JUST CONSOLATION

LONDON — Rene Herrera didn’t quit even if  getting the shame of being overlapped, giving his last ounce of energy to get to the finish line in a brave stand that earned him a pat on the back from a local runner loved by all on Wednesday morning.
The 33-year-old Herrera crossed the finish during the first heat of the 5,000 event in the 30th London Games, spent from the effort of running 12-and-a-half  laps around the Olympic Stadium  against the finest in the world .
But the effort didn’t go unnoticed as no less than Mohammed Farah of Great Britain, the 10,000-m champion and is Rene’s idol in long distance running, came to his side  and embraced him as he went down on all fours.
“Parang nawala ang pagod ko ng tapikin ako sa balikat at sabihin yun,’’ said Herrera, smiling and joyful at the thought that no less than his idol ran to him to console him in his lowest moment.
Nobody expected him to win the heat given the depth of the field, but the Filipino veteran did achieve something which he aimed for going into the first of two heats to determine 14 finalists — clock a new personal best.
And he got what he wished for.
Herrera clocked 14 minutes and 44.11 seconds, easily eclipsing the 14.51 he did in a victorious run in the 2011 Philippine National Games in Bacolod City last year and lessening the pain of a last place- finish among 21 runners in the heat.
The loss left only BMX rider Danny Caluag as the last man standing for the embattled Team Philippines, which continued  to resemble a family in mourning going into the closing days of the Games.
Caluag, son of a Filipino couple who migrated to the United States before he was born, was to see action in the seeding run of the BMX cycling event on Wednesday afternoon at the 6,000-seat track inside the Olympic Park.
As told by coach Joseph Sy, Herrera stayed  at the tailend of the field  and let the big guns do the fighting in front. In his heart, he knew running side by side with them would be a foolish thing to do.
So for the entire run of the punishing event, Herrera stayed at the rear, the gap separating him and the frontrunners getting bigger and wider with every lap.
Worse, Herrera was overtaken with  less than two laps remaining by the leaders, who started to jockey for position for the wild, interesting drive for home.
Others would have just pulled over and quit.
But not Herrera, who persevered, egging himself on to go for another mile until he hit the tape, to the cheers of a crowd of around 60 thousands.
Hayle Ibrahimov of Azerbaijann won the heat in 13 minutes and 25.23 seconds behind a powerful run down the stretch while Dejen Gebremeskel of Ethiopia triumphed in heat 2 in 13:15.15 to lead the finalists.
“Ang bilis ng pacing. Mauubos ka talaga. Pero pinilit ko talagang matapos at higitan ang personal best ko,” said Herrera, sweats dipping off his face after the race.
“Salamat naman at nakuha ko ang gusto ko. Masaya ako,’’ he added.

Leave a comment

Make sure you enter the (*) required information where indicated.Basic HTML code is allowed.

Commentaries

Rubber stamp Senate

25-05-2013 Ninez Cacho-Olivares

Rubber stamp Senate

There is so much hypocrisy in Malacañang and the Libera...

New concerns for China’s rising middle c…

25-05-2013 AFP

New concerns for China’s rising middle class

BEIJING — With two cars, foreign holidays and a cook fo...

No go for Cha-cha

24-05-2013 Ninez Cacho-Olivares

No go for Cha-cha

Don’t expect Charter changes from the Noynoy administra...

Hope for harmonious end

24-05-2013 Tribune

Hope for harmonious end

Dead Editor:Regarding the recent dispute between Taiw...

Comelec-voted senators

23-05-2013 Ninez Cacho-Olivares

Comelec-voted senators

Proclaiming winning senators through “projected” votes ...

Riding out US tornado in a walk-in freez…

23-05-2013 AFP

Riding out US tornado in a walk-in freezer: A survivor’s tale

MOORE — For years Anita Zhang’s neighbors joked that if...

Sports

Headlines

Nation

Metro

Sports

Life Style

Etcetera

Motoring

business

Copyright 2000-2012 All rights reserved, The Daily Tribune Publishing Inc.