Track And Field @ MindSay


 

   
the good news first? oh. well. your dog isn't suffering anymore.
actually not really. but i did get an A on my semester test in speech today. SUPER!!

oh right. and then the crappy stuff.

so. basically here it is.


apparently i just suck SO BAD at track that i made varsity and i qualified for regional trials and i lettered my freshman year.

or at least i suck that bad according to a certain senior's younger sister in my grade who doesn't even do track.




my i have good friends don't i?

fucking bitch.
 
 
   
 

OH MY GOSH THIS IS GUNNA BE SO MUCH FUN!!!!
Pal Track started today.














i hate kids.
 
 
 

   
home track meets are fun right?
definetely. its the elko invitational if anybody wants to come. i'm running the 100M, the 4x100M, and the 200M.



wish me luck?
 
 
   
 

Olympian Montgomery Pleads Guilty
Olympic gold medalist Tim Montgomery pleaded guilty Monday in connection with a multimillion-dollar bank fraud and money laundering scheme, his lawyer said.

Attorney Robert McFarland declined to discuss details of the plea. The U.S. attorney's office had no immediate comment.

Montgomery was charged last year along with his track coach, Steven Riddick, and 11 others in an alleged conspiracy to deposit $5 million in stolen, altered or counterfeit checks at several banks over three years.

Montgomery, 32, had been awaiting trial along with Riddick and other co-defendants. An alleged coconspirator, Ephraim Richardson, previously pleaded guilty to a single charge of conspiracy to commit bank fraud.

The government had accused Montgomery of participating in a plot created by two other defendants who set up sham businesses to take checks stolen from banks and alter them or make counterfeits.

Montgomery allegedly deposited three bogus checks worth a total of $775,000. He also was accused of helping Riddick deposit others worth at least $905,000 and accepting a $20,000 fee for his role. Riddick, a 1976 Olympic medalist, has maintained his innocence.

Montgomery was a 2000 Olympic gold medalist and a former 100-meter world record holder. He retired in 2005 after he was banned from track and field for two years by the Court of Arbitration for Sport for doping linked to the investigation of BALCO, the lab at the center of a steroid scandal in sports.

Montgomery never tested positive for drugs, and has said he never knowingly took any banned substances.


 
 
 

   
IAAF new project
IAAF
The IAAF has teamed up with one of the world's leading sports research companies, Sponsorship Intelligence (SI) to carry out the biggest, most in-depth survey of the sport of track and field athletics ever conducted.

The IAAF is keen to gather as much information as possible about the current state of the sport around the world in order to assist it in the planning and development of the sport.

As part of a three-year contract through to 2009, SI, the IAAF's first research partner, will review the global state of track and field, with particular focus on the sport's commercial potential, as part of the IAAF's new strategy under its Marketing Director, Luis Carulla.

Sponsorship Intelligence metamorphosised from Sponsorship Research International (SRi) after the ZenithOptimedia Group acquired SRi from sports marketing agents, ISL in 2001 and re-branded the company.

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