OPINION

Jeremy Wariner Splits From His Coach

Written by EPelle
Published January 30, 2008
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Hart had a similar package until the shake-up.  He was the guy who borrowed from other successful coaches and made the workouts tailored to his own athletes. Wariner ran them as a collegian, and he continued doing so as a professional. Hart became a master with Johnson and devised race plans for his new protégé. Wariner, competing against himself and the clock at stadiums in places like Zürich, Athens, Stockholm, London, Osaka and more, followed them. And, for the most part - save a couple of races he failed to finish - their working relationship was a success. 

And that's what Hart appreciated with their previous deals: the faster and more successful Wariner ran, the more Hart was rewarded.  If Wariner flopped, so did the amount paid into Hart's paycheck.   And he was fine with that.


Ford is now taking over the training duties - without a contract, by the way.  He's attempting to keep Wariner, who is hugely popular and well-respected and liked around the world, respectable enough an athlete that no one takes notice as he attempts to build up to the USA Olympic trials at Hayward Field on the University of Oregon's campus in June.

Wariner's first race of the season will be in Australia — a 200m race at the Sydney Grand Prix on 16-February.  He is set to follow that race with his season opener at 400m in Melbourne five days later. He has the tools in Johnson to block out these distractions, but does he have the experience to run on his own business with an inexperienced Olympic advisor however who was an assistant to Hart at Baylor for eight years?

I'll raise an even better question: Will Hart, who claims to have no animosity toward Wariner, wind up helping one of Wariner's competitors who may need an extra lift this season?

Again, stranger things have happened in Olympic years.

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Jeremy Wariner Splits From His Coach
Published: January 30, 2008
Type: Opinion
Section: Sports
Filed Under: Sports: Olympic
Writer: EPelle
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#1 — August 23, 2008 @ 19:45PM — James

Well I think now the question of whether this was a good choice for Jeremy to switch coaches during an Olympic year is pretty academic. Since Jeremy finished second to LaShawn Merritt, and Wariner actually had to try hard to get the Silver! When Wariner looks back on his last few performances, ie. his defeat in the trials and the Olimpics, he may not want to admit it, but I think he knows it was an idiotic decision to change coaches.

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