Preview

Gabriela DeBues-Stafford ready to 'get back at it' in 1,500m at Texas Qualifier

Gabriela DeBues-Stafford headlines a group of seven Canadians at the Texas Qualifier on Saturday night, running her first outdoor 1,500-metre race since lowering her national record 16 months ago at the 2019 world championships.

Toronto runner not concerned about recurrence of Achilles, plantar fasciitis issue

Gabriela DeBues-Stafford, who became the first Canadian woman to run the 1,500 metres in under four minutes in August 2019, doesn't expect that fast of a pace in Saturday's event at the Texas Qualifier in Austin. (Jewel Samad/AFP via Getty Images/File)

Gabriela DeBues-Stafford admits it felt strange preparing to run an outdoor 1,500-metre race for the first time in 16 months.

But she's fit and excited to be part of a talent-laden women's field, which includes fellow Canadian Jenna Westaway, at Saturday's Texas Qualifier after six weeks of altitude training in Flagstaff, Ariz.

"It's definitely different stakes [compared to] a world championship [race] but to get back at it will be fun," said DeBues-Stafford, who hasn't competed in the 1,500 distance outdoors since lowering her national record time to 3:56.12 at 2019 worlds in Doha, Qatar.

"I don't think [Saturday's race] is going to be personal-best pace. It's all about peaking appropriately and it is still only February, so people aren't going to see me in tip-top shape quite yet, but they will in July [at the Tokyo Olympics]."

WATCH | DeBues-Stafford runs 3:56.12 PB at 2019 worlds:

Gabriela DeBues-Stafford sets national record in 1,500 metres, finishes 6th

5 years ago
Duration 7:02
Canada's Gabriela DeBues-Stafford places 6th with a time 3:56.12, Sifan Hassan claims gold.

The Toronto native, fresh off a season world-leading 8:38.51 PB in the 3,000, had some speed sessions in the fall but focused primarily on strength and endurance before travelling to Flagstaff.

"I was ready for that boost of being in a camp environment after doing the same loops [on the track] all the time. It's nice to add some novelty into your training with different courses and scenery," said DeBues-Stafford, the world's No. 4-ranked women's 1,500 runner who moved to Oregon last summer to join Portland-based Bowerman Track Club.

"The workouts got more intense [in Flagstaff] and I felt I got more serious about training, recovery and my [race] approach whereas the fall is more relaxed."

Unfortunately, DeBues-Stafford was forced to shorten her runs early in camp while managing a flare-up of her right Achilles combined with plantar fasciitis, or heel pain, caused when the ligament that supports the arch of your foot is inflamed. She treated the injury with physiotherapy and massage.

Achilles 'feels strong'

DeBues-Stafford first dealt with plantar fasciitis in her freshman year at the University of Toronto in 2013, had right Achilles issues in 2016, a left Achilles problem two years later and Achilles soreness in January 2019.

"It evolved into more plantar pain that fall and got significantly worse [this past] fall," she said. "When the Achilles flared up, the plantar followed and the root of the problem was similar, probably general calf weakness."

WATCH | DeBues-Stafford talks COVID-19 vaccine with CBC Sports' Jacqueline Doorey:

Why a COVID-19 vaccine isn't the key to a fair Olympics

4 years ago
Duration 5:51
Jacqueline Doorey speaks with Canadian middle distance runner Gabriela DeBues-Stafford to discuss the COVID-19 vaccine, how it can affect the Olympics, and whether athletes deserve to cut the line.

DeBues-Stafford isn't concerned about a setback this weekend after getting through recent high volume workouts unharmed while running in spiked shoes on the track.

"I was able to get it under control and it feels strong, the best it has in a year," she said. "The big thing was focusing on my strength exercises in the gym to get the area stronger so it can take the training load."

For Westaway, Saturday's race at 8 p.m. ET will be her second 1,500 of the year after the Calgary runner posted a 4:17.98 winning time on Jan. 19 in Clermont, Fla.

The 2019 Canadian silver medallist set national indoor records in the 800 and 1,000 in February 2019, breaking Melissa Bishop-Nriagu's mark in the former and becoming the first Canadian woman to go sub-two minutes in 1:59.87.

Knight confident of achieving another PB

Six other Canadians are competing in Austin on Saturday: Justyn Knight (men's 1,500), Ben Flanagan and Kieran Lumb (men's 5,000), Julie-Anne Staehli (women's 5,000) Rory Linkletter (men's 10,000) and Lanni Marchant (women's 10,000).

Knight returns to the track at 8:12 p.m. and believes a PB in the 1,500 is attainable two weeks after he clocked a 2021 world-leading 8:13.92 in the 2-mile race at the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix in Staten Island, N.Y., the second fastest all-time among Canadian men.

Toronto native Justyn Knight believes he can set a personal-best time in the 1,500 metres at the Texas Qualifier. The 24-year-old ran a career-best 3:36.07 on April 20, 2018 in California. (Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports via Reuters)
"The field is strong and the race should be fast enough. The most important thing is making sure I establish a solid position," said the Toronto native, who ranks 11th in the world in the 5,000. "You have less room for error in the shorter races."

Knight, 24, ran a career-best 3:36.07 on April 20, 2018 in California, and his most recent outdoor 1,500 was Aug. 14, 2019 in Cork City, Ireland.

Flanagan targets 13:20 in 5,000

Flanagan, Knight's teammate with Reebok Boston Track Club since the fall of 2018, moves up to the 5,000 after a pair of 3,000 races earlier this month.

After running 13:31 indoors and 13:38 outdoors in 2020, the 26-year-old native of Kitchener, Ont., believes he's capable of clocking around 13:20 on Saturday. The Olympic standard is 13:13.50.

"I feel I've improved my overall strength and it's allowed me to sustain a faster pace in the 5,000, but I don't know what to expect this weekend," said the former University of Michigan track star, who wants to qualify for Tokyo in the 5,000 and 10,000. "The field is stacked, the race is set up well to run fast and I'm excited to be part of it."

Vancouver's Kieran Lumb will try to hit the 13:13.50 Olympic standard on Saturday after running 13:43.36 on Dec. 5 in Burnaby, B.C. (Submitted by Jeff Sargeant/UBC Athletics)

Joining Flanagan in the 8:43 p.m. race is Lumb, a 22-year-old Vancouver native and University of British Columbia Thunderbirds standout. The electrical engineering major ran 13:43.36 on Dec. 5 in Burnaby, B.C., after clocking 13:40.51 at the 2019 Mt. SAC Relays in Torrance, Calif.

The former nationally ranked cross-country skier was fifth in the 5,000 at the 2019 Canadian championships.

First 10,000 race since 2016 Olympics

Linkletter and Marchant will compete in their respective 10,000 races at 9:29 and 10:07 p.m.

The Calgary-born Linkletter is making his 2021 debut two months after placing 17th at The Marathon Project in Chandler, Ariz. In January 2020, the 24-year-old ran a 1:01:44 half marathon PB in Houston, only 16 seconds off Jeff Schiebler's 1:01:28 Canadian record.

Marchant, 36, will race her first 10,000 since the 2016 Olympics in Rio, where she was 25th of 35 finishers in 32:04.21. Her PB is 31:46.94, set May 2, 2015 in Palo Alto, Calif.

A month ago, the London, Ont., native clocked 1:13:19 in the Las Vegas Gold Half Marathon, a 48-second improvement from the Michigan Pro Half Marathon last Oct. 28, Marchant's first 21.1 km race since March 2017 before hip surgery in May 2018.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Doug Harrison has covered the professional and amateur scene as a senior writer for CBC Sports since 2003. Previously, the Burlington, Ont., native covered the NHL and other leagues for Faceoff.com. Follow the award-winning journalist @harrisoncbc

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