Klech aiming 400 hurdles in 2012

freedom1

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Future limitless for track star
By Eric Gilmore
TIMES COLUMNIST
BERKELEY - California High School's David Klech had climbed high into the stands Friday afternoon at Edwards Stadium for a quick rendezvous with his track team coaches.

Now he was headed back down toward the track to warm up for his heat in the 110-meter high hurdles at the North Coast Section Meet of Champions.

That's when a fan in the stands stopped him and made a request. Moments later, she was posing with Klech for a picture.

"That happens a lot now," California coach Mark Karbo said, observing the scene.

Other fans and athletes at recent meets have asked Klech to autograph their T-shirts or programs.

Klech's remarkable high school career is on its final lap before he moves on to UCLA in the fall, and it's clear that many of those who have watched him want a keepsake. You know, something to prove they knew him when.

"I've been telling everybody I know, 'Remember this name because you're going to see him in the Olympics,'" Granada track coach Brad Morisoli said from the Edwards infield. "That's my impression. He's got the fire inside him."

Until Klech exploded onto the national prep track scene last year, talk of the Tri-Valley producing an Olympic hurdler would have sounded far-fetched. The area has produced its share of elite athletes in many sports, but it could hardly be considered a cradle of track and field Olympians.

"We all kind of know this is a once-in-a-coaching-experience thing for us," Karbo said. "We're all enjoying it."

Klech has taken his coaches on a track and field joy ride, especially the past two years.

Last year as a junior at the California Interscholastic Federation state meet, he won the 300-meter intermediate hurdles, placed second in the 110 high hurdles and third in the long jump.

Klech was named the Gatorade California Boys Track & Field Athlete of the Year and the 2004-05 Times Male Athlete of the Year. Then at the USA Youth Outdoor Track & Field Championships, he won the 400 hurdles and placed third in the long jump.

"This year I had a bunch of goals in mind, and I passed them all within the first month of the season," said Klech, who won his heats Friday in the 110 hurdles (13.79 seconds, wind-aided) and 300 hurdles (37.03), advancing to today's finals. "So I had to re-evaluate all those. It's just been such an incredible experience."

In April at the Arcadia Invitational, Klech won the 300 hurdles in 35.45 seconds. That's the second-fastest time in California high school history and fourth-fastest time in U.S. prep history.

That month he also set a California state prep record in the 400 hurdles (50.35) and ran a personal best in the 110 hurdles (13.69).

Entering the Meet of Champions, he owned the nation's fastest prep time in the 300 hurdles and second-fastest in the 110 hurdles. On the state track and field leader board, he ranks among the top 10 in six events: 110 and 300 hurdles, 400 meters, 800 meters, high jump and long jump.

No wonder his Olympic bandwagon is filling up.

"I definitely think he has the potential to go to the Olympics someday," Karbo said. "His physical talents are there. He has the work ethic. He does have a good chance of doing that if he continues on his current path."

Although some see Klech as a future decathlete, if he makes the Olympics it most likely will be in the 400 hurdles, a grueling race that demands a rare combination of stamina and speed.

"It is my perfect event," Klech said. "I've got the strength of an 800 runner ... and I have the speed of a 200 runner. So that (400) just fits in perfectly."

So does the fact that at 6-foot-4, Klech has a world-class stride that eats up huge chunks of ground on the track.

"He runs at a 13-stride clip between hurdles," said California hurdles and sprints coach Earl Harris. "That's what Edwin Moses did. That's what Andre Phillips did. And those are Olympic gold medalists.

"He shows all the markings of having that ultimate capability of being there in the big lights."

But which big lights? The 2008 Summer Games in Beijing are just two years away. That might be too soon for Klech, who just turned 18, although Harris holds out hope. Four years later, the Summer Games move to London.

"I'm still going to be pretty young," Klech said of the Beijing Olympics. "I'm really hoping to just go and hopefully have a good experience at the Olympic Trials in 2008. And then really gun for it in 2012 in London.

"I've definitely got a lot of work to get there, but I've really worked hard the last four years and really showed myself that anything is possible."
 

freedom1

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In solitude, Klech trains to be great
Cal star goes into state meet hurdling and jumping better than any East Bay athlete in history
By Dennis Miller, STAFF WRITER

DAVID KLECH, a senior at San Ramon's California High School, hopes to continue opening eyes around the track world when he competes this weekend at the California State Meet in Norwalk. (Sean Connelley - Staff)

SAN RAMON  Last week was your typical spring afternoon around the athletic facilities at California High.
The football team was going through spring drills, and one could hear the crack of the bat from the baseball diamond as the Grizzlies were readying for postseason play.

On the track was a small group of athletes who were going through their warm-up drills without the slightest bit of attention. Out of the usual? Hardly, as high school track and field certainly flies under the radar in the East Bay.

But lost in the moment, was one of the Cal athletes on the track who just happens to be arguably the greatest track and field athlete ever to come out of the East Bay, if not Northern California.

David Klech has set standards that we may not see matched for some time, yet the UCLA-bound senior was preparing for his last run through the prep postseason with no fanfare.

"It's very unassuming," said California coach Mark Karbo. "I remember seeing an ESPN special when they went to De La Salle to do a story on the football team. The gist of it was, that you would never know by the atmosphere around theschool they were that good. It's the same thing here with David.

"Track and field is not a marquee sport here, and he's not the kind of person who is self-promoting. But the people in the track and field community  they're aware of who he is."

And they should be. Friday and Saturday, when Klech competes in the state track meet, he'll be defending his 300 intermediate hurdles title and will be the favorite to win the 110 high hurdles as well, events where he's the national leader.

In addition, he'll compete in the long jump, an event in which he finished third at state last year, a meet where he brought home three medals. Along with Klech being the national leader in two events, he's gunning for the national record in the 300 hurdles, where his best time is just .13 seconds off the record.

Everything combined will make him perhaps the marquee attraction at the most prestigious prep track and field meet in the United States.

It's a long way from his freshman year when Klech finished fourth in the North Coast Section Meet of Champions in the high jump and ran one of the legs on the Grizzlies winning 4x400-meter relay team.

"My freshman year I didn't make the finals of the MOC in the 300 hurdles," Klech said. "When I got the blue ribbon for the relay, I couldn't believe it. I thought it would be the first  and last  first place I would ever get."

Hardly. In fact, after winning three events last week at the MOC, Klech ended his career with seven MOC titles.

It's been a gradual procession from gawky freshman to polished senior.

As a sophomore, Klech went to state in both hurdles, the high jump and the 4x400 relay but only advanced to the final in the high jump and finished ninth. It was during the ensuing summer when Klech hit his career defining moment.

At the Junior Olympics that summer, Klech won the 400 hurdles, and it was on the victory stand he had a vision.

"I was standing there, and I realized I had so many things to come and to accomplish," Klech explained. "I wanted to follow up with so many great things my junior year."

He did. In a three-month span from late March to June 2005, Klech went from being a very good local athlete to a nationally ranked figure. The watershed meet came at the Stanford Invitational which put him on the national landscape.

A 7-foot high jump, a 52.7-second 400 hurdles and a 14.28 in the 110 hurdles prompted the Web site http://www.dyestatcal.com to ask if Klech was the "Nation's Top All-Around Prep Athlete."
when everything started clicking," said Klech of the Stanford meet. "But all I could think was that I had so much more potential."

By the time he got to state, Klech was the buzz, and his win in the 300, second in the 110 and third in the long jump made Klech a hot commodity. So much in fact, he was awarded a spot on the United States team for the World Youth Games last summer in Morocco where he was picked to compete in the long jump and the 400 hurdles.

"That was the most incredible experience in my life," said Klech. "I was able to watch the first two days of the meet, and it was mind-boggling. It was amazing."

Bigger things were to come that week, as Klech made the final in both events, he didn't medal in the long jump but finished third in the hurdles.

"I made the finals in the long jump first and was in total shock," Klech said. "I never thought something like that could happen. Then I got the medal in the 400. To be in the top three in the world in anything was so amazing and incredible. It was priceless."

Priceless yes, but it also meant the expectations for his senior year would be out of this world.

Karbo agreed.

"He's in a position that high-level athletes get in to," Karbo said. "If he doesn't come out and take both hurdles races this weekend, it's considered a disappointment. It's not a story any more unless he sets a record or loses. Winning isn't necessarily something that's celebrated, as much as something that's expected."

But Klech, true to his demeanor, wasn't fazed.

"Really, I just try to focus on one thing at a time," Klech said. "I took a couple of weeks off (after Morocco) and got back into it in September. I reset my goals for my senior year  I knew I couldn't rest on what I had done."

And he hasn't. In fact, this has been his most consistent year  and most enjoyable, even with the added pressure. After winning the pentathalon at the Nike Indoor Championships in March, setting a meet record in the process, it was on.

"I knew in early March everything was going to click this year, and it has," Klech said. "Last year I didn't know what I was doing, but this year I know I've been through all of this before. I am having so much more fun this year."

After this year, it's off to UCLA and then, possibly the Olympics. Many in the track and field community have put Klech there, either in two years or six.

Karbo doesn't want to increase the pressure on his athlete.

"When people ask me about that, I just say he has a good chance, and he has the potential," Karbo said. "But I never would want to say someone is already there. There are a lot of factors that go into that level. I wouldn't want him to be perceived a failure if he didn't make it."

Klech just lives by his plan to

focus on one thing at a time.

"(The Olympics) is a goal in the far back of my mind," Klech said. "It's something I want in the future, but there's a lot to accomplish before then. As good as I am now, it's going to take a lot more to get to that level."
 

white is right

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This kid is a true prodigy. I just hope he finds the right event for his talent. It's better to be a master of trade than a jack of all trades and a master of none.......
 

JD074

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I just saw Klech on FSN. It was the California Championships, and he dominated the 300m hurdles. Unfortunately, I saw the interview afterwards, and he seems to be... well, let's just say, effeminate. I don't want to jump to any conclusions, or berate a talented young white athlete, but it's pretty obvious. Oh well.
 

surfsider

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From UCLA sports site...

"The 2006 Gatorade National Boys Track Athlete of the Year, David Klech, will make his outdoor debut in the 800m this weekend. Klech battled some injuries during the indoor season, but is ready and healthy for outdoors."

Is this strength training or is a great hurdling talent being eased into a more pigment appropriate event?
 
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surfsider said:
From UCLA sports site...

"The 2006 Gatorade National Boys Track Athlete of the Year, David Klech, will make his outdoor debut in the 800m this weekend. Klech battled some injuries during the indoor season, but is ready and healthy for outdoors."

Is this strength training or is a great hurdling talent being eased into a more pigment appropriate event?


I sure hope not, but there is the case of Anthony Tufariello (see previous post).Also, Brad Sellers (who has the natl. frosh, soph, and junior class records in the HJ) was originally assigned to be a distance runner and had to persistently ask to be given a chance to high jump then subsequently cleared over 7' as a freshman.
 

white is right

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I hope it's just for endurance training. He is such a talent he could probably final in the 800 at the state level. At the next level who knows. If he is going to be a 400 meter hurdler at the senior level he will need to do a lot of endurance work anyway. Maybe this is the reason?
 

surfsider

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Looks like the UCLA site had it wrong.Klech ran the 400 hurdles prelim in 52.13 yesterday. Was the second fastest qualifier of the four heats.
 

white is right

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JD074 said:
I just saw Klech on FSN. It was the California Championships, and he dominated the 300m hurdles. Unfortunately, I saw the interview afterwards, and he seems to be... well, let's just say, effeminate. I don't want to jump to any conclusions, or berate a talented young white athlete, but it's pretty obvious. Oh well.
Why do I get visions of Levar from the Revenge of the Nerds....
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white is right

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freedom1 said:
You mean he's "light footed?"
Actually the nerds devised a javelin to take advantage of Levar's limp wrist technique....
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I think he set a meet record.......
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One of the funnier scenes from the movie,that and the Japanese foreign exchange student riding a tricycle while drunk.
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