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Can Ashton Eaton Save the Decathlon? - The New YorkerPublished by
Can Ashton Eaton Save the Decathlon?Published by The New Yorker on August 15, 2016 Ten years ago, Tate Metcalf, a high-school track coach in Bend, Oregon, was trying to find a college that would give one of his athletes a scholarship. Ashton Eaton was a talented sprinter with a fierce long jump, but Metcalf received mostly lukewarm responses. His coach felt that Eaton would have the best shot at getting into a Division I college if he competed in one of track and field’s multi-event disciplines, like the heptathlon or the decathlon. Metcalf knew it would make Eaton, who was raised by a single mother and had never had any private coaching, one of the first people in his family to go to college. So he suggested it. “Sure,” Eaton replied, as Metcalf recently recalled. Then Eaton said, “What’s the decathlon?” Eaton ended up attending the University of Oregon, where he set a variety of collegiate records, although his college coaches concede that without Metcalf’s phone call, Eaton easily could have been overlooked by recruiters. Read the full article at: www.newyorker.com
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