A
Homecoming of sorts for Ahmed.
(Boston, January
25,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
On Saturday,
Said Ahmed will walk across the street from his parents'
Roxbury home and run 800 meters on the indoor track at the
Reggie
Lewis
Center, just like he did so many times as a teenager. This
time, however, he'll be running in the Boston Indoor Games
as a professional athlete.
The 2001 English High
graduate collected some of the fastest 800-meter times in
state history before becoming a three-time SEC Champion at
the University of
Arkansas. Two years
ago, he finished eighth in the 1,000-meters at the Boston
Indoor Games as a senior at
Arkansas. He'll only run
the 800-meters Saturday, which is slated for
6:35 p.m.
"Here's a good line: This
is my first time ever racing at Reggie Lewis as a pro
athlete," Ahmed during a Wednesday morning telephone
interview. "It's kind of a dream come true. I always worked
hard at Reggie Lewis that was first track I saw, indoor or
outdoors, in my life.
"I cannot be any happier; I
don't care if I do good or bad. Its home field advantage,
you know, I got to represent."
Ahmed has only been a pro
for about a year, and on Monday he scored a second-place
finish in the USA
vs. the World Meet in
Fresno,
Calif., running the
mile in 4:05. And of course, Ahmed is setting his sites on
the Olympics.
"Whatever it takes," he
said. "I'm ready for it."
Moving to Boston from
Somalia in 1995, it never occurred to Ahmed that English
High's track - sandwiched between Washington Street and the
hulking brick school building in Jamaica Plain - leaves much
to be desired.
"I was dedicated, I had a
good family behind me, I had good coaches behind me," the
25-year-old said. "It was all hard work. I didn't even look
at English High's facilities, what we have, what we didn't
have. What I wanted to do was become somebody.
"Boston Public Schools have
so much talent, not just me, there's so many more out there.
I got to just tell them, keep on going."
Source: Boston Now
webmaster@ceegaag.com |