Woody Kincaid

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Woody Kincaid
File:2019 US Track & Field Championship (48401353357).jpg
Kincaid (middle) in 2019
Personal information
Born (1992-09-21) September 21, 1992 (age 31)
Littleton, Colorado, U.S.
Employer Nike
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight 135 lb (61 kg)
Sport
Country United States
Sport Track and field
Event(s) Long-distance running
College team University of Portland
Club Bowerman Track Club
Turned pro 2016
Coached by Mike Smith (2023–)
Jerry Schumacher (2016–2022)
Rob Conner (college)
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)

William "Woody" Kincaid (born September 21, 1992)[1] is an American long-distance runner. He won the gold medal in the 5000 meters at the 2022 NACAC Championships. Kincaid is the North American indoor record holder for that event.

High school

Woody Kincaid attended Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, where he emerged as one of the top high school distance runners in Colorado until he graduated in 2011. While competing in high school cross country and track he became a multiple-time state finalist highlighted by 2010 5A Cross Country State championship individual title.[2][3]

Collegiate

Kincaid attended University of Portland, where he competed in track and cross country representing Portland Pilots and coached by Rob Conner.[4] He accumulated two All-American honors.[5] At the 2016 NCAA Division I T&F Championships, he placed ninth in the men's 5000 meter final. Kincaid earned an MBA from Portland that year.[6] One of his best performances at the university came when he was the fifth and final scorer on the 2014 third place men's cross country team. He finished in 70th place, passing an astounding 50 people in the last 2 kilometers of the race.

Professional

Kincaid turned pro in 2016, joining the Bowerman Track Club under coach Jerry Schumacher.[7] The same year, he finished eighth in the 5000 meters at the US Olympic Trials.[8]

In March 2017, he started a podcast in digital media Citius Mag[9] that can be found through channels like SoundCloud and ITunes.[10][11][12] That same month, Kincaid earned a silver medal in two miles at USATF Indoor T&F Championships.[13]

The early part of his professional career was impacted by injury and he had surgery for a hernia in 2018.[7]

On September 10, 2019, Kincaid became the eighth man in American history to break 13 minutes in the 5000 m, when he ran a time of 12:58.1.[14] It was the fifth-fastest mark in US history at the time.

In 2021, he placed seventh in the Prickly Pear Invitational over 3000 m with a personal best of 7:46.07. The meet was held in Phoenix, Arizona on February 6. On February 20, he competed in the 10,000 m at the TEN, a meet held by Sound Running in Southern California. There Kincaid placed third to his Bowerman teammates Marc Scott and Grant Fisher, running a personal best of 27:12.78. His time moved him to sixth on the all-time U.S. list for the distance. At the US Olympic Trials in June, he won the 10,000 m event and a place on the US Olympic team for Tokyo along with Fisher and Joe Klecker. Kincaid also placed third in the 5000 m nine days later, securing his spot for a second event.[15][16] At the Tokyo Games, Kincaid finished 14th and 15th in the 5000 m and 10,000 m, respectively.[1]

Kincaid started 2022 with a February 5000 m win at the Boston University David Hemery Valentine Invitational in Boston in an indoor personal best of 13:05.56. In May, he had to drop out from the USATF 10,000 m Championships due to a diaphragm spasm. He finished second at the USATF Championships 5000 m the following month, but at the World Championships held in Eugene, Oregon in July, he fell in the heats and broke his elbow. Kincaid rebounded once again the following month, winning the 5000 m title at the NACAC Championships in Freeport, Bahamas.[7]

In 2023, he moved to Flagstaff, Arizona to be coached by Mike Smith at Northern Arizona University.[17] On January 27 at the Boston University John Thomas Terrier Classic, the 30-year-old broke the North American indoor record in the 5000 m with a time of 12:51.61, slicing more than two seconds off Grant Fisher's mark set on the same track in February 2022. His closing splits included a 56.39 s for the final 400 m, and 26.27 s for the final lap. His performance put him fourth on the world indoor all-time list.[18]

Personal bests

References

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  4. Portland Pilots Woody Kincaid University of Portland 2016.
  5. William Kincaid TEAM: Portland DI, WCC, MPSF, DI West TFRRS. 2016
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  17. Woody Kincaid Breaks Grant Fisher's 5K American Record Indoor Record in 12:51.61 CITIUS MAG
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External links