Update: Ben Blankenship finished ninth among the 15 runners in his 1,500-meter heat Tuesday morning at the Rio Olympics, and qualified for Thursday's semifinals.
At the Olympic Stadium, Blankenship ran for most of the heat in second and third place before easing toward the finish and taking ninth. More important, he ran a 3:38.92 and realized down the stretch that he would easily advance.
Jakub Holusa of Poland won the heat in 3:38.31, and the top nine qualifiers for the semifinals all came from the heat in which Blankenship ran.
"I really thought if, being the last (heat), and having everyone jog the first two, if we would have just clipped along, we could get 12 through our heat (into the semifinals)," Blankenship said afterward. "I made it through. It just wasn't very pretty."
Blankenship added that he wasn't running at 100 percent.
"I got jet-lagged and my legs were just heavy, he said. "I just need to do something to just open them up. I felt like this at the USA championships, too."
RIO DE JANEIRO – As Ben Blankenship made plans for the 2016 season, he never doubted the 1,500 meters still was the right race for him. The distance fit his running and training style perfectly, and at 26, the former Gopher didn't feel ready to move up to longer races.
Blankenship had another powerful incentive as well: the excruciatingly tiny margin that separated him from a berth at the 2015 world championships, when Leo Manzano edged him by .02 of a second at the U.S. championships for the final spot on the team.
"I wanted a do-over,'' Blankenship said. "I wasn't going to give up easily.''