EUGENE, Ore. — Middle-distance runner Eric Holt quit his job and moved back in with his parents. They pay his cellphone bill and let him use the car for a long commute to practice. He works out in any pair of running shoes he happens to get for free and babysits at his sister's place for extra meal money.
Anything to keep his costs low and his training high.
Never quite fast enough to earn a lucrative shoe deal, he's put everything on hold to chase a spot on the U.S. Olympic team in the 800 meters at the track and field trials.
The 29-year-old from New York is making a big investment in himself.
''All of the struggles he's had, all of the people that have said he can't do it, that he's not talented enough — this is the great American story,'' his coach, John Trautmann, said. ''Hopefully, it has the All-American ending, too."
Holt also runs the 1,500 meters and made it to the semifinal round but didn't advance Saturday night. He faded down the stretch.
''I ran a dumb race. I deserved not to qualify,'' Holt said. ''I'm about to shock the world. I feel I'm in an event (the 800) I'm better at.''
Holt was a state champion in high school and a multi-time conference champion at Binghamton University. After that, he figured his running career was wrapping up.