Matt Wilkinson's first experience with the 3,000-meter steeplechase didn't go well.
"I actually face-planted,'' he said.
Alec Basten offers advice for those new to the event that mixes distance running with hurdling and leaping over a water pit.
"They should try it a couple times before completely swearing it off,'' he said.
Wilkinson got up from that face-plant, and Basten didn't swear off the event. Together as Gophers teammates, they'll be chasing a national championship in the steeplechase this week in the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Ore.
Basten, a senior from Green Bay, Wis., is the reigning NCAA runner-up in the event and enters Wednesday's second heat with a qualifying time of 8 minutes, 33.91 seconds, third best among the 24 entrants. Wilkinson, a graduate transfer from Carleton and a former Minnetonka High School runner, won the NCAA Division III steeplechase last year for the Knights and brings the top qualifying time, 8:32.61, into the second heat. The top five finishers in each heat, plus the two next-best times, advance to Friday's final.
"They're both competing for a very high place at nationals,'' said Gophers assistant coach Brad Wick, whose duties include leading the steeplechasers. "They're not just happy to be there.''
They are, however, happy to be competing for the Gophers and in a unique and quirky event as the steeplechase. On each lap, competitors must hurdle four barriers of 36 inches tall, plus leap over another 36-inch barrier that has a 12-foot water pit at its end. That's a total of 35 jumps — seven over or through the water — during the course of the 3,000 meters.