The CITIUS MAG Podcast | A Running + Track and Field Show

Track and field's biggest names on the track, in the coaching ranks and within the industry sit down and open up in-depth to share brilliant insights and vivid snapshots from their professional/personal accomplishments and experiences in the sport. Hosted by CITIUS MAG founder Chris Chavez. The show was named one of "The Best Running Podcasts" by Runner's World. ▶ Visit https://CITIUSMAG.com ▶ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CitiusMag ▶ Instagram: https://instagram.com/citiusmag ▶ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CitiusMag ▶ Patreon: https://patreon.com/citiusmag

  1. Susanna Sullivan & Jess McClain 2025 World Championships Marathon Recap & Reflections After Finishing 4th and 8th

    3 小時前

    Susanna Sullivan & Jess McClain 2025 World Championships Marathon Recap & Reflections After Finishing 4th and 8th

    The World Athletics Championships marathon in Tokyo was always going to be a test of patience, heat management, and guts and two American women rose to the occasion. For over an hour, Susanna Sullivan was the story of the race. A sixth-grade math teacher from Virginia, she surged to the front by 5K, running alone through the streets of Tokyo with nothing but the sticky, humid air and a clock for company. By halfway, she had built a 63-second lead on the pack of global stars behind her. And when they finally came for her, Sullivan didn’t panic. She held her rhythm, managed the late miles and battled all the way to the line for fourth place in 2:28:17 — just seconds away from becoming the third American woman ever to medal in a World Championship marathon. Alongside her, Jess McClain was running her own masterclass in composure. McClain tucked in behind Sullivan early, endured the surging heat, and stayed locked in when the race splintered. Running smart and steady, McClain delivered the best global performance of her career, finishing eighth in 2:29:20. In a field stacked with some of the fastest women of all-time, McClain proved she belongs. Peres Jepchirchir and Tigist Assefa settled gold and silver with a final-lap sprint inside Japan National Stadium. Uruguay’s Julia Paternain stunned the world with a historic bronze. But it was Sullivan and McClain who gave Team USA its heartbeat. Two working professionals, two fearless racers. ____________ Host: Chris Chavez | ⁠⁠⁠@chris_j_chavez on Instagram⁠⁠ Guest: Susanna Sullivan & Jess McClain | @susannasullivan4 on Instagram & @jesstonn on Instagram Produced by: Jasmine Fehr |⁠ ⁠⁠⁠@jasminefehr on Instagram⁠⁠⁠ ____________ PRESENTED BY ASICS For the third consecutive year, CITIUS MAG is proud to partner with ASICS for our global championship coverage. With their support, we’re able to bring you the best coverage of the 2025 World Athletics Championships. Support our sponsor and check out ASICS’s latest including the MegaBlast and SonicBlast. Shop at ASICS.com

    37 分鐘
  2. TOKYO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 3 RECAP: GEORGE BEAMISH KICKS TO STEEPLECHASE GOLD + COLE HOCKER DQ’ED

    14 小時前

    TOKYO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 3 RECAP: GEORGE BEAMISH KICKS TO STEEPLECHASE GOLD + COLE HOCKER DQ’ED

    Join Chris Chavez, Eric Jenkins, Anderson Emerole, Mitch Dyer and Paul Hof-Mahoney as they recap all the highlights from Day 3 at the 2025 World Championships in Tokyo. Some of today's highlights include: Mondo Duplantis Breaks World Record (6.30m) - Sweden’s Mondo Duplantis cleared 6.30m to set his 14th world record - Secured his third straight world title - Vault came on his third and final attempt, capping an electric evening - Historic depth: First time seven men cleared 5.90m+ in a single competition - 2nd: Emmanouil Karalis (GRE) – 6.00m - 3rd: Kurtis Marschall (AUS) – 5.95m (=NR) Beamish Ends El Bakkali’s Steeplechase Streak - Geordie Beamish (NZL) wins in a tactical race, kicking late to defeat Soufiane El Bakkali (MAR) - El Bakkali’s long championship win streak comes to an end - 1st: Beamish – 8:33.88 - 2nd: El Bakkali – 8:33.95 - 3rd: Edmund Serem (KEN) – 8:34.56 Cole Hocker Disqualified from 1500m Final - Hocker originally finished 2nd in his semifinal - Disqualified for jostling in the final 100 meters - Appeal by USA Track and Field was denied - Disqualification shown on broadcast approximately one hour after the race Ditaji Kambundji Stuns in 100m Hurdles - Swiss hurdler sets a national record (12.24) - Upsets top names including Tobi Amusan - 1st: Kambundji (SUI) – 12.24 NR - 2nd: Tobi Amusan (NGR) – 12.29 - 3rd: Grace Stark (USA) – 12.34 Simbu Wins Historic Marathon for Tanzania - Alphonce Felix Simbu claims Tanzania’s first global gold in the marathon - Outkicked Germany’s Amanal Petros by 0.03s - 1st: Simbu – 2:09:48 - 2nd: Petros – 2:09:48 - 3rd: Iliass Aouani (ITA) – 2:09:53 ____________ PRESENTED BY ASICS For the third consecutive year, CITIUS MAG is proud to partner with ASICS for our global championship coverage. With their support, we’re able to bring you the best coverage of the 2025 World Athletics Championships. Support our sponsor and check out ASICS’s latest including the MegaBlast and SonicBlast. Shop at ASICS.com ____________ Hosts: Chris Chavez | ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@chris_j_chavez on Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ + Mac Fleet |⁠⁠⁠ ⁠@macfleet on Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ + Eric Jenkins | ⁠⁠_ericjenkins on Instagram⁠⁠ + Anderson Emerole | ⁠⁠@atkoeme on Instagram⁠⁠ + Mitch Dyer | ⁠⁠@straightatit_ on Instagram⁠⁠ + Paul Hof-Mahoney | ⁠⁠@phofmahoney on Instagram⁠⁠ Produced by: Jasmine Fehr |⁠⁠⁠ ⁠@jasminefehr on Instagram

    1 小時 16 分鐘
  3. Valarie Allman Is Finally A World Champion | LIVE From ASICS House In Tokyo!

    14 小時前

    Valarie Allman Is Finally A World Champion | LIVE From ASICS House In Tokyo!

    Valarie Allman has known the joy of Olympic gold. Twice. She’s stood atop the podium in Tokyo and Paris. She’s held world leads and set marks that haven’t been seen since the 1980s. But until now, one medal had eluded her. In Tokyo once again, which was the site of her first Olympic triumph, Allman finally became a world champion. With a 69.48-meter toss, she claimed her first global title, winning by the largest margin in 18 years. It was a performance that broke open the event, stamped her dominance with a 29-meet win streak, and made her the first American woman ever to pair Olympic and World outdoor gold in a throwing event. After world bronze in 2022 and silver in 2023, this was about closure — about finishing the climb and silencing any doubts. In this conversation LIVE from the ASICS House in Tokyo, she calls it a dream come true. The moment itself was pure Valarie: lying down in the ring after the competition, arms and legs carving a victory angel into the infield grass. A mixture of joy, relief, and the playfulness that has made her one of the most beloved figures in U.S. track and field. Now, with two Olympic titles, a world crown, and the year’s farthest throw on her résumé, Allman has fully written her name into history — not just as the face of U.S. throwing, but as one of the greatest to ever pick up the discus. ____________ Hosts: Chris Chavez | ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@chris_j_chavez on Instagram⁠⁠⁠⁠ + Paul Hof-Mahoney | ⁠⁠@phofmahoney on Instagram⁠ Guest: Val Allman | @valallman123 on Instagram ____________ PRESENTED BY ASICS For the third consecutive year, CITIUS MAG is proud to partner with ASICS for our global championship coverage. With their support, we’re able to bring you the best coverage of the 2025 World Athletics Championships. Support our sponsor and check out ASICS’s latest including the MegaBlast and SonicBlast. Shop at ASICS.com

    22 分鐘
  4. WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 2 RECAP: MELISSA JEFFERSON-WOODEN, OBLIQUE SEVILLE WIN 100M TITLES + JIMMY GRESSIER SHOCKS THE 10,000M FIELD + 1500M SURPRISES

    1 天前

    WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 2 RECAP: MELISSA JEFFERSON-WOODEN, OBLIQUE SEVILLE WIN 100M TITLES + JIMMY GRESSIER SHOCKS THE 10,000M FIELD + 1500M SURPRISES

    Join Chris Chavez, Eric Jenkins, Anderson Emerole, Mitch Dyer and Paul Hof-Mahoney as they recap all the highlights from Day 2 at the 2025 World Championships in Tokyo as five first-time individual gold medalists were crowned. Key Highlights from Day 2: Melissa Jefferson-Wooden – Women’s 100m Champion - Time: 10.61 (Championship Record) - Context: Broke the previous championship record and tied the fastest time ever at a global championship (Elaine Thompson-Herah’s 2021 Olympic record). - Margin of Victory: 0.15 seconds — second-largest in meet history. - Podium: Jefferson-Wooden (USA) – 10.61 CR, Tina Clayton (JAM) – 10.76 PB, Julien Alfred (LCA) – 10.84 Oblique Seville – Men’s 100m Champion - Time: 9.77 (Personal Best) - Narrative: Delivered on years of potential with a statement win. - Drama: Letsile Tebogo (BOT) was disqualified for a false start; Noah Lyles prevented a Jamaican sweep with bronze. - Podium: Seville (JAM) – 9.77 PB, Kishane Thompson (JAM) – 9.82, Noah Lyles (USA) – 9.89 Peres Jepchirchir – Women’s Marathon Champion - Time: 2:24:43 - Storyline: Echoed her Olympic gold in Tokyo with another win in the same city, outkicking Tigist Assefa in the final 100 meters. - Surprise: Julia Paternain (URU) took bronze — Uruguay’s first global championship medal. - Podium: Jepchirchir (KEN) – 2:24:43, Tigist Assefa (ETH) – 2:24:45, Julia Paternain (URU) – 2:27:23 Jimmy Gressier – Men’s 10,000m Champion - Time: 28:55.77 - Shock Result: Pulled off a stunning upset, outsprinting favorite Yomif Kejelcha in a slow, tactical race. - Podium: Gressier (FRA) – 28:55.77, Yomif Kejelcha (ETH) – 28:55.83, Andreas Almgren (SWE) – 28:56.02 Field Event Gold Medalists: Valarie Allman – Women’s Discus Throw - Best Mark: 69.48m (5th round) - Background: Two-time Olympic champion earns her first world title. - Podium: Allman (USA) – 69.48m, Jorinde van Klinken (NED) – 67.50m, Silinda Morales (CUB) – 67.25m Tara Davis-Woodhall – Women’s Long Jump - Best Jump: 7.13m - Performance: Took the lead with 7.08m on her first attempt and sealed it with 7.13m in round four. - Podium: Davis-Woodhall (USA) – 7.13m, Malaika Mihambo (GER) – 6.99m, Natalia Linares (COL) – 6.92m (=PB) ____________ PRESENTED BY ASICS For the third consecutive year, CITIUS MAG is proud to partner with ASICS for our global championship coverage. With their support, we’re able to bring you the best coverage of the 2025 World Athletics Championships. Support our sponsor and check out ASICS’s latest including the MegaBlast and SonicBlast. Shop at ASICS.com ____________ Hosts: Chris Chavez | ⁠⁠⁠⁠@chris_j_chavez on Instagram⁠⁠⁠ + Mac Fleet |⁠⁠ ⁠@macfleet on Instagram⁠⁠⁠ + Eric Jenkins | ⁠_ericjenkins on Instagram⁠ + Anderson Emerole | ⁠@atkoeme on Instagram⁠ + Mitch Dyer | ⁠@straightatit_ on Instagram⁠ + Paul Hof-Mahoney | ⁠@phofmahoney on Instagram⁠ Produced by: Jasmine Fehr |⁠⁠ ⁠@jasminefehr on Instagram

    1 小時 55 分鐘
  5. WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 1 RECAP: BEATRICE CHEBET KICKS FOR GOLD, NOAH LYLES VS. JAMAICA IS ON, RYAN CROUSER EARNS HIS 10TH MEDAL

    2 天前

    WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS DAY 1 RECAP: BEATRICE CHEBET KICKS FOR GOLD, NOAH LYLES VS. JAMAICA IS ON, RYAN CROUSER EARNS HIS 10TH MEDAL

    Join Chris Chavez, Eric Jenkins, Anderson Emerole, Mitch Dyer and Paul Hof-Mahoney as they recap all the highlights from Day 1 at the 2025 World Championships in Tokyo. Among the top stories: 🥇 Crouser Returns with Golden Comeback - Ryan Crouser (USA), world record-holder and three-time Olympic champion, won his third world title in the men’s shot put. - He threw 22.34m in his first competition in a year after an elbow injury. - Uziel Munoz (MEX) took silver with a national record of 21.97m. - Leonardo Fabbri (ITA) secured bronze (21.94m) over Tom Walsh (NZL) on countback. 🥇 Chebet Dominates 10,000m Final - Beatrice Chebet (KEN) added a world title to her Olympic gold and world record in the women’s 10,000m. - Chebet kicked away late to win in 30:37.61. - Nadia Battocletti (ITA) claimed silver in an Italian record of 30:38.23. - Gudaf Tsegay (ETH), the defending champion, settled for bronze (30:39.65). 🥇 USA Repeats in Mixed 4x400m Relay - USA retained their mixed 4x400m title in 3:08.80, equaling the championship record. - Femke Bol anchored The Netherlands to silver in 3:09.96, recovering from her infamous fall in Budapest 2023. - Belgium took bronze in 3:10.61. 🚨 Heats and Early Round Action 🏃‍♂️ Men’s 100m Heats - Gift Leotlela (RSA) topped the heats in 9.87 – 3rd-fastest ever in a global champs first round. Other heat winners: - Kishane Thompson (JAM) – 9.95 (easy effort) - Noah Lyles (USA) – 9.95 - Kenny Bednarek – 10.01 - Letsile Tebogo, Akani Simbine, Israel Okon also advanced. Women’s 100m Heats - Julien Alfred (LCA) eased to a 10.93 win. - Melissa Jefferson-Wooden (USA) and Daryll Neita (GBR) also dipped under 11. - Other qualifiers: Sha’Carri Richardson, Shericka Jackson, and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. 🏃‍♂️ 3000m Steeplechase Drama - Soufiane El Bakkali (MAR) cruised through. - Lamecha Girma and Geordie Beamish both fell but still qualified. - Kenneth Rooks (USA) missed out, finishing 11th in his heat. - Ryuji Miura (JPN) progressed to the final for the home crowd. 🏃‍♀️ 1500m Heats - Faith Kipyegon (KEN), chasing a fourth world title, won her heat with ease. - Also advancing: Jess Hull, Nelly Chepchirchir, Freweyni Hailu. ____________ PRESENTED BY ASICS For the third consecutive year, CITIUS MAG is proud to partner with ASICS for our global championship coverage. With their support, we’re able to bring you the best coverage of the 2025 World Athletics Championships. Support our sponsor and check out ASICS’s latest including the MegaBlast and SonicBlast. Shop at ASICS.com ____________ Hosts: Chris Chavez | ⁠⁠⁠@chris_j_chavez on Instagram⁠⁠ + Mac Fleet |⁠ ⁠@macfleet on Instagram⁠⁠ + Eric Jenkins | _ericjenkins on Instagram + Anderson Emerole | @atkoeme on Instagram + Mitch Dyer | @straightatit_ on Instagram + Paul Hof-Mahoney | @phofmahoney on Instagram Produced by: Jasmine Fehr |⁠ ⁠@jasminefehr on Instagram

    1 小時 32 分鐘
  6. Niels Laros On His Rise As A 1500m Gold Medal Contender & The Confidence From Winning The Diamond League Title

    9月1日

    Niels Laros On His Rise As A 1500m Gold Medal Contender & The Confidence From Winning The Diamond League Title

    “It goes without saying that we want to go for at least a medal and maybe even the gold medal [at the World Championships]. We don't really speak about that; it's just about being at my best level in the final. I would call that our goal. Whatever result is connected to that depends on so many factors and that's why we don't really speak about, ‘We want to be first there,’ but more about the whole process.” Every so often, a young runner bursts onto the scene not just with talent, but with a presence that makes you believe you're watching the next big star take shape in real time. Niels Laros is that runner right now. At just 20 years old, the Dutch phenom has gone from a precocious prospect to Diamond League champion and now even being the name on everyone's lips as the favorite for the World Championships in the 1500m in Tokyo. He's rattling off consistent victories this summer, he put together a historic 800m and 5000m double at the European U23 Championships, he had an epic Bowerman mile victory over Yared Nuguse that we haven't forgotten, and most recently, a Diamond League title in Zurich where he unleashed yet another sizzling final 100m in 12.5 seconds to clock a 3:29.20 – a Dutch national record and personal best. Again and again, Laros has shown the defining quality of today's 1500m champions: the ability to close off a fast pace. His final 100m stacks up against anything that we've seen from Josh Kerr or Cole Hocker that they've produced in their gold medal runs. But Laros's story isn't just about times and trophies; it's about timing and arriving in peak form as the global landscape in the 1500m shifts. With Jakob Ingebrigtsen sidelined by injury and his rivals Cole Hocker and Josh Kerr searching for their best in 2025, Laros has positioned himself right now as the man to beat. We talk about his rise, the confidence that comes with winning big races, and what it means to carry the weight of expectations heading into Tokyo. ____________ Host: Chris Chavez | ⁠⁠@chris_j_chavez on Instagram⁠ Guest: Niels Laros | @niels.laros on Instagram  Produced by: Jasmine Fehr | ⁠⁠⁠@jasminefehr on Instagram⁠⁠⁠ Mentioned in this episode… - Paris Olympics men’s 1500m final - Zurich Diamond League men’s 1500m - Brussels Diamond League men’s 1500m - Prefontaine Classic Bowerman Mile ____________ SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS NEW BALANCE: The FuelCell Rebel v5 was built to feel fast—and look the part. With a sleek, race-inspired mesh upper and lightweight PEBA/EVA foam blend, it offers a responsive, energetic ride that’s ideal for everything from steady miles to speedwork. A redesigned heel and added forefoot rubber provide comfort and traction, making this your go-to for runs when you want to pick up the pace. The Rebel V5 shows up every time. ⁠⁠⁠Find the New Balance FuelCell Rebel v5 at newbalance.com or your local running shop today.⁠

    49 分鐘

主持人與來賓

簡介

Track and field's biggest names on the track, in the coaching ranks and within the industry sit down and open up in-depth to share brilliant insights and vivid snapshots from their professional/personal accomplishments and experiences in the sport. Hosted by CITIUS MAG founder Chris Chavez. The show was named one of "The Best Running Podcasts" by Runner's World. ▶ Visit https://CITIUSMAG.com ▶ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CitiusMag ▶ Instagram: https://instagram.com/citiusmag ▶ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/CitiusMag ▶ Patreon: https://patreon.com/citiusmag

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