Monday, August 4, 2008 1 1 SP NA N 4t The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Harris asesthe Gnanan dream By ANDY REID Daily Sports Editor Maize and blue to red, white and blue. When a Michigan athlete earns a trip to the Olympics, that particular transition in uniform colors is the most common. But several of the 28 athletes and coaches with Wolver- ine ties participating in the upcom- ing Beijing Games are making a different chromatic transition. In addition to representing the United States, athletes with Michi- gan ties will represent Canada, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, New Zealand, Peru, Israel and Guyana. Adam Harris, a rising senior for the Wolverines, will shirk red, white and blue to don a different color scheme in the Olympics: the red, yellow and green of Guyana, his mother's homeland. Harris will run in the 200-meter dash wearing those colors. Although competing for the small South American country (its population of 751,000 is about half the size of Phoenix) may seem like an easy way to secure a spot in the Olympic games, Harris and his stress-filled quest to run for Guy- ana prove that it was anything but. A ROUGH ROAD TO BEIJING With his jaw-dropping natural -ability, it's easy to see how Harris has found success at every level of track he has competed at - from a stellar high school career to a solid first two years as a Wolverine, the Wheaton, Ill. native is always a vital part of the team he's on. But no one knew just how good he was until this year's Big Ten Outdoor Championships. In that meet, Harris posted a world-class time of 20.75 sec- onds in the 200-meter dash, good enough to qualify for the U.S. Olympic trials. There was hardly time to celebrate the performance, though. Harris, his mother Dar- lene and Michigan assistant coach Fred LaPlante immediately began thinking of the ramifications of the Olympic-worthy mark. Could Harris conceivably run for Team USA? Should he test his mettle in the fast-approaching Olympic trials? Or should he take the more obscure approach - becoming a legal citizen of Guyana in order to run for its national team? In Harris's mind, the answer was simple. Senior Adam Harris will represent Guyana in the 200-meter dash at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing this month. "I just thought it'd be nice to run for my roots," he said. But, from a coaching stand- point, LaPlante thought Guyana was a perfect fit for Harris for dif- ferent reasons. If Harris would have run in the U.S. Olympic trials, he would have been tied to the United States for at least two years. And even had he committed to Team USA, there was no guarantee Harris would make it to Beijing. "Although he's great, the U.S. sprint team is the best team in the world," LaPlante said. "Not that they're going to win all the med- als, but the depth they have makes it very, very difficult to get in. It was easier for him this way to get. on the team." With everyone - Harris, his mom and LaPlante - in agreement that running for Guyana was the sprinter's best option, it seemed it was almost a matter of time before he would be participating in the opening ceremony, the aspect of the Olympics Harris is the most excited about. There was just one problem: Harris needed Guayanan citizen- ship, and no one quite knew how to go about getting it. But all it took was a little bit of luck to get the ball running. Years ago, LaPlante "had been around" the Irish national team, when a young man named Joe Ryan ran for Ireland. The two have kept in contact, with LaPlante saying they go "way back." It just so happens that Ryan, who now coaches at Manhattan Col- lege, is also the coach of the Guy- anan contingent, and he directed LaPlante to the proper authorities. Now equipped with a plan for getting to Beijing, Harris, his mother and his coach each became responsible for a certain aspect of the job. Harris began training daily in Ann Arbor. LaPlante began working with Guyana's Athletic Federation in order to make sure Harris had a spot on the team. And Darlene Harris arranged her son's dual citizenship, a task that turned out to be quite a bit more difficult than anticipated. "Just getting the papers complet- ed and to where they're supposed to be, it's pretty hard work," she said of the weeks she spent pouring over the paperwork she had to file with both the American and Guy- anan governments. "She put in so much work," Harris said. "I am so thankful for everything she did for me." But with his citizenship in limbo, Harris could do nothing but wait and see. A MINOR SETBACK Five hours is a long time to sit still for anyone. For a 21-year-old who has spent the last six months of his life training non-stop for the NCAA Track Championships and a potential invitation to the 2008 Beijing Olympics, that much time spent trapped in the back seat of a car could feel like torture. Harris found himself in that exact situation three weeks ago. But in the back seat of his par- ents' car, the Michigan men's track and field star had plenty on his mind to keep him busy dur- ing the trip to Toronto. Of course, in the back of his mind was the ever-growing doubt Guyana would accept his citizenship application. Harris had more immediate con- cerns, too - at the end of the road trip, his first real competition in a month was waiting for him. After the U.S. Olympic trials, the nation's top talent dispersed across the world to cram in last-min- ute training, workouts and meets before the Beijing games. That left Harris and LaPlante alone to train in Ann Arbor. While the one-on- one time with his coach gave Har- ris seven weeks to tone his body and train, both he and LaPlante are concerned with the extended break in between meets. "The law of averages would say that he's at a disadvantage because he hasn't raced," LaPlante said. "The other guys are sharp from See HARRIS, Page 15 I