Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Small town gal living the dream

Sutherland still realizing NCAA title win did happen

By Darren Steinke
Gordie Howe Sports Complex

Savannah Sutherland does a drill at the Track and Field Track.
Savannah Sutherland is reminded often she is famous in a good-natured way during her Saskatchewan summer homecoming.

On June 10 at the 2023 National Collegiate Athletics Association Track and Field Championships held at Mike A. Myers Stadium in Austin, Texas, Sutherland won the championship race in the 400-metre women’s hurdles in a time of 54.45 seconds with the University of Michigan Wolverines. Along with claiming the NCAA title, Sutherland’s time was a personal best, set a school record, a Canadian U23 record and the 2023 world championship standard.

She just missed clipping Sage Watson’s overall Canadian record in the 400-metre women’s hurdles of 54.32 seconds set in October of 2019.

With having won an NCAA title with one of the most storied overall athletic programs in the Wolverines, Sutherland’s win made major rounds in mainstream media and social media.

In early July, she returned home and first spent quality family time in her hometown of Borden, which is located about 53 kilometres northwest of Saskatoon. She proceeded to return to the Track and Field Track on the Gordie Howe Sports Complex grounds to train with the elite national level crew that includes Michelle Harrison, Nicole Ostertag and Madisson Lawrence.

The training mates would send good-natured jabs Sutherland’s way telling her how well-known she was and that news of her heroics takes over their social media feeds. Sutherland, who turned 20-years-old on August 7, chuckled at the comments about her newfound fame. Due to the fact she was only in her second season with the Wolverines when she won her NCAA crown, Sutherland admits she still thinks that day was some sort of dream.

“It still feels surreal,” said Sutherland. “It almost feels like it didn’t happen to me.

“It is like someone that I watched on TV. It hasn’t sunk in that, ‘Hey, that was me on the track.’ It still feels pretty unreal.”

Savannah Sutherland jogs around the Track and Field Track.
Sutherland, who was 19-years-old at the time, entered the NCAA championship race as an underdog with Britton Wilson from the University of Arkansas and Masai Russell from the University of Kentucky pegged as the favourites. Russell finished second with a time of 54.66 seconds, while Wilson came in seventh at 55.92 seconds.

“I just wanted to get out hard,” said Sutherland about the NCAA title race. “I knew that there was a pretty big head wind on the back stretch, so I was just focused on that first 200-metres on getting out.

“It was around the 250-mark where I started wondering like, ‘Hey, where is everybody else.’ The two people that were favoured were on my inside, so I couldn’t see them for the whole race. Coming around that last curve, it kind of sunk in that, ‘Hey, I could win this thing.’

“Then, it was just trying to come home as strong as I could. It was a little scary, because I knew that they were coming after me. I was just hoping that I could hold them off for that last 150-metres.”

Sutherland, who stands 5-foot-8, was named the Women’s Track Athlete of the Year for the Big Ten Conference. Her lengthy list of accomplishments for the 2022-23 season included a Big Ten championship in the 400-metre hurdles, a Big Ten championship in the 4 X 400-metre relay for the indoor season, a first team all-American nod in the 400-metre hurdles and a first team all-American selection in the 400-metre race for the indoor season.

In the 400-metre race, Sutherland set a personal best time for outdoors at 51.41 seconds on February 25 and a personal best in indoors at 51.60 second in March 11. The indoor personal best came at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships held in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Sutherland said she couldn’t believe how many accomplishments she had until they were listed to her.

“It feels amazing, especially indoor, because it was my off event,” said Sutherland. “To still be able to get top eight at NCAAs indoor for the flat 400-metre was really great.

Savannah Sutherland, left, share a laugh with Nicole Ostertag.
“Those all-American honours and big 10 championships, it just kind of starts to stack up. You don’t really realize when you are running like how many school records have gone down and things like that. Being able to look back at that, it was just pretty spectacular to see all the work just in one space like that.”

Sutherland has enjoyed campus life at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Mich. She said it was different going into a lecture hall for a class and there were more people in the lecture hall than the entire population of Borden. In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Borden had a population of 281 people.

Overall, Sutherland has been amused when she explains to folks at the University of Michigan about where she is from.

“It is funny, because usually, I’ll be in a conversation with someone, and I’ll be like, ‘Oh yeah, I’m from a small town,’” said Sutherland. “They are like, ‘Oh, me too like there are only like 5,000 people.’

“I’m like you don’t understand. You don’t even understand. Once I try to explain it to people I think it is hard for them to even grasp like growing up in a place that small until they like see it on the map and there is only like six streets type of thing.

“It is really hard for them to actually wrap their minds around it that people actually come from places that small.”

Still, the gal from the small town has proven she can make an impact on the biggest stages. On July 30 at the Canadian Track and Field Championships in Langley, B.C., Sutherland won the senior women’s 400-metre hurdles final in a time of 56.14 seconds. She just edged out Brooke Overholt from St. Mary’s, Ont., who had a time of 56.17 seconds.

Sutherland spent the majority of July training at the Track and Field Track on the Gordie Howe Sports Complex grounds preparing for nationals. She enjoys coming back to the state-of-the-art facility in Saskatoon to train.

Savannah Sutherland blasts over a hurdle while training on June 8, 2021.
“I’m always so excited to come home and just see everybody and reconnect with everybody,” said Sutherland. “This is where I grew up running.

“I’m always excited to come back here. I’m always excited to compete for Canada and compete for Saskatchewan. I never forget who I am representing even when I’m in the States.

“It is always mentioned, ‘Oh, girl from small town Saskatchewan.’ I’m really proud to be from where I am from.”