Shem-Tov Sabag Explained

Shem-Tov Sabag
Native Name:Hebrew: שם טוב סבג
Fullname:Also Shemi Sabag, and Shemi Sagiv
Nickname:Shemi
Nationality:Israeli
Birth Date:13 April 1959
Birth Place:Haifa, Israel
Height:1.65 m
Weight:52 kg
Alma Mater:
Occupation:chiropractor, triathlon coach
Relatives:Shachar Sagiv and Ran Sagiv, Olympic triathletes (sons)[1]
Sport:Running
Event Type:Races
Event:cross-country, 5,000 metres, 10,000 metres, 25K, half marathon, and marathon
Collegeteam:Augustana Vikings, University of Oregon Ducks
Nationals:
  • Israeli national marathon champion (1984, 1987)
Pb:
  • Half Marathon: 1:06:13
  • Marathon: 2:18:23

Shem-Tov "Shemi" Sabag; later known by the surname Sagiv[1] [2] (Hebrew: שם טוב "שמי" סבג; born April 13, 1959) is an Israeli former Olympic marathoner, former triathlon coach, and currently a chiropractor.[3] [4] He competed for Israel at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. He won both the 1984 Lake County Marathon, and the 1989 Vancouver Marathon. His sons Shachar Sagiv and Ran Sagiv have both competed in the Olympics in the triathlon.[1]

Early and personal life

Sabag was born in Haifa, Israel, later lived in Zichron Yaakov and Tiberias, Israel, and is Jewish.[5] [2] [6] [7] He started running marathons at age 17, at the urging of a high school coach, but lost three years of training as he served with a tank unit in the Israel Defense Forces.[2] [8] He later changed his surname to Sagiv.[9]

His sons Shachar Sagiv and Ran Sagiv have both competed in the Olympics in the triathlon, coming in 20th and 35th, respectively, in the Tokyo Olympics held in 2021.[10] [11] His son Shachar, whom he coached until 2021, will represent Israel at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris in the Men's triathlon at Pont Alexandre III on July 30, 2024.[12] [13]

Education

He studied as a pre-med student at Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois, in 1983 and 1984.[2] [14] In the summer of 1983, between semesters at Augustana, he worked at Camp Interlaken, developing a running program.[7]

In the winter of 1984-85, he transferred to the University of Oregon, in Eugene, Oregon.[15] In 1986 he obtained a bachelor's degree from the University of Oregon in exercise physiology.[16]

From 1986 to 1989 he studied biomechanics and gait analysis as a graduate student at the University of Oregon, earning a master's degree. During that time, he ran for a year for the Oregon Ducks.[16] [17] [18] [19] [20]

From 1989 to 1993 he studied at the University of Western States in Portland, Oregon, earning a Doctor of Chiropractic degree, and is now a chiropractor.[16]

Running career

1983–84; 2x All American, 2x CCIW 5,000 meter champion, CCIW cross-country champion, Lake County Marathon champion

At Augustana College, he was an All-American in cross-country in 1983 and 1984.[21] [14] In 1983, he was the College Conference of Illinois & Wisconsin (CCIW) 5,000 meter champion, and won the silver medal in the CCIW Cross-Country championship, with a time of 24.49.[22] [23] In November 1983, he came in 8th in the NCAA Men's Division III Cross Country Championship in Newport News, Virginia.

In May 1984, in a season in which he was co-captain of the Augustana Vikings Track and Field team, he came in 2nd in the 10,000 meters (in 30:18.48) and 6th in the 5,000 meters, at the NCAA Division III men's outdoor track and field championships in Northfield, Minnesota.[24] [21] [2] He also set the record in the CCIW 5,000 meters in 1984 (while winning the title for the second straight year), with a time of 14:24.36 (still a CCIW championships record as of 2021), and that year also set the Credit Island Park four-mile course record with a time of 19:33 (as of 2009, that was still a school record in the four-mile).[25] [26] [27] [21] [28] In 1984 he won the CCIW cross-country championship, with a time of 24:52.7, after having won the silver medal in 1983, and also won the Notre Dame Invitational in South Bend, Indiana, with a time of 24.06.[29] [21] [30] He was named team MVP in both 1983 and 1984.[21]

In April 1984 he won his first marathon in his eighth race at that distance, in Chicago, Illinois, in the Lake County Marathon in 2:21:47.[14]

His personal best time in the marathon was 2:18:23, which he ran in June 1984 in Duluth, Minnesota.[3]

1984 Summer Olympics

He competed for Israel at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 25.[3] He had qualified with his time in his third marathon in three and a half months.[31] Running in the Men's Marathon in August 1984 he came in 60th out of 107 competitors, with a time of 2-31:34.[3] [32] When he competed in the Olympics, Sabag was 5inchesft6inchesin (ftin) tall and weighed 139lb.[3] Speaking of the Munich Massacre, which had taken place 12 years earlier at the Olympics, he said: "As a representative of Israel, I am here to do what they tried to do. We are here to continue their job."[2]

1984–present; Israel national marathon champion, Vancouver Marathon champion

In December 1984 he won the silver medal in the Tiberias Marathon in Israel, with a time of 2:22:15, behind British marathoner Lindsay Robertson, and won the Israeli national marathon championship.[33] [34] In the mid-1980s, after transferring, he ran for the University of Oregon Ducks track and field team, under coach Bill Dellinger.[35]

His personal best in the half-marathon was 1-06:13, which he ran in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in September 1986.[36] Also that month, he won the New York Road Runners Club Back-To-Work 4-Mile Run in 19 minutes, 10 seconds in Central Park.[37] [38]

In 1987 he won the Israeli national marathon championship in a time of 2:27:57.[39] [34]

In September 1988, he won the 18th annual NIKE/OTC (Nike/Oregon Track Club) 25K in Eugene, Oregon, with a time of 1:20:26.[40]

Sabag won the Vancouver Marathon in Canada in May 1989 with a time of 2:19:41.[36] He did so against a field of 1,109 finishers.[41]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: For Israeli triathlete brothers, the Olympics is a family affair. Amy Spiro. July 26, 2021 . The Times of Israel.
  2. Web site: It is 12 years since Munich, and still the.... July 23, 1984. UPI. Martin Lader.
  3. Web site: Shem-Tov Sabag Bio, Stats, and Results. https://web.archive.org/web/20200418085017/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/sa/shem-tov-sabag-1.html. dead. 2020-04-18. sports-reference.com.
  4. Web site: Shemtov Sabag - Olympic Athletics - Israel. 15 June 2016. Olympic.org.
  5. Dotan Malach (December 29, 2022). "I believe that at my level today I deserve a medal in any competition, including the Olympics," Makor Rishon.
  6. Web site: Sabag, Shem-Tov. Jews in Sports.
  7. Web site: Specialty camps offer variety of programs . 5. The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle. May 6, 1983.
  8. Web site: Tokyo 2020 thoughts with Ran Sagiv. Oceania Triathlon. July 17, 2021. Zapier Bot.
  9. Web site: TRI זה הכי אחי: שחר ורן שגיב - אלופי ישראל בטריאתלון אילת 2016! . כותבים. אורחים. December 2, 2016. Bikepanel.
  10. Web site: Israeli Olympic triathlete has family and country riding on his shoulders. Debra Nussbaum Cohen. 24 May 2021. The Forward.
  11. Web site: Shachar Sagiv becomes first Israeli athlete to compete in Saudi Arabia. 30 October 2022 . The Times of Israel.
  12. Web site: ריאיון בלעדי | 'יצאנו לריצה ושם אבא אמר לי שמספיק. שאנחנו צריכים להיפרד'. סתיו. איפרגן. June 9, 2024. Ynet.
  13. Web site: Complete, Up-to-Date Triathlon Start Lists for the Paris 2024 Olympics. Tim. Heming. 7 June 2024. Triathlete.
  14. Web site: Running . April 30, 1984. The Chicago Tribune.
  15. https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5e790a23f3b4fb4a1e9f78c4/t/6047ce2b01565a46f91314de/1615318575261/OTC+02+February+1985.pdf "The Team"
  16. Web site: ד"ר שמי שגיב - כירופרקט | המרכז לכירופרקטיקה NSA ישראל. chiro-nsa.co.il.
  17. https://oregonnews.uoregon.edu/lccn/2004260239/1987-11-02/ed-1/seq-5/ "Streetwise,"
  18. Web site: Track & Field. University of Oregon Athletics.
  19. Web site: UO Olympians. University of Oregon Athletics.
  20. Web site: Oregon Men's Cross Country History. Oregon Cross Country. 2007.
  21. https://s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/sidearm.nextgen.sites/augustana.sidearmsports.com/documents/2022/8/16/2021mccRecordBook.pdf "Year-by-year records,"
  22. Web site: Men's Individual Champions . Mike Krizman. October 23, 2009. 2009 CCIW Cross Country Championship Program.
  23. Web site: Cross Country Looks Ahead. Augustana Observer. September 14, 1983. 8.
  24. Web site: Track Results NCAA Division III Track and Field Championships At Northfield, Minn., May 25. May 25, 1984. UPI.
  25. https://nparku_ftp.sidearmsports.com/custompages/TrackField/2021/2021%20CCIW%20Men%27s%20Track%20&%20Field%20Championships%20-%20Final%20Results.pdf "Men 5000 Meter Run,"
  26. https://augustana.net/documents/athletics/Media%20Guides/2009-10/Men%27sCrossCountry.pdf "Statistics,"
  27. https://static.cciw.org/custompages/CCIW_Links/Outdoor_TrackField/History/OTF_Records.pdf "Statistics,"
  28. Web site: Records: CCIW Championships . Athletic Live.
  29. Dave Andrzejewski (October 9, 1984). "Harriers pace to top twenty finish at Notre Dame," The Lanthom, p. 10.
  30. https://static.cciw.org/custompages/CCIW_Links/CrossCountry/History/CC_Records.pdf "CCIW Men’s Cross Country History,"
  31. Web site: כתבות על ד"ר שגיב. January 27, 2016. chiropract.co.il.
  32. Web site: Shem-Tov SABAG | Profile. World Athletics.
  33. Web site: Israeli Championships. GBR Athletics.
  34. Web site: National Marathon Champions for Israel. Association of Road Racing Statisticians.
  35. https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5e790a23f3b4fb4a1e9f78c4/t/6047d358933fae7a12e43746/1615319897436/OTC+07+Fall+1986.pdf "Oregon Update,"
  36. Web site: Runner: Shem-Tov Sabag. Association of Road Racing Statisticians.
  37. Web site: Elsewhere. Olympian Shemi Sabag of Israel won …. September 8, 1986. Orlando Sentinel.
  38. Web site: From Journal-News wires . 33. September 8, 1986. The Journal News from White Plains, New York.
  39. Web site: Tiberias International Marathon. Association of Road Racing Statisticians.
  40. https://www.mastershistory.org/NMN/11_1988.pdf "Final Running of NlKE/OTC 25K,"
  41. Web site: 1989 Vancouver Marathon. RUNVAN.