Paige Kouba

Paige Kouba (born January 8, 1994) is an American cross country and track athlete from Eugene, Oregon. Paige earned a 2016 NACAC U23 silver medal. As a long distance runner she has been most successful in the steeplechase, earning National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) All-American honors in that event in 2016 after finishing 7th at Outdoor Nationals. She was a 2016 Olympic Trials qualifier, the 2016 Ivy League champion in the steeplechase, and was also a member of Harvard's winning DMR at the 2016 Ivy League indoor championships.

Paige Kouba
Personal information
Nationality American
Born (1994-01-08) January 8, 1994
Eugene, Oregon
ResidenceDavis, California
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Sport
SportAthletics
Event(s)3000 metres steeplechase
College teamHarvard Crimson
ClubSaucony
Turned pro2016
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)3000 m SC: 9:50.21

High School

As a freshman, Paige Kouba won the 2008 Northwest regional meet in the Nike Cross Nationals series, and was a four time state cross country finalist. As a senior, Kouba won 2012 Outdoor track and field Oregon School Activities Association 6A title in 800 meters.[1]

NCAA

Competing in the Ivy League (2012–16), Kouba ran cross country and track and field and was captain of the 2015-16 Harvard University team that won in the 2016 Ivy League outdoor championships at Princeton University. Kouba placed 7th in steeplechase at 2016 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships.[2]

Professional

Paige Kouba signed with Saucony in July 2016 and debuted at the 2016 United States Olympic Trials (track and field).[3][4] Kouba represented the USA in steeplechase by earning a silver medal in a time of 10:38.84 at 2016 NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics in El Salvador contributing to USA's 62 medals at this competition.[5]

gollark: _ponders GPU-based BF execution_
gollark: Idea: not using ***C***.
gollark: People use **Windows**.
gollark: It would just need a bootloader and stuff and probably involve horrible madness like directly rewriting the BF code.
gollark: I'm sure you can do it by executing programs within BF.

References


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