To the average runner, the acronym USATF—short for USA Track & Field— doesn’t mean much. The organization was chartered in 1979 (under the name The Athletics Congress) by the United States Olympic Committee (USOC) to govern the whole of American “Athletics,” meaning track and field, longdistance running, cross-country, road races, and race walking—and within those disciplines, participants ranging from Olympic athletes to kids. Today, its stated mission is to “[drive] competitive excellence and popular engagement in our sport.”
Structurally, USATF is something of a representative democracy. At the top is a 15-member volunteer board of directors, a volunteer president, and a boardappointed CEO who leads a small, paid national staff in Indianapolis. The base of the pyramid, USATF’s constituency, is a legion of more than 126,000 registered members, nearly two-thirds…
