

Heat 10 of the boys mile



impairment to his left leg, Tracht wears a prosthetic from his knee down to help him run, which falls under the T44 impairment classification . But that hasn't held him back in the slightest. Chris Tracht is just a freshman at Southlake Carroll High School, but he's already chasing world records. Born with a partial





Southlake Carroll head coach Justin Leonard said Tracht, who oftentimes competes in races at the varsity level, runs every workout in full with the team and has never wanted to be treated any differently.

This past weekend at the Texas A&M Indoor High School Classic, Tracht was just off the 1500m T44 world-record pace on his way to completing the full mile. His time of 4:57.19 converts to a 4:35.26 for 1500m and 4:55.47 for 1600m. The current world record is held by another Texan, James Roland Ortiz, who is the head coach at Giddings High School. Ortiz set the record time of 4:33.46 in Lawrence, Kansas, on April 19, 2013, while coaching at Colby Community College in Colby, Kansas . Ortiz, who had his right leg amputated in 2006 after a bicycle crash, is also the American record holder at 4:29.04.





Ortiz says he would love to see Tracht get his world and American record, whom Ortiz first saw compete in the 400 and 800m events in the U14 division at the Endeavor Games in Oklahoma back in 2012 .





"He's a stud," Ortiz said.





According to Ortiz, it might be tough for Tracht to get the official world record, but this isn't due to the level of talent he brings to the sport.



"Everything is a fight to get the [International Paralympic Committee] to recognize amputee distance runners due to 'lack of data,'" Ortiz said.











Soooo yeah. I just ran 4 seconds faster than my T44 1500 world record.@USParalympics pic.twitter.com/f808pUCNot -- James Ortiz (@jamesrortiz) April 11, 2015





Ortiz has been fighting for years to get P aralympic distance runners more recognition . Many times competitions will hold events for sprinters but not for distance runners. For Ortiz, the Kansas Relays was a sanctioned event, because it offered 100m and 200m distances for impaired athletes. However, he had to compete in an able-bodied 1500m race to hit the record. His U.S. record is a lower time, because there are not as many stipulations on achieving the American record than the world record.





After a long battle to get more recognition for the sport, Ortiz has gotten away from competing and runs more for the enjoyment of the sport. But he hopes for Tracht's sake that something changes.





"We just have to h ope and pray that the IPC gets it together and recognizes there are Paralympic distance runners," Ortiz said.





Ortiz said h e's already reached out to the USOC about Tracht's time being included as a record in the indoor mile, but the organization said that indoor records for any distance are still in the works. Ortiz said he might even jump in some races and help push Tracht to the record if he can.





According to Leonard, Tracht is hoping to make a run at the world and American record, official or not, sometime later this season. The big goal would be to hit it at the Texas Distance Festival in March in front of the home crowd, but if not there, then possibly at a pre-district meet.







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