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Champion Northwest Runner Dropped From Team USA

https://www.flickr.com/photos/tabor-roeder/4741653063/in/photolist-dn1Jfk-dn1GNi-dn1H4c-dn1GcR-dn1Jan-8e1dg2-dn1KQn-542FH2
Phil Roeder
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Flickr
File photo of Nick Symmonds winning the men's 800m national title at the 2010 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.

Two-time Olympian Nick Symmonds has been dropped from the U.S. team for the upcoming world track and field championships in Beijing. U.S. team managers announced their roster Monday.

The Northwest native is being left behind over a contract and sponsorship dispute.

Symmonds qualified for the 2015 World Championships by winning the 800 meter national title in Eugene in late June. He would've been the defending silver medalist at Worlds later this month. But Symmonds refused to sign what he called a "poorly worded" team contract with USA Track & Field.

It requires athletes to wear Nike apparel while representing the U.S. in Beijing. A rival sports company, Seattle-based Brooks, is Symmonds’ primary sponsor. He worries individual sponsorships will lose value if athletes can't rep other brands off the track during big events.

In a statement, USATF said it "respects Nick's decision not to represent the United States," but cannot unilaterally change or waive conditions in the athletes’ contract.

Last year, Beaverton, Oregon-based Nike inked a multi-million dollar long-term deal to sponsor the U.S. national team in track and field and USATF through 2040.

The 130 U.S. athletes travelling to Beijing for the IAAF World Championships all signed the USATF terms and conditions. That includes Symmonds' teammate on the Brooks Beasts club, Cas Loxsom of Seattle.

Brooks Running Company CEO Jim Weber complimented Symmonds' "spirit, grit and quest" in a tweet over the weekend.

On Sunday, the 31-year-old Symmonds said he was deeply disappointed to miss the World Championships, which would have been the culmination of two years' worth of training. But he explained on Twitter that he was "proud to have stood my ground and fought another battle for athletes' rights."

The 2008 and 2012 Olympian has been outspoken for years about athlete compensation and restrictive sponsorship rules. Symmonds was raised in Boise, graduated from Willamette University and trained for most of the last decade with the Nike-sponsored Oregon Track Club Elite in Eugene. Last year the middle distance runner moved to Seattle after changing his primary sponsor to Brooks.

Alternate 800 meter qualifier Clayton Murphy of New Paris, Ohio will get the Team USA slot vacated by Symmonds. The 2015 IAAF World Championships take place August 22-30.

Now semi-retired, Tom Banse covered national news, business, science, public policy, Olympic sports and human interest stories from across the Northwest. He reported from well known and out–of–the–way places in the region where important, amusing, touching, or outrageous events unfolded. Tom's stories can be found online and were heard on-air during "Morning Edition" and "All Things Considered" on NPR stations in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho.