It’s June 28, 2023.
Darren Gauson just found out he got the job – he would be the next Head Coach of a New Mexico Cross Country / Track & Field program that had evolved into a distance powerhouse over the past two decades, winning two women’s cross championships in 2015 and 2017 in the process.
The No. 1 order of business? Making sure Habtom Samuel was still going to be there.
“It was a complete shot in the dark whether we’d have him or not,” said Gauson, who took the job at UNM after an eight-year stint at Bradley. “We honestly had no idea until we called him and he said that he was already enrolled.”
The Eritrean-born distance star had been recruited by Joe Franklin before his departure for Louisville but never considered going anywhere else after he left. His visa papers limited his ability to change his choice of school on such a short timeline anyways.
“And now, he might be the greatest of all time,” Franklin jocularly sighs in a parking lot in Eugene at 2024 Outdoor Championships after catching up with the UNM staff.
A generous parting gift, to be sure.
By the time his father began encouraging him to use his running talent to seek an education, Habtom had already heard of Weini Kelati, a fellow Eritrean national who claimed asylum in the United States in July 2014 before dominating state and national level competitions while attending Heritage High School in Leesburg, Virginia.
Perhaps by association, the mold of a champion and the mold of a Lobo had become one and the same to him. Little did he know that the legacy he would build in Albuquerque would need no comparisons or priors to be appreciated, even 12 months later.
It’s September 22, 2023. The Lobo men’s cross country squad is about to make its debut in earnest against nationally-ranked competition at the Roy Griak Invitational in Minneapolis. They haven’t received a single vote in the two USTFCCCA Coaches’ Polls that have been released and were picked to finish sixth in the Mountain West Preseason poll.
But Gauson knew he had something better than that. Behind Samuel were two Kenyan freshmen – Evans Kiplagat and Lukas Kiprop – who could compete near the front of the pack in nearly any field and two solid point-scorers in All-MW returner Jonathan Carmin and Florida State transfer Samuel Field that could keep them competitive in the team score.
Habtom did not disappoint, putting down the fastest winning time at Griak since 2011 – when Lawi Lalang of Arizona finished in 23:15.5 – and the second-fastest in the event’s 37-year history in beating the second-place finisher by 24 seconds to become UNM’s first-ever Griak champ. He stayed with the pack in position for the top spot the entire race, holding on to the No. 1 spot for the final 3 kilometers with Kiplagat and Kiprop just behind him.
“That’s when I knew we had something here,” Gauson said. “I mean, we definitely knew we had something before, but sometimes you have to see it to believe it.
The natural gifts are evident, even if they’re not the sum of what has gotten him here. Habtom makes running look far easier than it is – a soccer player in childhood, he was encouraged to take up running by coaches that watched him zip across all corners of the field endlessly without fatiguing. He’s well-suited to the newest generation of cushy super shoes with a bouncy yet low-impact stride, absorbing the stresses and forces on the body that distance running demands without impacting his gait. Even his late-race kicks are succinct and efficient, expending his remaining stores of energy methodically — there is nothing he doesn’t take into account.
“Even if I had to start from square one and build someone’s running form, I couldn’t make anything more perfect than his,” said his athletic trainer, Elliott Crynes. “He’s the most efficient, smooth runner I’ve seen.
“Foot strike’s perfect, arm movement’s perfect – all in all, he is just a well-rounded, efficient running machine.”
“It’s unreal,” said teammate Osaze Demund as he watched Samuel lap the field at the 5,000m at 2024 MW Indoor Championships. “He runs like he’s got moon boots on.”
It’s March 16, 2024. Samuel just crossed the finish line in a stunning 26:53.84 at Sound Running’s THE TEN – a non-NCAA meet designed to produce Olympic qualifying times with primarily professionals – for the new No. 2 time in NCAA history, blowing past the previous UNM record by more than a minute and punching his ticket to Paris for this summer’s Olympics. He was one of just two collegians along with NAU’s Nico Young in a field of 30, finishing fifth among them.
For perspective, the fastest men’s 10,000m time in the nation in each of the previous five seasons:
- 2023: 27:57.47, Charlie Hicks, Stanford
- 2022: 27:38.54, Adriaan Wildschutt, Florida State
- 2021: 27:41.16, Conner Mantz, BYU
- 2019: 28:11.30, Connor McMillan, BYU
- 2018: 28:04.44, Tyler Day, Northern Arizona
A true freshman had just made a decade of elite collegiate distance times – all recorded under the most optimal conditions – look like brisk jogs.
It’s the final day of competition at the NCAA West Region Preliminaries in Fayetteville, Ark., well into a late-night 10,000m race in which only the Top 12 finishers advance to the NCAA Final in Eugene. Samuel is hanging the front of the pack with 12 laps to go after a tightly-paced strategic race in which mere fractions of a second decide who moves on after he and teammate Vincent Chirchir had both made a push to lead the race together.
But over the next three laps, the 17-year-old Chirchir had dropped to eighth as the pace started to take its toll on the young runner who had only joined the Lobos at the semester. After another 400 meters, he fell out of qualifying position in 15th, and stayed there over the next four laps. Habtom noticed after looking over his shoulder for him – typically considered taboo by distance coaches – before intentionally dropping back to run with him, putting himself out of the top 12 briefly in doing so.
Simply by running with him and pushing him to stay in the race, Habtom managed to get “Vinny” back up to qualifying position as he surged back into the race, leaving him to his own devices as the race turned to its final stretch with two laps left. Chirchir couldn’t fully hold on the rest of the way, but he wouldn’t have come nearly as close without Samuel helping him.
Closing with a 58-second final lap, Habtom took over late and won the race even after exerting himself more than he anticipated.
Just like in Madison, the combination of Samuel’s gifts and his sheer willpower permitted him to do a rare thing – taking an individual risk solely because his conviction as a teammate wouldn’t allow him to do otherwise. He had thrown his race strategy out the window for the sake of elevating a teammate to a life-changing accomplishment and still won the damn thing anyways.
In a similar vein, the duality of the rivalry and friendship between Graham Blanks and Habtom Samuel felt somewhat poetic – two forces that rise above the rest as the race transitions from a show of aerobic talent into a measure of sheer willpower.
In 2023, Samuel was the only one who could hang with Blanks until the very end on that hilly Virginia course. In 2024, Blanks was the only one who could resist Samuel’s sheer will to win.
Two runners dominating the rest of the field in the same way twice in a row is uncommon – the same two runners hadn’t gone 1-2 in consecutive years since 1959-1960, and it’s only happened three times in the history of NCAA cross country.
And on that damp day in Verona, Graham won the all-important race. But Habtom won everyone’s respect.
Blanks – an American from Georgia who was able to leverage running to attend an Ivy League school in Boston – and Samuel – an Eritrean who fled to the U.S. to pursue an education and change his life – are two sides of the same coin.
Reject the superficial comparisons about the quality of life in the United States compared to Eritrea. It wasn’t pure talent or privilege, but grit and unrelentingness that got them to where they both are now; an ability to channel those motivations into a champion’s utmost desperation to win.
After the race, Blanks, compelled by the way things shook out, had a proposal for Habtom: a jersey swap. A soccer player at heart, Habtom enthusiastically agreed, donning Harvard’s black top while Blanks put on the turquoise New Mexico singlet in what was – by all understanding – the first post-race jersey swap at an NCAA D-I Cross Country Championships.
But even that feels fitting, given the exceptional circumstances of their rivalry. Two opposite sides of the world, two disparate athletic makeups – but the same heart of a champion. For all the varied discussion of pre-race contenders, it was always going to be between those two.
When UNM Head Coach Darren Gauson shared the photo of the two to Instagram, he captioned it “Ronaldo and Messi,” playing upon he and Samuel’s shared love of soccer.
Two once-in-a-generation stars that merely happened to exist in the same era. Two sides of the same coin that needed each other’s looming presence to push them to reach those heights in the first place.
“Two of the greats,” Gauson laughed.
Two G.O.A.T.’s, as the younger generation would be inclined.
The other thing that’s gotten Habtom to this junction in his career is that he has always understood that running will be his livelihood.
Habtom’s persona is a dichotomy of groundedness and supreme confidence – the kind one doesn’t have to speak into existence. When he speaks with conviction about his chances ahead of a race, it’s not speculative or hopeful: everything he believes about what he is capable of achieving is based on something tangible that he has proven to himself already.
He speaks with a soft voice but indicates his conviction when he means what he says — there is no mistaking otherwise.
After earning 2024 MW Indoor Performer of the Meet honors after sweeping the 3,000m and 5,000m races in not-particularly-close fashion at the Albuquerque Convention Center, Samuel was nowhere to be found to accept his award, even as the announcer repeated his name. He was busy running a cool-down outside, oblivious to the fact he was even up for an award beyond his individual event wins.
“Good,” he said with a smile when told he won the award after returning, not surprised but not affected by the revelation either; “Good.”
When asked about the upcoming outdoor season, he was similarly plain, but not out of disinterest in what’s next – It was just that simple.
“I’m really good outdoors – better than indoors – so I’m very excited for the outdoor season,” he said with a laugh. “Some of the guys (were) faster than me this season.
“But I’ll beat them, definitely all of them in the outdoor season.”
Few track athletes make promises like that, especially distance athletes who can fall victim to a strategic race that doesn’t match their strengths or suffer from late-season fatigue that limits their chances to go toe-to-toe with competitors who benefited from an indoor season or cross country season off. Samuel bore a heavy load for the Lobos from the get-go, and he hadn’t even ran at indoor nationals yet – there was nothing that guaranteed he could keep this going all year long in his first year of collegiate training, nonetheless against the nation’s best at outdoor nationals.
But with Habtom, those are just niceties; idle thoughts that merit as much attention as is granted them. He truly hates to lose.
As he remembers telling assistant coach Brian Maty ahead of that fateful 2024 outdoor championship race, that same conviction wells in his voice.
“This time, no one can take it from me – this is mine. I’m going to be a champion.”
“10K? I’m gonna die tomorrow – but no one can beat me.”
Even after his dramatic fall, Habtom did precisely that. He beat them all.
It’s now June of 2025, with Habtom preparing to return once again to Eugene to contest the 5,000m and 10,000m and conclude a sophomore year that has seen him rise to new heights – along with a similarly uber-talented freshman in Kenyan national Ishmael Kipkurui. But this time around, the taste of defeat is more recent, more acidic.
Habtom finished second in the 5,000m by mere fractions of a second to Oklahoma State Bryan Musau as the sophomore outkicked him down the final stretch after hanging on his tail the whole way. He missed out on first team All-American status for the first time in the 3,000m two days later, the physical burdens of the 3K/5K double wearing on as the race heated up and he crossed ninth. He finished second to Kipkurui at the 2025 iteration of THE TEN, even as both finished below the previous collegiate record.
But this time around, he’s learned to compartmentalize his races – he knows the degrees of separation between the best of the best in this final race will be miniscule, and it demands all of his focus and prioritization.
Maybe the stars will align again, and it will once more be the perfect time to be a champion. Maybe the saga of Habtom Samuel deserves more winds and turns to humanize his defeats and accentuate his eventual triumph, as they did exactly 12 months ago.
We’ll find out soon enough, knowing that whatever the outcome, every ounce of every struggle that has forged Habtom Samuel Keleta’s soul will have been poured into it.
Will Samuel be remembered as the man who almost won with one shoe, or will some future feat eclipse the present and it will become just an early chapter in a story that’s far more narratively dense?
There are plenty of Olympic gold medalists whose names escape our collective recall as the years fade, but most know the story of Jim Thorpe winning a gold medal with shoes found in a trash can. There’s something in the novelty of battling through adversity that no one else has to reckon with and still achieving the result through will alone.
Social media flooded with comments on Habtom’s performance that day in November, from new fans marveling at the singular feat to those who couldn’t believe he’d nearly done it again.
But one comment felt especially poignant — a direct address for the man who has spent his life gritting his way through far worse than a missing shoe and became a hero for finishing second.