EUGENE, Ore. — Mason Ferlic may someday boldly go where no steeplechaser has gone before — space.
The 30-year-old with a master's in aerospace engineering from Michigan has aspirations to become an astronaut.
For now, that plan remains a galaxy away.
Ferlic's focus was on the track Friday night at the U.S. Olympic Trials, but a tweaked hamstring kept him out of his first-round heat in the steeplechase and making his second straight Summer Games.
Tumbles, plunges and injuries happen, especially in the 3,000-meter race that includes 28 unforgiving jumps over four fixed barriers and seven leaps over a water pit.
Each time he's fallen, though, he's picked himself up and only gotten better. That's why he's already setting his sights on the world championships next season.
''I've had some pretty iconic falls,'' said Ferlic, who put off applying for NASA this spring and put on hold his doctoral work in statistics at Michigan so he could focus on training. ''But (falling) is very character-building, to have those moments where it's humbling. It makes you light the fire.''
For the longest time, Ferlic had a newspaper photo pinned to the bulletin board in his room. It was a picture from the 2015 NCAA championships, when Ferlic mistimed his leap over the water jump and splashed head-first into the pool.