ATHENS - Justin Gatlin was crowned king of the Olympic
sprinters Sunday in the fastest men's 100m final in Olympic history as
Team USA had a brilliant performance at Olympic Stadium. Adding to
the medal haul that was topped by the 22-year-old Gatlin's gold were
bronze medals for Maurice Greene in the 100 meters and Deena Kastor
in the women's marathon, and a silver medal for Matt Hemingway in the
men's high jump.The men's 100 could not have been closer, more hyped, or more
surprising. As the field of eight stepped on the track, flash bulbs popped,
the crowd chattered excitedly, and music blared. Greene did his
traditional, pre-race stalking as Gatlin (Raleigh, N.C.) shouted to
Crawford while the duo walked down the straightaway. In the meantime,
Jamaican Asafa Powell - considered by many to be the favorite after
twice beating Greene this year and looking frighteningly easy in the
rounds - lay prone in front of his starting blocks.
When the gun went off, Gatlin surged immediately to the lead. He never
relinquished his advantage - although it was close - finishing in a
personal-best, world-leading time of 9.85 seconds. Francis Obikwelu of
Portugal held second position throughout the race and finished just .01
behind Gatlin in 9.86 seconds, while Greene won the second 100m
medal of his career at 9.87 seconds for bronze, using a strong final 50
meters to nearly win the race. The capacity crowd was equally
awestruck by the close finish as they were by Shawn Crawford (4th in
9.89) and Powell (5th in 9.94) being kept off the medal stand. It was the
first time in Olympic history that five men dipped under 10 seconds.
With his win, Gatlin ushered in the next wave of young male sprinters,
just as 20-year-old Lauryn Williams had done Saturday night in winning
the women's 100m silver. Several under-25 U.S. athletes are set to
compete in finals in coming days, offering that the trend should continue
to gain momentum.
Stirring performance by Kastor
A 15-minute cab ride away at Panathinaiko Stadium, Deena Kastor
(Mammoth Lakes, Calif.) started the evening on an emotional high note.
Sobbing with joy 100 meters from the finish line, she took the bronze
medal in the women's marathon in a race that was nothing short of
remarkable. It was the first medal of the night for Team USA and was just
the second women's marathon medal in Olympic history for an
American, following Joan Benoit-Samuelson's gold at the 1984 Olympic
Games. Fittingly, the second American medal at the distance went to the
woman who in 2003 eclipsed Samuelson's American record in the
event.
Kastor perfectly executed a marathon race plan that was tailored
specifically for the brutally hot, sunny conditions. Beginning
conservatively as the race began at 6 p.m. in Marathon, Kastor passed
through the first 5 km in 28th place, in 17:19. From there it was nowhere
but up. At 10 km, she was 17th (24:58); at 15 km she was 15th (53:27),
and at the half-marathon, she was 12th at 1:15:40 - on pace to run a
2:31:20 marathon.
But a 2:31:20 marathon was not in Kastor's game plan. As the sun went
down, her pace picked up. She was 11th at 25 km (1:29:33), 8th at 30
km (1:47:13) and 6th at 35 km (2:04:15) - and suddenly a medal was
possible.
Two hours, 23 minutes and 25 seconds into the race, she overtook
Elfenesh Alemu of Ethiopia to move into third. As impressive as her
bronze-medal finshed was that Kastor looked powerful, fast and fresh in
conditions that left world record holder Paula Radcliffe and 15 other
runners wilted by the heat and on the DNF list.
Kastor crossed the finish line in 2:27:20, exactly 40 seconds faster than
her target time of 2:28. Mizuki Noguchi of Japan won the gold in 2:26:20,
with Catherine Ndereba of Kenya second at 2:26:32. American Jen
Rhines (Ardmore, Pa.) was 34th in 2:43:52, and Colleen de Reuck
(Boulder, Colo.) was 39th in 2:46:30.
Hemingway comes close to gold
The men's high jump was just as dramatic. Matt Hemingway (Littleton,
Colo.), the 2000 USA indoor champion, found himself in first place
throughout the entire competition, jumping without misses. He
successfully cleared 2.20m/7-2.5 and 2.25m/7-4.5 on his first attempts,
then passed at 2.29m/7-6. His first try at 2.34m/7-7.25 also was
successful, keeping him up on the world's top jumper, Stefan Holm of
Sweden who had two misses at the height, as well as a miss at 2.32. At
2.36m/7-8, it was Holm who prevailed, clearing on his first attempt while
Hemingway missed three times.
Olympic Trials champion Jamie Nieto (Chula Vista, Calif.) came
extraordinarily close to the medal stand as well. He matched
Hemingway's best jump, as well as that of bronze medalist Jaraslav
Baba of the Czech Republic, at 2.34m/7-7.25. But Nieto had one miss at
the height while Hemingway and Baba were over on their first try. Had
Holm failed to clear 2.36, Hemingway would have had the gold and
Nieto the bronze.
In Sunday's other final with U.S. athletes, Kenta Bell (Chula Vista, Calif.)
was ninth in the men's triple jump with a best mark of 16.90m/55-5.5,
and Walter Davis (Baton Rouge, La.) was 11th at 16.78m/55-0.75.
Team USA will have three women in Tuesday's Olympic 400m final for
the first time since 1988, thanks to Sunday's semifinal performances by
Monique Hennagan (Stockbridge, Calif.), 21-year-old Dee Dee Trotter
(Knoxville, Tenn.) and 19-year-old Sanya Richards (Austin, Texas).
Olympic Trials champion Hennagan ran the fastest time of the three
semifinal races, winning heat 3 in 49.88 seconds. Trotter was second in
heat 2 to automatically qualify in 50.14 seconds, while Richards
qualified on time, placing third in heat 1 in 50.54.
In Sunday's other semifinal, Olympic Trials champion Sheena Johnson
(21, Los Angeles) and Trials runner-up Brenda Taylor (Chula Vista,
Calif.) placed third and fourth, respectively, in the first heat of the
women's 400m hurdles and will compete in Wednesday's final. Johnson
was clocked in 54.32 with Taylor at 55.02. LaShinda Demus (Columbia,
S.C.) was fifth in the second semifinal in 54.32 and did not advance.
Melissa Morrison (Columbia, S.C.) won her quarterfinal heat in the
women's 100m hurdles in 12.76 seconds, and Joanna Hayes did
likewise in her race, in 12.71, to advance to Monday's semifinal round.
Three-time world champion Gail Devers, nursing a tender left calf
entering the race, endured a severe strain of her calf warming up in
Olympic Stadium. She came out of the blocks in heat 5, but did not make
it to the first hurdle, sliding to the ground.
Grant Robison (Mountain View, Calif.) was 12th in his 1,500m semifinal
round in 3:47.03 and did not advance to the final.
In wheelchair races, American Scot Hollonbeck was fourth in the men's
1,500 meters (3:11.49) and Cheri Blauwet was fifth in the women's
800m (1:54.22).
Team USA Olympic medal count, track & field
As of August 22
Gold
Justin Gatlin (Raleigh, N.C.), M100m, 8/22
Silver
Matt Hemingway (Littleton, Colo.), MHJ, 8/22
Adam Nelson (Athens, Ga.), MSP, 8/18
Bronze
Deena Kastor (Mammoth Lakes, Calif.), WMarathon, 8/22
Maurice Greene (Granada Hill, Calif.), M100m, 8/22