One year ago, only three athletes ended 2005 boasting a
win streak of 10 or more competitions. When 2006 begins,
five athletes will resume competition riding streaks of 13 or
more, topped by Saif Saaeed Shaheen,s 24 in the 3000m
Steeplechase and Virgilijus Alekna,s 22 in the Discus
Throw.
24 straight for Shaheen, 22 for Alekna
With four wins in as many races in his specialty this
season, Shaheen, the World record holder, extended his
unbeaten streak in the water and barrier race to 24, currently
the longest win streak in the sport. The 24-year-old
Kenyan-born Qatari hasn,t lost in the event he has
dominated in recent years since the African Championships
on 8 August 2002. With the Asian Games coming up in
December, there is little reason to doubt that Shaheen will
raise his tally even higher before the New Year bells toll.
The 34-year-old Alekna has been no less dominant,
particularly this year. The Lithuanian,s streak of 22 wins
dates back to his runner-up finish in Tallinn on 16 August
2005. This year, the two-time World and two-time Olympic
champion won each of his 16 competitions, including his
first European title.
While notching 20 straight wins or more seems to be
becoming increasingly more difficult, a trio of athletes could
threaten that mark in 2006.
Olympic hammer throw champion Koji Murofushi of Japan
returned from injury this season with a bang, winning each
of his eight meets, adding to a nine meet streak he began at
the tail end of 2003 which now rests at 17.
Kluft unbeaten in five years
But considering the limited number of Combined Event
competitions at which it is either physically or realistically
possible to compete in each year, the record of World and
Olympic champion Carolina Kluft is perhaps most
impressive among the currently undefeated. The Swede
extended her win streak in the Heptathlon to 16 this year
after yet another perfect three-for-three season - Gotzis, the
European Cup, and the European Championships. Her
streak began on 22 July 2001 when she captured the
European Junior title.
Sanya Richards, one of three athletes who produced a
perfect six-for-six record in Golden League races, was
undefeated the entire outdoor season over the full lap,
extending her current win streak outdoors in the 400 to 16.
Among her 13 wins this year were the year,s five fastest
performances, capped by a spectacular 48.70 U.S. record at
the World Cup.
Five approaching double figures
Three athletes will begin 2006 seeking their tenth straight
victory in a single event. Jamaican Sherone Simpson, this
year,s world leader at both the 100 and 200 (10.82/22.00),
has won her last nine races in the shorter dash, oftentimes
in convincing fashion. Michelle Perry of the U.S., the reigning
World champion in the 100m Hurdles has also won each of
her last nine appearances, while Tatyana Lebedeva hasn,t
lost a Triple Jump competition since her runner-up finish at
the Russian indoor championships, ending the season with
nine straight as well.
Suffering just one loss since finishing second at the World
Indoor Championships, Panamanian Irving Saladino,s
season-capping victory at the World Cup was his eighth in a
row. While Meseret Defar spent much of 2006 chasing ^ and
sometimes beating - her fellow-Ethiopian rival Tirunesh
Dibaba over 5000m, she has extended her unbeaten streak
in the 3000 to eight after five victories over the shorter
distance this season indoors and out, including World
indoor gold in Moscow in March and a national record and
world-leading 8:24.66 in Stockholm in July.
Single-season perfection in 2006, almost
In the 100 meters, Asafa Powell was without peer in 2006.
The 23-year-old Jamaican won each of his 16 finals in the
100, while twice equalling the 9.77 World record he first set
in Athens in June 2005. His streak ended however in most
undramatic fashion after a false start disqualification last
month in Yokohama.
In 2005, World and Olympic 400m champion Jeremy
Wariner ended his season with a slight injury at the World
Athletics Final, finishing a distant eighth. This year his
season ended with a DNF in Shanghai late last month, but
in between, he had little company at the finish line in 11
straight races.
End of the line in 2006
Topping the list of those whose streaks were brought to a
halt in 2006 was Sweden,s World High Jump champion
Kajsa Bergqvist. After an injury ended her 2004 Olympic
season after just one outdoor contest, Bergqvist bounced
back with a vengeance in 2005, winning each of her 13
competitions, including the elusive World outdoor gold
medal. She increased it to 18 this year, including a 2.08
World Indoor record, before a fourth place finish at the
Prefontaine Classic in May ended her victory momentum.
In addition to Bergqvist, another quartet of 2005 World
champions also reached the end of winning line this year.
World Shot Put champion Nadezhda Ostapchuk began the
year with 14 consecutive wins, and added a pair to her tally
before finishing out of the medals at the World Indoor
Championships last March. Osleidis Menendez of Cuba, the
World and Olympic champion in the Javelin Throw, began
the year with a six meet win streak, and added ten more
before a third place finish in Athens in July ended her streak
at 16. American Bershawn Jackson, the World 400m
Hurdles champion, racked up 13 straight wins before his
runner-up finish at the U.S. championships in June. World
Hammer Throw champion Ivan Tikhon of Belarus began his
season with a nine competition win streak, but it ended with
his first competition of the year.
NOTE: The win streak calculations are based on finals
only.
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