American triple jumpers Melvin Lister (26, Fayetteville , Ark. ) and
Kenta Bell (27, Chula Vista, Calif.) are at Team USA training camp on
Crete to prepare for the Olympic Games. The Olympic Trials champion
and third-place finishers, respectively, Lister and Bell are two of the most
dangerous jumpers in the world. Lister improved his personal best by
roughly 2.5 feet to win the Olympic Trials in a meet record of 17.78m/58-
4, which is the farthest jump in the world this year. Bell, meanwhile, has
jumped over 57 feet in 10 consecutive competitions, making him the
most consistent triple jumper in the world. They, along with Olympic
Trials runner-up Walter Davis, will represent the United States at the
Olympic Games in Athens.The duo spoke with the press on Monday. Below are excerpts from the
conversation.
Melvin Lister
Q: What is your training schedule like?
A: Right now I'm trying to get used to the weather out here and training
in the morning, because my first round is going to be in the morning.
Q: How did you find the conditions?
A: Hot, but I'd rather be hot than cold. Hot and dry.
Q: How do you rate your chances?
A: I think my chances are great. Honestly I think I have the best shot of
anybody, because I have the best jump and I've done it in the last
month, not last year.
Q: Do you expect to match your jump from the Olympic Trials?
A: I expect to exceed it. On my best jump, I broke down going into the pit.
If I change a few things, it should work.
Q: What makes this competition different for you?
A: I came in 2000 to the Olympics in the long jump. It's 2004, I'm older,
and I want to come back with hardware this time. I'm more determined.
It's not a trick this time. It's for real.
Q: You have a full-time job?
A: I'm still working. I go to work in the morning, get off at 3:00 so I can
make it to 4:00 practice. It's something I'm used to doing. It's hard, but I
can't quit. Now that I have a sponsor, I'll start working fewer hours.
Q: Talk about the Olympic Trials and the U.S. triple jump team, which
also includes Walter Davis.
A: It was the best competition ever. I feel like we have a chance to go 1-
2-3. Honestly, I hope I get first place. That will give the American [triple
jump] team the respect back that we deserve. I don't think we're
respected like we should be, but we're on our way.
Kenta Bell
Q: You've been picked for the silver by USA Today. What do you think of
your chances?
A: I think I have a great shot to win. [Christian] Olsson [of Sweden] is the
defending world champion, so naturally you're going to pick that person
to win. But based on this year's results, and my consistency, I think I'm
the favorite. My first choice is definitely gold.
Q: What do you think separates you from your competition?
A: Considering my career, I think I want it a little more.
Q: What kind of professional career will you pursue?
A: Right now I consider myself in my career. Once I finish here, who
knows what might happen. I might go into reporting, commentating, or
even law.
Q: How long will you keep training?
A: Who knows, I could go until I'm 36, 38, or something could go wrong
tomorrow. I'm just trying to enjoy it all.
Q: How do you feel about competing in Athens?
A: I am enthusiastic, excited ... this is what I've been dreaming about. It's
kind of like explaining love. All these thoughts and feelings and
passions are going through you - there's no one true way to describe it.
Q: Talk about the quality of the Olympic Trials competition, where four
men went over 57 feet.
A: That competition motivated me in the sense I hadn't lost a meet in a
very, very long time. Losing that meet put a chip on my shoulder. It
forced me to go back and analyze what I did wrong. It definitely put a fire
under me. I don't like to lose. It also put some pride in me, because I lost
in the best competition ever. I just got out-jumped that day. That means
we have the strongest team in the world.
Q: What is your biggest strength?
A: I think my biggest strength is that I coach myself. You have to know
yourself and understand your event extremely well. Some days in
competition I have to step back as a coach and say, 'what am I doing
wrong?' I need to always go out there with a plan. I have every
competition scripted going in. Things may go wrong on one jump, but I
say, let's go to step 2, step 3.
Q: What did your win at the 2001 World University Games do for you as
a jumper?
A: Victories on that level show I can jump with the best in the world. I've
jumped far in the U.S., but that showed I could jump well overseas or on
a bigger venue. It said I've arrived. That's the biggest thing about it. It
showed me I was on the right path in training and could show up and
compete with the best in the world.