The Olympic Games return to their ancient roots in 2004,
when the world's best athletes converge on Athens, Greece,
for the Summer Olympics. Closer to home, history is
repeating itself a bit more quickly.
The U.S. Olympic Track & Field Trials returned to Northern
California in 2000 after a 32-year absence. The 2000
Olympic Trials featured eight days of sellout crowds; one
world plus three American records; and a daily streem of
standout performances from the likes of Marion Jones, Allen
Johnson, Gail Devers, Michael Johnson, Tom Pappas and
Maurice Greene.
Unlike Athens, which played host to the first modern
Olympics in 1896, Sacramento isn't waiting 108 years for a
return engagement. The 2004 U.S. Olympic Track & Field
Trials return to Hornet Stadium on July 9-18, making
Sacramento the first city host successive Trials in a
quarter-century.
With 10,000 eight-day ticket packages already sold, the bar
is set high for the local organizing committee. Similarly, the
stakes couldn't be any higher for the U.S. athletes trying to
qualify for Athens.
It's a good bet that both sides will deliver, according to Sue
Humphrey, coach of the 2005 U.S. Olympic women's track
and field team.
"Sacramento did an excellent job last time, and I don't
expect it to be any different this time," Humphrey said.
Four years ago in Sydney, Australia, the U.S. men and
women combined to win 20 medals in track and field,
including 10 gold medals. That figure nearly doubled the
medal total of the second-best country in Sydney - Russia,
with 12.
With the exception of Michael Johnson, who retired in 2001,
the headliners at the 2000 Olympic Trials should be strong
contenders again in Sacramento. Devers and Allen
Johnson were ranked No. 1 in the world in the sprint
hurdles in 2003. Johnson won his fourth world outdoor title
in the 110-meter highs in Paris, France.
Devers, a two-time winner of the 100-meter dash at the
Olympics, set a still-standing American record of 12.33
seconds in winning the 100 hurdles at the 2000 Trials in
Sacramento. This time, Devers will be attempting to qualify
for her fifth Olympic team. Long jumper Willye White
(1956-72) is the only other U.S. woman to compete in five
Olympics in track and field.
Jones won five medals in Sydney, including golds in the
100, 200 and 4x400 relay. She took the 2003 season off to
have a baby but looked strong in her return to competition
earlier this month at the Millrose Games in New York. Jones
has indicated that she plans to compete in three events at
the Trials - the 100, 200 and long jump.
Dragila finished fourth at the 2003 World Championships -
her first loss in either an Olympics or world outdoor meet -
but opened 2004 with a series of 15-foot-plus vaults.
The United States will rely heavily on its veterans in Athens.
But what most excites Humphrey and George Williams, the
men's Olympic coach, is the influx of young talent. Justin
Gatlin (100, 200 meters), Sanya Richards (400), Allyson
Felix (200) and Christian Cantwell (shot put) are among the
new wave of U.S. stars.
"We're going to have a great mixture of veterans and
youngsters," Williams said. "We'll bring home a truckoad of
medals from Athens. This is the U.S.A. - the greatest team
in the world."
Other countries choose their Olympic track teams by
committee, or by factoring in years of meritorious service. In
the United States, it's trial by fire. No other major track power
takes such a rigid approach to selecting its Olympic team,
but the formula is a winner, and it makes the U.S. Olympic
Trials one of the most exciting specator events in the world.
In most events, the top three finishers in Sacramento will
automatically qualify for the Olympics. To place three
individuals in an Olympic event, each of the nation's three
athletes must meet the Olympic "A" qualifying standard. In
2000, the U.S. had three "A" qualifiers in 26 of the 33 men's
and women's events.
Fifty-five world records have been set in the U.S. Olympic
Trials over the years. The list of Trials record-setters reads
like a who's who of the sport - Ralph Boston, Bobby Morrow,
Florence Griffith Joyner, Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Bob
Seagren, Michael Johnson and Glenn Davis.
The most recent world record came on the final day of the
2000 Olympic Trials, when Dragila, a graduate of Placer
High School in nearby Auburn, thrilled the hometown crowd
with a vault of 15-2 1/4. The 2000 Trials attracted more than
187,000 fans over eight days of competition, shattering the
previous record by more than 35,000.
For tickets to the 2004 U.S. Olympic Trials, call (916)
566-6560, or visit the event's Web site, www.sacsports.com .