2008 was a landmark year in sprinting events. It was the year Usain Bolt produced his colossal breakthrough at Beijing Olympic Games, beating effortlessly the fastest men in the world and claiming the world record at the 100m final, in spite of slowing down once he had secured the victory, and also erasing from the record books the superhuman mark of 19.32 which Michael Johnson had achieved in Atlanta-96 at the 200m distance. Yet, significantly, those Olympic Games were not only the scenario of the prowess of an individual but also of the whole Jamaican team, which sensationally dominated all four pure sprinting events at stake, defeating in each occasion the USA, the traditional powerhouse of the specialty. Because of the unbelievable achievements of Lightning Bolt, the succesful defense of Veronica Campbell-Brown at the women’s 200m and even the historical swept of the whole 100m podium by Shelly-Ann Fraser, Kerron Stewart and Sherone Simpson were overshadowed. The Caribbean country went home with no less than 6 gold medals, a feat which marked the beginning of its athletic supremacy.
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Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake at the 2012 Olympic Games 200m final Harry How/ Getty Images Europe www.zimbio.com |
2008 was a landmark year in sprinting events. It was the year Usain Bolt produced his colossal breakthrough at Beijing Olympic Games, beating effortlessly the fastest men in the world and claiming the world record at the 100m final, in spite of slowing down once he had secured the victory, and also erasing from the record books the superhuman mark of 19.32 which Michael Johnson had achieved in Atlanta-96 at the 200m distance. Yet, significantly, those Olympic Games were not only the scenario of the prowess of an individual but also of the whole Jamaican team, which sensationally dominated all four pure sprinting events at stake, defeating in each occasion the USA, the traditional powerhouse of the specialty. Because of the unbelievable achievements of Lightning Bolt, the succesful defense of Veronica Campbell-Brown at the women’s 200m and even the historical swept of the whole 100m podium by Shelly-Ann Fraser, Kerron Stewart and Sherone Simpson were overshadowed. The Caribbean country went home with no less than 6 gold medals, a feat which marked the beginning of its athletic supremacy.
After
such groundbreaking demonstration, the question was if Jamaica would be able of
keeping its sprinting stardom all along the new Olympic cycle, or, on the
contrary, the rest of the world, specially the well-defeated North Americans,
would put the means to face Bolt and company and strike back. Four years later,
the answer is Jamaica continues dominating the most emblematic athletic event,
the 100m, and also remains at the top at the other sprint distance, the 200m.
Only the fabulous Allyson Felix, with her victory at the latter event, avoided
a new swept of the gold medals by their Caribbean neighbours at the 2012 London
Olympic Games. Bolt defended majestically both individual titles and also the one at
the 4x100m relay, and so did Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. If in Beijing we had seen
a clean swept of the female’s 100m podium, in London, Bolt, his dolphin Yohan
Blake and newcomer Warren Weir got all the medals at the male’s 200m
final.
Four
years ago, Jamaica dominated in quality, in medal number, while The United
States still had the consolation of its superior depth. However, by 2012,
Jamaica has considerably reduced this gap to the point they have almost matched
their archrivals, at least in the men’s side. Between 2005-2008, USA’s 23 male
representatives at the top-50 scored 696 points at the 100m, against the 347
points amassed by the 6 Jamaican athletes ranked. Now between 2009-2012, USA
just wins 597 to 526, with Jamaica doubling up the number of top-50 athletes
from 6 to ![]() |
Kerron Stewart, Shelly-Ann Fraser and Carmelita Jeter competing in Zurich in 2009 Jamie McDonald/ Getty Images Europe www.zimbio.com |
It is important to understand too that in Jamaica, as in Kenya or Ethiopia, track and field is the king of sports. Every kid dreams of escaping a tough life to become the new Usain Bolt. Besides, and unlike in Kenya or Ethiopia, because of more than 100 years of experience, there is a well established organisation of track and field. Let us say no public or private sector in the life of the country works better than athletics. There is not anywhere in the world an sportive event as Champs, which has been staged for over a century to make compete the high school boys and girls of all the country under an enthusiastic crowd of 30.000 spectators. Participating in Champs and getting used since young age to challenging competition and huge pressure is arguably the most important reason behind Jamaican athletic success. It is the same for those like Bolt or Blake who set records at Champs or those like Veronica Campbell and Shelly-Ann Fraser who struggled to make a name for themselves there. All of them learned a good lesson at Champs. Often the inability of Asafa Powell to face the pressure of a major championship is explained for his lack of experience at Champs: he belonged to a small school and only once got the opportunity to participate in the most renowned high school track and field event in the world. http://moti-athletics-200-w.blogspot.com.es/
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Before the arrival of Bolt the fastest man on Earth was Tyson Gay Photo AP http://hereandnow.wbur.org/2012/07/19/london-olympics-athletes |
With Usain Bolt
competing sparingly in the transitional year of 2010, US runners Tyson Gay and
Walter Dix dominated the season. Gay who had established a new national record
in the last stages of the 2009 campaign (9.69) beat handily Bolt in Brussels. Yet both Gay and Dix would be hinder again by their recurring injuries
in following seasons. Maybe
it was more significant the expected breakthrough of French sprinter
Christophe Lemaître, world junior gold medallist in 2008 and european junior champion
one year later, setting a new age continental record. Lemaître won gold at the
100m, 200m and at the 4x100m relay at the senior European Championships and
also snatched a victory at the Continental Cup over 100m. He received notorious
publicity after becoming the fastest white man ever, beating the 10.00 mark the
Polish Marian Woronin had set in 1984 and, more importantly, becoming the first in breaking the 10
seconds barrier. It was just the same year Chris Solinsky beat another “race”
record, running the 10.000m under 27 minutes, thought Lemaître has been much
more consistent than him afterwards. Interestingly, the Frenchman, in the same
way than Usain Bolt, has not a good start but is a really strong finisher, he
has a speed endurance which make him more a 200m specialist. Lemaître has since
easily dominated the European scene, at least after Netherland Antilles
athletes as Churandy Martina were forced to compete for the Netherlands.
Nevertheless, Christophe had to learn a lesson when he remained sitting
dejected after his defeat at the 2011 continental indoor championships final,
and Francis Obikwelu and Dwain Chambers, the old warriors who had upset the
young French star came to console him. Chambers is still going strong as proved
his big victory at the 2010 World Indoors at the 60m distance. Yet strangely,
he and Christian Malcolm has not found a valid relay in the British Team in the
last years. National fans hope the arrival of Adam Gemili, world junior
champion in the Olympic year, is going to end up with this crisis. Also watch up for the last sprinting sensation at Jamaican Champs: Delano
Williams from the overseas British territory Turk and Caicos.
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Dwain Chambers, Brian Mariano, Christophe Lemaître and Francis Obikwelu compete at the 2011 European indoors Stu Forster/ Getty Images Europe www.zimbio.com |
Chambers is an
example of longevity as it is Darvis Patton, who made the 2009 and 2011 US
national teams well in his thirty, but this is nothing to compare to Saint
Kitts and Nevis’ 2003 World champion Kim Collins, who got to win the bronze
medal at 35 at the hotly contested 100m World Championship in Daegu, and some
days later came through again to snatch another still more surprising bronze at
the 4x100m relay, along with Antoine Adams, BJ Lawrence and Jason Rogers. Sadly
this athlete was withdrawn for his athletic federation at London Olympic Games
for disciplinary reasons.
The greatest
surprise in Daegu was however Usain Bolt’s disqualification at the 100m final
for a false start. Was he too confident and lacked concentration? Perhaps. Anyway
it was big news and restarted the debate about this controversial rule. In a
final without Bolt and without the injured Powell and Gay, Yohan Blake confirmed
his irresistible rising, winning the race in a 9.92 PB, against strong
headwind. Usain made amends defending his 200m gold in an excellent clocking of
19.40 and helping Jamaica to break the 4x100 world record, along with Blake,
Nesta Carter and Michael Frater, anchoring the team in 37.04. For the third
time in a row, the improvised USA team failed to finish the race for lack of
coordination in baton exchanges. Yet, before that, its best sprinter in Daegu,
Walter Dix, had obtained two silver medals at the individual events, proving
what he is capable of when he is healthy. Lemaître also performed exceptionally winning
bronze in a national record at the 200m, holding Norway’s Jaysuma Saidy Ndure,
and finishing just out of the medals at the 100m, in a race where there was a
second French representative, the junior athlete Jimmy Vicaut. France was also
succesful at the 4x100 relay, winning the silver medal, though more than one
second behind the impressive Jamaicans.
2011 was a
exceptional year in the 100m event with an incredible depth: no less than 20
men dipped under the 10 second barrier, the best figure ever, which was
followed by “only” 19 in
the Olympic year. Maybe the effort for
reaching Bolt had pushed his competitors to the limit. Yet, Yohan Blake, the national
junior record holder when he clocked 10.11 at Carifta in 2007 and also the man
who has run fastest at Champs, was clearly the closest to beat Bolt. And Blake
really raised everybody’s eyebrows, still more than in his golden race in Daegu,
when he ran two weeks later the 200m distance at the Ivo Van Damme meeting in 19.26!
the second best performance ever: better than Michael Johnson in Atlanta and Bolt in
Beijing and just 7 hundredths out of Usain’s world record in Berlin. Afterwards,
specialists relativized some this extraordinary mark stating that Brussels has
the fastest curves in the circuit because about 15cm longer, and also it is
worth to know that, unlike Blake, Bolt had run seven races in Berlin before his
200m world record.
Anyway, not knowing
anymore who was best, because they trained together under Glenn Mills but
avoided each other during the whole season in the Diamond League circuit,
comparisons and speculations abounded: for example, Blake was the product of
hard work while Bolt was sheer talent, a man who did not care about nutrition
and trained no more than what was strictly necessary to win at Worlds and
Olympics. Whatever it is, no one can deny that even if Bolt performances during
the year can be a little erratic, he is a serious professional who always
arrives to majors 100% fitted, in world record shape. When eventually the two
Race Track Club stars clashed at the Olympic Trials, Blake got the better of
Bolt in both 100m and 200m. Was it a sign of Bolt’s decline? Of course not: the
man who had won three Olympic gold in Beijing stated that it would not be the
same in London, that in the Olympics we would see the best Bolt!
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Antoine Adams, Kim Collins, Jason Rogers and Brijesh Lawrence at the podium, after winning a historical bronze medal at the 2111 World Championships in Daegu, at the 4x100m relay for Saint Kitts and Nevis http://www.sknlist.com/sports/20110904.html |
If there was not enough
quality for London Olympic Games, another fearsome sprinter had been invited to
the party: the returned Justin Gatlin. Four years out of the track for his
second doping offence, the 2004 Olympic champion was in outstanding form that
season: after grabbing the gold medal during the winter at the World Indoor
championships, Gatlin had won the national olympic trials in 9.80 over Tyson
Gay. Walter Dix was out due to injury but a young rising star, Ryan Bailey, who
had run the distance in 9.88 back in 2010, was in the comeback trail and up for
grabs. Eventually, with Lemaître
choosing to concentrate in his best event, all eight finalists at the 100m were
American-born: all three Jamaicans: Bolt, Blake and Powell, all three US
sprinters: Gatlin, Gay and Bailey, Richard Thompson from Trinidad and Churandy
Martina, back to his best after some dissapointed years, who had recently won
the 200m at the European Championships and also led the Dutch 4x100m relay to
another gold. As he had announced, in the decisive moment Lightning Bolt drove
his best. Althought not a world record, his run of 9.63 was mighty enough to win handily over Blake,
Gatlin and the two other US representatives. Everybody in the final dipped
under 10.00, except Powell who finished injured.
The 200m were about
the same story but in the final race there was only one USA athlete after both
the double NCAA champion Maurice Mitchell and Trials surprise Isiah Young had
failed in their semi-finals. Jamaica was favoured again for gold and silver
with Bolt and Blake and they lived up to the expectations amazingly with
outstanding clockings of 19.32 for the Lightning and 19.44 for the Beast.
Besides, new kid in town Warren Weir proved why he had taken the last
qualifying spot, leaving no less than Daegu’s 5th placer Nickel
Ashmeade at home. Thus he took the bronze medal to complete an impressive and
somewhat unexpected all-Jamaican podium. Wallace Spearmon and Churandy Martina,
who had lost their medals in Beijing for lane invasion, finished again out of
the podium and a dissapointing Christophe Lemaître could only handle a sixth
place. On the other hand, the young surprising finalists, Alex Quiñónez from
Ecuador and Anaso Jobodwana from South Africa were well satisfied of being
there.
The same winning
quartet from Daegu with Carter, Frater, Blake and Bolt improved on his one year
world record to end up the Games in style in 36.84. This time around though
they were well challenged by the US team, which eventually got to make it to
the line and they did it in a new national record (37.04), also equalling the
former world record. Trinidad and Tobago won another collective medal to
complete the podium and show they are a real force in the event. No less than
six athletes from this country make our 100m top-50, including Richard
Thompson, 9.86-man Keston Bledman, Marc Burns and Daegu 200m finalist Rondell
Sorrillo. France, Japan, the Netherlands and Australia finished all of them less
than 3 hundredths off the bronze medal, with the Canadian disqualified team
hoping for more. Saint Kitts and Nevis without Collins did not make the final,
despite improving the national record they had set in Daegu for bronze. Neither
did Brazil, Italy, who had been in both Berlin and Daegu’s finals and another
outstanding European teams as Great Britain, Germany and Poland. Such was the
depth of the field. Surprisingly no African team got to travel to London in a
moment traditional powerhouses as Nigeria and Ghana have little to offer and
the best specialists in the continent come from countries like Ivory Coast
(Ben Youssef Meité), South Africa (Simon Magakwe) or Egypt (Amr Seoud). On the
other hand, Asia qualified no less than three teams: Japan, China and the small
country of Hong Kong. In the precedent major championship in Daegu they had
done even better with also Taiwan, India, South Korea and Thailand meeting the qualifying
standard. Notwithstanding, no individual
Asian sprinter has got to face the best in the world in a global championship
in the last seasons, a situation which is likely to change with the arrival to
senior ranks of athletes like Shota Iizuka, the 2010 World junior champion at
the 200m, and the brand new world youth record holder Yoshihide Kiryu.
Men's100m | Men's200m | Men's4x100m | ||||||||
1
|
Usain Bolt
|
JAM
|
1
|
Usain Bolt
|
JAM
|
1
|
Jamaica
|
JAM
| ||
2
|
Yohan Blake
|
JAM
|
2
|
Yohan Blake
|
JAM
|
2
|
Trinidad & Tobago
|
TRI
| ||
3
|
Tyson Gay
|
USA
|
3
|
Wallace Spearmon
|
USA
|
3
|
France
|
FRA
| ||
4
|
Justin Gatlin
|
USA
|
4
|
Walter Dix
|
USA
|
4
|
United States
|
USA
| ||
5
|
Asafa Powell
|
JAM
|
5
|
Warren Weir
|
JAM
|
5
|
Japan
|
JPN
| ||
6
|
Ryan Bailey
|
USA
|
6
|
Christophe Lemaître
|
FRA
|
6
|
Canada
|
CAN
| ||
7
|
Walter Dix
|
USA
|
7
|
Tyson Gay
|
USA
|
7
|
Italy
|
ITA
| ||
8
|
Richard Thompson
|
TRI
|
8
|
Churandy Martina
|
NED
|
8
|
Great Britain
|
GBR
| ||
9
|
Christophe Lemaître
|
FRA
|
9
|
Nickel Ashmeade
|
JAM
|
9
|
Netherlands
|
NED
| ||
10
|
Daniel Bailey
|
ANT
|
10
|
Alonso Edward
|
PAN
|
10
|
Saint Kitts & Nevis
|
SKN
| ||
11
|
Nesta Carter
|
JAM
|
11
|
Jaysuma Ndure
|
NOR
|
11
|
Germany
|
GER
| ||
12
|
Churandy Martina
|
NED
|
12
|
Maurice Mitchell
|
USA
|
12
|
Australia
|
AUS
| ||
13
|
Michael Frater
|
JAM
|
13
|
Rondell Sorrillo
|
TRI
|
13
|
Brazil
|
BRA
| ||
14
|
Kim Collins
|
SKN
|
14
|
Alex Quiñónez
|
ECU
|
14
|
Poland
|
POL
| ||
15
|
Dwight Chambers
|
GBR
|
15
|
Marvin Anderson
|
JAM
|
15
|
China
|
CHN
| ||
16
|
Darvis Patton
|
USA
|
16
|
Jason Young
|
JAM
|
16
|
Switzerland
|
SUI
| ||
17
|
Keston Bledman
|
TRI
|
17
|
Ramil Guliyev
|
TUR
|
17
|
Hong Kong
|
HKG
| ||
18
|
Mike Rodgers
|
USA
|
18
|
Anaso Jobodwana
|
RSA
|
18
|
Russia
|
RUS
| ||
19
|
Nickel Ashmeade
|
JAM
|
19
|
Darvis Patton
|
USA
|
19
|
Taiwan
|
TPE
| ||
20
|
Lerone Clark
|
JAM
|
20
|
Justin Gatlin
|
USA
|
20
|
South Africa
|
RSA
|
Check out the whole TOP-50 RANKINGS and complete STATISTICS for every event above/*