Source: AP Photo |
By Mike Hurst, The Daily Telegraph
(Australia)
GRENADA'S teenage world 400m champion Kirani James confirmed this week he
may be the man who bestows the final indignity on the USA by denying them an
individual sprint gold medal on the track at the London Olympics.
While at the Perth
Track Classic this Saturday Australians will be sorting out who, if any,
deserve to be selected to sprint at the Games which open in July, James is
delivering on his plans to extend his global domination.
More than any other track event, the US
has owned the men's 400m at the Olympics winning the last seven gold medals
dating back to the US-led boycott in 1980 of the Moscow Games.
But James, 18, in only his fourth
professional race (three of which were run at the world championships in Daegu,
Korea last year) ran down LaShawn Merritt who led a US clean sweep of the 400m
at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
"This is, to my mind, the most
important event that ever happened to our country," the Grenada island’s
police commissioner, James Clarkson, said of James' world title win. "Even
more important than Christopher Columbus landing."
James' coach, 1976
Olympic 4x100m relay gold medallist Harvey Glance, who says James as a
"freak of nature", has no doubt he can continue to improve on his
best time of 44.60sec.
Referring to James'
progression through world age-14 and 15 bests of 46.96 and 45.70, University of
Alabama coach Glance predicted: "He's only going to get faster and
stronger. He really wants to put his country on the map. We want to rewrite
history."
Last weekend James
continued to progress, winning the Boston Indoor 400m in a world pacing 45.96.
"There are so many other good 400 men everywhere, and I know anything can
happen, but right now things are looking pretty good," said James.
A week earlier Jamaica's
Asafa Powell won the US Indoor 55m sprint, beating among other America's 2004
Athens Olympic 100m gold medallist Justin Gatlin.
Former 100m world
record-holder Powell was hurt and didn't compete in Daegu but it hardly dented
Jamaica's assault with Yohan Blake winning the 100m and his training partner
Usain Bolt, disqualified for a false start in the 100m, winning the 200m
and sharing in the 4x100m relay victory.
With the possible
exception of Tyson Gay, returning from surgery, there are simply no Americans
who look capable of beating world records-holder Bolt or Blake over 100m and
200m.
The scenario is less
clear in women's sprints with California's Carmelita Jeter being some experts'
choice as the best female athlete in the world in 2011.
But US women are under
almost as much pressure with the rise of Caribbean and African sprinters.
Although Jeter won the
100m at the world athletics championships in Daegu, last year and is history's
second fastest woman behind fellow American Florence Griffith Joyner (Flojo),
there are several Caribbeans who appear capable of beating her - not least, the
Olympic 100m titleholder Shelley Fraser Pryce of Jamaica who did not defend her
world title in Korea.
Allyson Felix, the most
decorated among current US long sprinters, attempted the double in Daegu and
finished second in the 400m to powerfully framed Amantle Montsho of Botswana,
and then third in the 200m behind Jamaica's Veronica Campbell Brown (VCB) with
Jeter claiming silver.
The depth among Jamaican
women sprinters is already astonishing and still on the rise.
In the 100m, VCB has 33
sub-11 times. Kerron Stewart has 20. Fraser-Pryce has 14, including the
Jamaican national record 10.73, and Sherone Simpson has 12. Jeter has run 26
times under 11sec.
Jamaica's overall sub-11
total is 153 - about a quarter of the global all-time list of 595. Astonishing
over-representation for a nation of less than three million people, or less
than the population of Sydney.
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