Local olympian falls short in shotput
(AP Photo/David Phillip)
Adam Nelson of the United States is seen in the men’s shot put during the athletics competitions in the National Stadium at the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing, Friday, Aug. 15, 2008.
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By EDDIE PELLS
AP National Writer
Published: August 15, 2008
BEIJING (AP) — After his second successful sprint at the Olympics, Tyson Gay jumped over a barrier to avoid a waiting horde of reporters.
That said as much as Gay said himself regarding how his left hamstring felt Friday in his second 100-meter heat.
The defending world champion finished his quarterfinal race in 10.09 seconds, second behind NCAA champion Richard Thompson of Trinidad, to advance easily to the final 16 in track and field’s glamour event.
“It felt pretty relaxed,“ Gay said when finally persuaded to stop just for a second to offer an update. “I just wanted to make it through.“
He did, and so did world record-holder Usain Bolt and fellow Jamaican Asafa Powell, keeping alive a potential dream final matching the three men with the eight fastest times in history.
An American dream fizzled in the shot put, where there was no U.S. winner, much less a U.S. sweep. The best the U.S. could do was a silver for Christian Cantwell after 2007 world champion Reese Hoffa fouled on his last two attempts and finished seventh and Adam Nelson, a two-time Olympic silver medalist, threw with hurt ribs and didn’t make it into the final eight.
“We expected more from ourselves,“ Nelson said. “We’re all disappointed. We all wanted a sweep.“
Squandering two medals is no small thing in the big picture. America led China 44-39 in the overall Olympic medal count as Friday’s action wound down and the race to win that contest is expected to go down to the end.
Medals will be awarded in the 100 on Saturday night. Before that, though, the semifinals offer the first big Olympic showdown — Powell vs. Gay in the second heat. Bolt’s biggest challenge in the other semi figures to be from America’s Walter Dix and Derrick Atkins of the Bahamas.
Gay was the biggest question mark of the Big Three coming into this, his first Olympics. He hadn’t raced in six weeks, when he went tumbling to the track and had to be taken off in a stretcher at the Olympic trials. He was diagnosed with a strained hamstring that he insisted was fine earlier this week.
He did nothing to disprove that in two races Friday, starting cleanly and conserving energy at the end, the way the medal contenders are supposed to.
Also still in play is the three-man American success story in the men’s 1,500. Bernard Lagat, Leo Manzano and U.S. team flagbearer Lopez Lomong all made it out of their first races.
Lagat, a double gold medal contender hoping to add to the silver and bronze he won for Kenya in the last two Olympics, showed his trademark kick, chasing from 11th to fourth in the final lap of his race.
Lomong, a “Lost Boy” refugee from Sudan, got the fifth and final qualifying spot in his race.
Manzano, at 5-foot-5 and 125 pounds among the smallest in his race, got into a nasty bump-and-push match with Deresse Mekonnen of Ethiopia and finished sixth. That was out of the automatic qualifying — but his time of 3 minutes, 36.67 seconds earned him a wild-card spot in Sunday’s semis.
In the 100, Bolt had the fastest time of the second round at 9.92 seconds — the fastest ever run in China — and he made it look easy.
“I just ran the first 50 meters, then I looked around to make sure I was safe and I shut it off,“ he said.
Even before he slows down, he looks as if he’s loping down the track, unfurling his 6-5 frame out of the starting blocks, then taking off — a unique sight in an event supposedly not made for tall men.
“He’s a phenomenal athlete,“ said American Darvis Patton, who also advanced.
But nobody was ceding the race to Bolt, Powell or Gay.
“I know I’m going to win for sure,“ said Churandy Martina of Netherlands Antilles after winning the first heat with his first official time under 10 seconds — at 9.99, just one of three men to break 10 seconds Friday. “That’s why I’m here. If not, I would’ve stayed home and watched it on TV.“
To move on, Martina needs to finish among the top four in the second heat with Gay and Powell.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press.
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