2011 IAAF World Outdoor Championships Daegu, South Korea August 27-September 5, 2011 Photo: Victah Sailer@PhotoRun Victah1111@aol.com 631-741-1865 www.photorun.NET
USA Track & Field – News – Felix earns 9th medal; Team USA wins four more medals at World Championships
DAEGU, South Korea – The hits keep coming for Team USA with another four medals, including gold in the women’s 4x400m relay, at the 13th IAAF World Outdoor Track and Field Championships Saturday night.
Sanya Richards-Ross and Allyson Felix earned their third straight gold medals in the women’s 4×400, combining efforts with Jessica Beard and Francena McCorory in allowing Team USA to continue its dominance in the race, while posting a world leading time of 3:18.09. Team USA has now won 10 medals in the relay, including six gold.
Appearing in her fourth World Championships Felix has now won nine career medals, including seven gold, while ties her with Jearl Miles Clark of Team USA, for the second highest number of medals ever won by a woman at the World Outdoor Championships. Jamaica’s Merlene Ottey owns the women’s record for career medals won at 14.
The 4×400 relay also gave the Team USA women its fifth gold medal of this year’s World Championship meet, tying the most ever accumulated by American team (1993, 1995, 2005).
For just the third time in World Championship history, Team USA collected two medals in the women's hurdles with Danielle Carruthers and Dawn Harper earning silver and bronze.
Walter Dix pocketed his second silver medal in the sprints, placing second behind world-record holder Usain Bolt in the men's 200m to conclude the Saturday night program which saw champions crowned in six events. Earlier, Dix placed second in the 100 last Sunday. Matt Centrowitz, who captured both NCAA and USA Outdoor championship titles earlier this year, got things rolling for Team USA by earning a surprising bronze medal in the men's 1,500m. Team USA pushed its nation leading hardware total to 21 medals, including 10 gold, seven silver and four bronze. That is just one medal shy of equaling its total medal count of 22 at the 2009 World Outdoor Championship. With the hammer throw, 800m and 4×100 relay remaining, Team USA's women already have 11 medals, tying their all-time World Championships high of 11 from 1993. Women's 4x400m Final Team USA's winning time of 3:18.09 was a world best and the fastest relay time ever run in September. Jessica Beard (College Station, Texas) ran the third leg in 49.9. Francena McCorory (Hampton, Va.) held off Jamaica's Shericka Williams with a 49.6 anchor leg giving Team USA its sixth gold medal in the relay. Women's 100m Hurdles Final Kellie Wells (Orlando, Fla.), who entered the meet owning a world leading mark of 12.50 en route to winning the U.S. Championships, hit the fifth and sixth barriers before tumbling into the seventh hurdle and did not finish. Wells, competing in her first world championships, earned a ticket into the finals by finishing second in the first heat in 12.79 Australia's Sally Pearson, running in lane three, set a championship record in winning the race in 12.28 which also is the world's fourth fastest time ever. Men's 200m Final It marked Team USA's 18th medal earned in the 200 at the World Championships. Men's 1500m Final Team USA has now medaled in three World Championships in a row, with the most recent being Bernard Lagat's bronze in 2009. Centrowitz is the youngest American to ever medal, and was the youngest of the field, which curiously saw the three youngest athletes become the three athletes on the podium. Kenya's Asbel Kiprop won the race in 3:35.69, becoming just the third runner in history to win a gold medal in the 1,500 at the Olympics and World Championships. Women's High Jump Final QUOTES Sanya Richards-Ross, 1st leg Women's 4x400m Final "It was nice to go out and get a medal. All my teammates ran great tonight, and I was proud to be a part of this team." Allyson Felix, 2nd leg Women's 4x400m Final Jessica Beard, 3rd leg Women's 4x400m Final Francena McCorory, 4th leg, Women's 4x400m Final Dawn Harper, Women's 100m Hurdle Final Danielle Carruthers, Women's 100m Hurdle Final Walter Dix, Men's 200m Final Matt Centrowitz, Men's 1500m Final "We definitely had a great showing here. She [Jenny Simpson, women's 1500m champ] went in a couple days of go and was definitely inspiring and made me think it was possible that I could come close to something like that, that is one I really started believing. She set the tone. "I was happy. I was in a good position. He [New Zealand's Nick Willis] was clicking off a very even pace and I didn't really want to look at the time but it felt pretty comfortable. "They went so hard with 350 to go. Even if I wanted to I couldn't cover them it was so hard, they were so fast. Each 50 [meters] was just one more guy, one more guy, then I found myself in almost medal position and l kept digging down." Brigetta Barrett, Women's High Jump Final "It hurts to know that your potential and what you can do, you're not doing. But it is okay, I'm thankful that I made it this far to make it to the final. I've had an amazing year, so I feel I'll be able to go home with my head held high, but this was kind of anti-climatic." Amberlynn Weber (Spokane, Wash.) women's wheelchair 800, seventh (1:55.43) Joshua George (Champaign, Ill.), men's wheelchair 400, fourth (50.97) Team USA Medals GOLD (10) SILVER (7) BRONZE (4) For full resuls visit www.iaaf.org |
About USA Track & Field USA Track & Field (USATF) is the National Governing Body for track & field, long-distance running and race walking in the United States. USATF encompasses the world's oldest organized sports, the World's #1 Track & Field Team, the most-watched events at the Olympics, the #1 high school and junior high school participatory sport, and more than 30 million adult runners in the United States: www.usatf.org. Katie Landry
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