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 – Team USA’s men golden in long jump and 4x400m
DAEGU, South Korea – Dwight Phillips landed his fourth World Championship title in the long jump and the men’s 4x400m relay team won gold in a dramatic finish Friday night to conclude the seventh day of competition at the IAAF World Outdoor Track and Field Championships.
Carmelita Jeter and Allyson Felix went 2-3 in the women’s 200 as each woman earned her second medal of these Championships. It marked the third time in World Championship history that Team USA earned two medals in the event and the first time since 2005, when Felix captured the gold with Rachelle Boone-Smith earning a silver.
Friday night’s four medals pushed Team USA’s total medal count to 16 with two days of competition remaining. The women have accumulated eight medals, including four gold to equal their entire output from the 2009 World Championships.
Phillips, who recorded a season best mark of 8.45m/27-8.5 in the second round, tied Cuba’s legendary Ivan Pedroso (1995, 1997, 1999, 2001) for the most gold medals ever won in men’s long jump history at the World Championships. Phillips also won the long jump crown in 2003, 2005 and 2009. It also was his fifth overall medal in the event after earning a bronze medal in 2007.
Meanwhile, Team USA achieved a milestone in the women’s 800m by advancing two runners into the finals for the first time ever with Maggie Vessey and Alysia Montano qualifying out of the semifinal round
Men's Long Jump Dwight Phillips (Snellville, Ga.) walked away with his fourth gold medal in five World Championships, continuing what will be a Hall-of-Fame career. Phillips jumped a season-best 8.32m/27-3.75 in qualifying and then went 8.31m/27-3.75 and 8.45m/27-8.75 with his first two jumps in the final. After Australia's Mitchell Watt, the 2011 world leader, could manage only an 8.06m/26-5.5 on his final jump, Phillips had the luxury of sprinting down the runway one last time with nothing but the gold medal on his mind. He ran through the pit and pulled off his very apt bib number – ‘1111' – and held it up to the photographers as he scored his fourth career #1 finish at Worlds. Will Claye (Phoenix, Ariz.), one of three 20-year-old jumpers competing in the final, finished ninth at 8.10m/26-7, which came on his third jump. He was coming back from the qualifying rounds in the triple jump Friday morning, where he reached the final that will be held Sunday. Men's 4x400m Relay Women's 200m Men's Shot Put As the junior member of the U.S. squad, Ryan Whiting (Tempe, Ariz.) finished seventh in his first World Championships. Whiting's best throw came on his fourth attempt at 20.75m/68-1. Adam Nelson (Watkinsville, Ga.) had a best mark of 20.29m/66-7 to finish eighth. Women's 5,000m Final Women's 800m Semifinal In the second semifinal heat, Alysia Montano (Canyon Country, Calif.) battled down the straight away and took the bell lap in second. While Montano ended up finishing third, she was able to qualify for the final from her time of 1:58.67 in the second semifinal heat. Alice Schmidt (San Diego, Calif.) faded to fifth place in 2:01.16 in the third semifinal heat and did not advance. Men's 200m semifinal QUOTES "I want to serve as an inspiration to kids and show it's not how you respond in victory, but how you respond in defeat. I've been defeated all year. "I sustained an Achilles injury (left) that prevented me from training the entire month of June. I knew that if I could have at least four weeks of injury free training, I could win a world championship." Greg Nixon, 1st Leg 4x400m Relay Angelo Taylor, 2nd Leg 4x400m Relay "I've been running on national teams in the 4x400m since 1999, and I've never gotten the baton behind. It was different. It was a strategic race on the part of the other teams. They put their best runners on the first leg. Some of them had their best runners on the second leg." Bershawn Jackson, 3rd Leg 4x400m Relay "Coaches told me before the 400m hurdles that I was going to run in the relay. Coaches told me to stay healthy, finish your finals and get ready for the 4x400m. When I was depressed the only thing the coach said was pick your head up and get ready to run the 4 x400m and bring it home for USA." LaShawn Merritt, fourth Leg 4x400m Relay "The race was a lot closer than we thought. We knew that everyone was going to come out and run hard. At the end of the day, everyone was told to do their job and each man left it all on the track. "I didn't want to go out too fast too early. I got boxed in and I was going to make a move early, but I played it smart. I knew that neither one of the guys I was running against was going to out kick me. I believed in my training and my foot speed." Carmelita Jeter, Women's 200m Final "For London 2012 I plan on doubling in the 100m and 200m. I've been on a high since I won the 100m and I'm trying to stay there. We still have the 4x100m. I hope we get that stick around." Allyson Felix, Women's 200m Final "I just tried to put the race together, and looking back my turnover just wasn't really there. I tried to gut it out, but it didn't come together. "All I can think about is next year; I'm just motivated for next year. I think that 200 meters is going to be the most important thing to me. This was all about a learning experience and I definitely learned a lot." Shalonda Solomon, Women's 200m Final Reese Hoffa, Men's Shot Put Final "I'm hoping that it will re-motivate us and be back on top next year, that's all we can do." Christian Cantwell, Men's Shot Put Final "I'll be fine. I've been here before and I'll be back. I couldn't get any momentum. My best was 21.36m/70-1 and I thought I killed it on that throw. I tried I to do my best. I'm proud of the guys; they put on a good show. "I feel I've had a decent season, all things considered. I'm always motivated." Adam Nelson, Men's Shot Put Final "All four of us are pretty frustrated with the results. We expect a lot more out of ourselves. We have a reputation and legacy to uphold in the U.S. as shot putters. And we all screwed up tonight. None of us executed properly. I think you will see us come back next year a lot stronger because of what happened." Ryan Whiting, Men's Shot Put Final Final "I don't know what to say, this is my first time here. I'm pretty happy with what happened. It was a good experience, get ready for London next year." Maggie Vessey, Women's 800m Semifinal "I wanted it so bad. Making it to the semifinals in the worlds in 2009 was good, but it was disappointing and I just didn't want to be there again. I raced a little more intelligently and you can't put a price on these things." Alysia Montano, Women's 800m Semifinal "I promised myself next time I get to the championships, I will make it to the final. I got another opportunity indoors in 2010 and I got a medal. So I'm hoping I can equal that." Alice Schmidt, Women's 800m Semifinal "It's disappointing. This is a world championship. This is the first year where I thought I was coming into this meet level headed knowing what I needed to do for the rounds. I'm really disappointed that I'm not in final." "The race went out pretty quick for the first 200m and then we settled right. We were slower than the other two heats so on that turn I started to go wide and then I need to get closer to the rail so Lauren Fleshman, Women's 5,000m Final "It was great, I'm happy. I was focused the whole way. I stuck to my race plan. I didn't get overwhelmed by the environment, those are all things I wanted to accomplish here to set me up for next year." Amy Hastings, Women's 5,000m Final "It just felt a lot harder than I thought it was. I don't know what it was, but it just wasn't my day. It happens, but I'll figure it out for sure and come back stronger." Darvis Patton, Men's 200m Semifinal "Sometimes you have to build a bridge and get over it. I won't do it immediately, I'll probably go in the back and cry a little bit, but sometimes you feel like you let a lot of people down. I‘ve got a lot of support back home and I just didn't perform well today, and that is heartbreaking right there. I'm in great shape, I know I train hard, this is what you train for. Not to perform on this day sucks a lot, a whole lot." Walter Dix, Men's 200m Semifinal Team USA Medals – 16 (Through Sept. 2) GOLD (9) SILVER (5) BRONZE (2) For full results 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
|