2011 IAAF World Outdoor Championships Daegu, South Korea August 27-September 5, 2011 Photo: Jiro Mochizuki@PhotoRun Victah1111@aol.com 631-741-1865 www.photorun.NET
USA Track & Field – News – American record and three gold medals highlight historic night
DAEGU, South Korea – It was a night made for milestones for Team USA at the 13th IAAF World Outdoor Track and Field Championships Thursday night.
During a 32-minute span, LaShinda Demus set an American Record in the women’s 400m hurdles, Jesse Williams ended a 20-year drought by Team USA in the high jump by winning gold, and Jenny Simpson won the first American gold medal in the women’s 1,500m since 1983.
Williams, the world leader at 2.37m/7-9.5, became the first American to medal in the high jump since Charles Austin and teammate Hollis Conway collected gold and bronze medals at the 1991 World Championships in Tokyo.
The momentum for Team USA then shifted from the infield to the oval.
Less than 10 minutes after Team USA teammate Simpson had scored a surprise victory in the women’s 1,500m, Demus earned a gold medal in the women’s 400m. It was redemption for Demus after settling for silver medals at the 2005 and 2009 World Championships.
If that wasn’t enough, Team USA had four athletes advance through the semifinal round of qualifying, including three-time defending World champion Allyson Felix and recently crowned 100m champ Carmelita Jeter in the women’s 200m. Maybe Thursday morning’s session was an indication of things to come for Team USA after advancing a whopping 15 athletes into the next round of competition. Team USA improved its medal count to 12, including seven gold, four silver and one bronze. The women have accumulated four gold medals, marking the third straight World Championship that Team USA has achieved that feat. Women’s 400m Hurdle Final Women’s 1500m Final Morgan Uceny (Mammoth Lakes, Calif.) and Kenya’s Hellen Obiri crashed to the track as they came around the top bend for the second last time. Both got up gamely to finish, with Uceny clocking 4:19.71 to place tenth. Men’s High Jump Williams’ victory broke a sequence of Russian championship successes which has brought the Olympic (Andrey Silnov), World (Yaroslav Rybakov), World Indoor (Ivan Ukhov) and European championship (Aleksandr Shustov) title in the past three years. Men’s 400m Hurdle Final Women’s 200m Semifinals In the second heat Shalonda Solomon (Orlando, Fla.) continued the winning ways, and bettered Jeter’s time by one-hundredth of a second to win in 22.46 and turned in the fastest time of the evening. In the third heat Allyson Felix (Santa Clarita, Calif.) made up ground on Jamaica’s Veronica Campbell-Brown after coming off the curve several meters behind; however, she was unable to close the gap and finished second in 22.67. Men’s 1500m Semifinals In the second heat, Leo Manzano (Austin, Texas) started conservatively in the back of the pack and began to move up during the last lap. With 40 meters to go Manzano was suddenly forced to let up his pace due to a left hamstring issue. He faded in the end to cross the finish line in 3:47.98 and miss advancing to the final. Men’s Javelin Throw Qualification Team USA Medals GOLD (7) SILVER (4) BRONZE (1) QUOTES LaShinda Demus (Palmdale, Calif.), Women’s 400m Hurdles "I am happy. I am grateful. I want to get home to see my sons, they are twin boys, four years old. “I still have not had a gold medal so this is great. I just saw my mom; she was so happy. It feels so great to bring it home. Watching the twins is more difficult than running the 400m hurdles. Running is my little break for the day. My father and my grandmother have the twins right now. He told me that he wouldn't be able to sleep, as it's 5 a.m. in Los Angeles, so I know he's seen everything by now. “This victory means that hard work pays off. I feel like I ran for my mother, the twins, my husband, my father, and for all the people who support me” Morgan Uceny (Mammoth Lakes, Calif.), Women’s 1500m Jenny Simpson (Colorado Springs, Colo.), Women’s 1500m “The last few meters was all about where my head was going into (the 1500m final). Standing on the line, I was thinking about what this could mean for my life and what this could mean for my family. My little sister [Emily] is serving in the army, so I thought, ‘man, if I win gold I get to play that national anthem for her.’ So coming down the last 100 meters I was thinking about my little sister and thinking, ‘let’s get that song playing.’ “Shannon (Rowbury) medaled at the last world championships and Morgan (Uceny) has been on fire all year, so I think this has been such an incredible American buildup to something that I was able to do tonight. I don’t want to lose sight of the way they pioneered back up to the world stage in the 1,500m with me.” Jesse Williams (Eugene, Ore.), Men’s High Jump “I turned my back and didn't look at anyone else’s jump. Dwight Stones always said that I jumped very high early in the season, and can't get it done at the end of the year, so 'Dwight, this is for you!' It's a friendly joke! “I really wanted to jump 2.37m and I wanted to jump clean through that height as I thought that was what it would take to win. It was a dream come true for me to win. It's been a long road for me from North Carolina to USC and to Eugene. “I love working hard, and I'm a fighter. I knew that if I could put it all together, I could win a world championship. I'm really going to enjoy this moment and have some fun tonight. “I'm a real student of the sport and I'm aware that twenty years ago, Charles Austin won in Tokyo, and I knew I could relive what he lived through today. If I could get through the qualifying rounds, I could be in a position to win it.” Angelo Taylor (Decatur, Ga.), Men’s 400m Hurdles Allyson Felix (Santa Clarita, Calif.), Women’s 200m Carmelita Jeter (Gardena, Calif.), Women’s 200m "This race was exactly what I was supposed to do. "The 200 is more of a fun race for me since I accomplished what I was supposed to do in the 100. I don't feel like I have that extra pressure on me right now, so I think I'm really enjoying myself which is great. I don't feel like I'm stressed or extra worried. I feel like the gun goes off I'm just going to run. I won the 100. It would be nice to do something real special in the 200 but I'm more relaxed at this point. “I've run a lot of rounds, so of course I'm not going to tell you my legs are fresh. I'm not going to sit here and act like they are. I'm going back to the village and just prepare myself for tomorrow. Everybody's legs should be tired.” (On finish in first round): “What happened was I really wasn't paying attention as well as I thought I was and I was really close to the line. So I was looking down and saying 'oh, no, no I'm about to touch the line…about to jump over,' so I was stumbling. I wasn't really hurt or anything.” Shalonda Solomon (Orlando, Fla.), Women’s 200m Matt Centrowitz (Arnold, Md.), Men’s 1500m Semifinals “Whatever happens in finals is going to be a great experience for the future. Winning the semi wasn’t really in my plans, it was more like focusing trying to get top three and qualify. “Once I found myself in the lead I figured I may as well finish it up and it felt great.” Leo Manzano (Austin, Texas), Men’s 1500m Semifinals For Complete 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
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