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Saturday, September 30, 2000
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BRITONS BLOWN OFF TRACK
A GOLD FOR GUTS - RADCLIFFE RUNS HER HEART OUT
GREENE AND JOHNSON ANCHOR GOLDS
Britons blown off track
Hopes of further British success on the track at Stadium Australia petered out in a women's 1500m yesterday that resembled a parks football match, and in a second relay which brings into question the judgment of the selectors.
The 1500m turned out to be a race too far for Kelly Holmes, and a race too frantic for Hayley Tullett, who fell on the second lap and trailed home in tears.
That Holmes finally ran out of legs and finished seventh behind the shock victory of Nouria Merah-Benida of Algeria is hardly surprising.
Twelve weeks ago, Holmes didn't even know if she could run in the British Olympic trials, so enduring were the injuries which have afflicted her preparation for major events since Atlanta.
She was fourth in the 800m four years ago, and her bronze medal at the same distance in Sydney was the sort of performance normally attributed to divine intervention.
She was accordingly ecstatic, and yesterday's knockabout race could not diminish her satisfaction.
"It was a battle out there, more tactical than I thought it would be," Holmes said. "I got boxed and barged, the 1500 can be a dirty race, but that's the dirtiest 1500 I've ever been in.
"I never thought I could win; some of those girls have run under four minutes, and this was only my third 1500 of the season. The worst thing about the 1500 is you get tired just trying to keep up.
"It was a shame about Hayley, but the best girl won. I don't care that I finished out of it, I've been in two finals, and come away with a bronze. I've got to be happy with that."
The battle Holmes referred to accounted for Tullett's fall just before the end of the second lap. In falling, Tullett baulked 5,000m champion, Gabriela Szabo of Romania. That looked to have spoilt Szabo's chances of any sort of medal let alone another gold.
She rallied so impressively that she snatched bronze on the line, but by that time another little known athlete had emerged from the pack to win Olympic gold, the second Algerian woman to do so in eight years, after Hassiba Boulmerka in Barcelona.
Following her world title in Tokyo in 1991, Boulmerka was condemned by the fundamentalist Imams in Algeria for racing in shorts. Hopefully, Merah-Benida has similar strength of character to withstand such archaic censure, should it come again.
The composition of the British men's sprint relay squad, with a less than fully fit Jason Gardener running on the second leg for the first time, resulted in disqualification on Friday.
And a tactical switch on the first leg of the women's 4x400m - Natasha Danvers for Helen Frost - rebounded disastrously when Danvers finished last but one, 15m back at the changeover.
Any realistic chance of the medal which had looked a strong possibility after the semi-final effectively disappeared for a team which boasted the third and fourth finisher in the individual race. Katharine Merry, who clocked 49.6sec on her anchor leg which brought the team to sixth, said: "It's too bad. We thought that we could win a medal. But personally, it's been a great year." Donna Fraser could echo those sentiments.
Marion Jones's drive for five got shunted into a couple of lay-bys, but she ended with the nevertheless impressive total of three golds and two bronzes. After her third place in the long jump on Friday, she was relegated to bronze again, along with the US sprint relay team, by an exuberant Bahamas quartet.
And she couldn't say that she hadn't been warned. At the press conference for the 200m on Thursday, silver medallist Pauline Davis-Thompson had remarked that the Bahamas were underdogs despite their excellent collective record, "and that will make it even better when we kick your butts on Saturday". And so it came to pass.
But if the British selection process was flawed for the longer relay, the American plan, putting Jones on the third leg was inspired.
She ran right away from her Jamaican and Russian opponents, and effectively won the race, running a split of 49.4sec, the same as individual champion, Cathy Freeman on the final leg, taking the Aussies to fourth.
The US men duly won both relays, but the sprinters won few friends with their clowning behaviour on the victory rostrum.
Maurice Greene is a curious contradiction. The 100m world record-holder is a quiet, courteous man in private, who seems to get drawn into his group's more abrasive behaviour in public.
Michael Johnson stays as well clear of that as he does of his opponents. But he was ably assisted in that regard by the Harrison twins, Alvin and Calvin, and Antonio Pettigrew, who sent him into a final lap of the 4x400m relay looking more relaxed than the 100,000-plus spectators who were applauding his efforts.
Trine Hattestad has illuminated women's javelin throwing since the days of Britain's Tessa Sanderson and Fatima Whitbread. She has won world titles and set world records.
She was the oldest competitor in the field last night, and all that experience paid off in her first throw, when she threw 68.91m to win gold. The Greeks are setting themselves up nicely for Athens in 2004, with several medals, gold, silver and bronze. Mirella Maniani-Tzelili added another silver behind Hattestad, throwing 67.51m twice.
After one of the most curious 5,000m races ever seen at a major championship, where a collective attack of tactical inertia led to a finishing time just 4sec faster than when Vladimir Kuts won in Melbourne 44 years ago, the question has to be asked whether this is a result of EPO testing.
Men who were running 45sec faster two months ago were reduced to fatigue by a finishing sprint from Millon Wolde, which won the Ethiopian the race in 13min 35.49sec.
It seemed as much of a surprise to Wolde as it was to the rest of us. Ali Saidi-Sief, who had emerged this year as one of the most exciting distance runners since Said Aouita looked to be in control of the dawdling race, until the final straight when Wolde eased past him.
PAT BUTCHER
Sunday Times
A gold for guts - Radcliffe runs her heart out
Paula Radcliffe is helped to her feat by Sonia O'Sullivan, right, after missing out on the medals in fourth after a brave run
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A HALF-HOUR after the race, tears welled in Paula Radcliffe's eyes. Mere mention of the word "fourth" and she blinked, as you do when trying to deal with tearful emotions. Every couple of minutes, she would remember that despite everybody's congratulations on her performance, she had finished fourth. She had come to win: to leave with nothing was too much.
Yet who could say she has left empty-handed? Great Britain have won nine gold medals, 10 silvers and six bronze - enough metal to capsize Steve Redgrave's boat. But, for 30 minutes at the Olympic Stadium yesterday, medals seemed not to matter.
Nothing more to give: Britain's Paula Radcliffe collapses on the track gulping for air after her brave effort in the Olympic 10,000m final. Picture: John Giles
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At the end of the 10,000m race, Radcliffe was wasted and drained. No medal, but a performance and an offering as precious as anything that went before.
It wasn't the time to say there are things in life more important than medals. But she has them. Does the courage, ambition and sheer bloody-mindedness of the frontrunner not count for something?
We remember Ron Clarke and Dave Bedford long after the men who beat them at some major championships.
Yet Radcliffe's guts on the track are a mere reflection of the inner woman. From her first days as an elite athlete she sensed the cheating that poisons her sport. She could have joined the cheats, but she took the harder option and chose to fight them, on and off the track.
The red ribbon she wears on her running vest is her protest, her opposition to doping and her plea for effective blood tests. Britain sent hundreds of competitors to the Olympic Games; none was more entitled to represent the nation than Radcliffe, the current Sunday Times Sportswoman of the Year. Sport, especially Olympic sport, should stand for something more than winning.
Yet the irony of yesterday's race is that winning was what Radcliffe had in her head. She knows that the way to produce the fastest time is to run negative splits - that is to run the second half of the race faster than the first. But she set out to do exactly the opposite.
"It would have been easier to run the first half slow and then faster in the second half but it would have been easier for the other girls too, and I was going to find it hard against them in a fast last lap," she said. "I thought Tegla Loroupe might help a little but she had a 2hr 29min marathon in her legs and couldn't do much.
"I knew that if the Ethiopians or [Fernanda] Ribeiro came to the front it would only be to slow things down. That's what happened and then the last two laps were so hard."
Radcliffe's tactics were founded on the silver medal that she won at the World Championships in Seville 12 months ago. Then she had set off sensibly, picked up the pace as the race progressed but could not shake off the slightly-built Ethiopian, Gete Wami.
To run the same race in Sydney would have been to accept that the gold medal wasn't possible, so Radcliffe started quicker, knowing that in trying to hurt others she would have to punish herself.
It was compelling to watch. In front after 300m, she didn't so much make the pace as force it. Her head nodded rhythmically, as it always does, and the nodding, as always, became more pronounced as Radcliffe dug deep to hurt more. There is no difficulty imagining the mental battle raging as she raced; a body clamouring for respite, a spirit that refused to listen.
But what draws us most to Radcliffe is that she humanises a sport that has lost much of its humanity.
She nods her head almost to propel herself forward. The pain of the race is drawn on her face and the arms pump as if to give the right example to her aching legs. We look at her and think: "Yes, we know how she feels." Her wrenching pain is in some part ours.
The rest knew what Radcliffe would try, and from that first lap, they queued up behind her. Sonia O'Sullivan, the Ethiopians Derartu Tulu and Wami, the Portuguese Ribeiro and the Kenyan Loroupe. Radcliffe is a natural pacemaker and she relentlessly churned out 72sec laps. O'Sullivan was the first to feel the pace and lost her place in the leading group after six laps.
That still left Radcliffe with four rivals who were all prepared to race in her slipstream. Tulu and Wami raced with a flowing ease that showed, come what may, they were going to be there at the end. The giant screens at either end of the stadium gave Radcliffe glimpses of the ambush awaiting her.
"I kept looking up at the screens and I could see the four girls there. One part of me was saying, 'You're definitely going to get a top-five
finish here', because I knew I wasn't going to die. Another part kept thinking I had to do better, had to keep piling on the pressure and hope I could burn off those behind me."
Try as she might, Radcliffe could not break clear. The effort to do so weakened her, and with six laps to go, the Ethiopians went past her and then slowed the pace slightly. The slight easing of the tempo gave Radcliffe time to recuperate and soon she was back, vying for the lead.
Two laps later Ribeiro overtook the Englishwoman but only to slow things down. Radcliffe wouldn't allow it and soon regained the initiative. She pushed on and it was clear that Loroupe was in trouble. But no matter how hard Radcliffe went, the Ethiopians and the Portuguese stayed right on her heels.
At the bell, Tulu and Wami accelerated past her, then Ribeiro went too. The Ethiopians went so fast that Radcliffe knew straightaway a bronze medal was the only possibility.
Tulu flew clear of Wami and she had to battle to stay clear of the strongly finishing Rib-eiro. Gold for Tulu,
silver for Wami, bronze for Ribeiro and then Radcliffe. A yard beyond the line, she collapsed and surrendered to an unforgiving track. It was O'Sullivan, two places behind her, who tried to lift her.
"Sonia was great. She picked me up and said, 'You've done everything you could out there, I couldn't stay with it, it was too fast'. I ran a personal best and I won't ever have to say, 'I should have done this' or 'I should have done that'. I ran the race I planned to run and it was the only way I could have won."
As Radcliffe spoke, her red ribbon reminded all who asked the questions that the arena remains imperfect: "Improving the tests is very important to me. We now have blood tests and we're doing better. I've made my protest and I don't need to carry it into the race, but the blood tests are not effective enough. That will be shown by the fact that there are no EPO positives at these Olympics. We also need to work on coming up with a test for human growth hormones."
But isn't it important to leave the stadium knowing you have raced honestly? Is it not easier to sleep knowing you have given every last ounce of yourself?
"Yes," said Radcliffe, "I will sleep tonight but I will sleep without a medal."
Again, it seemed not the time to say some things in life are more important than medals.
Sunday Times
Greene and Johnson anchor golds
Maurice Greene crosses the line in emphatic style in the men's 4x100m final. Picture: Russell Boyce/Reuters
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There was success for the US, disappointment for Britain and another couple of medals for Marion Jones as the four relay races brought the Sydney track events to a close.
The American sprinters had no trouble in the final of the 4x100m, cruising to victory to give 100m champion Maurice Greene his second gold medal of the games.
Greene anchored the American quartet to a time of 37.61sec, the fastest time this
year, beating Brazil (37.90) and Cuba (38.04).
It was the 15th time that the United States have won the
event. They have only been beaten across the finish line once
- by Canada in Atlanta four years ago. Their two other defeats came through disqualifications.
Greene received the baton level
with the Brazilians but pulled away in the final leg. He won the 100m, 200m and the 4x100m gold at
the world championships last year but was deprived of a chance
to match that feat in Sydney when he was injured in the US
trials and failed to qualify for the 200m.
In the 4x400m an American team boasting Michael Johnson also secured an easy victory while Britain could only muster sixth place. Alvin Harrison, Antonio Pettigrew, Calvin Harrison and Johnson made up the US team, and they cruised round in 2:56.35. Britain's Jared Deacon, Daniel Caines, Iwan Thomas, Jamie Baulch were much further back in 3:03.22. Nigeria took second place with Jamaica third.
Debbie Ferguson, of the Bahamas, with Marion Jones in the background, raises her arms as she crosses the finish line in the 4x100m final in a team time of 41.95sec. Picture: Ruben Sprich/ Reuters
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Marion Jones had a mixed final day, claiming two more medals in the relays, winning gold in the 4x400m but missing out on first place in the 4x100m.
As with the long jump, Jones could win only bronze in the sprint relay after the US team suffered a couple of poor change-overs that pushed them into third place behind the Bahamas. She still has two gold medals after success in the individual sprints, but Jones dreams of five golds at one Games will have to wait another four years.
The Bahamas dominated the relay from the start, and their team of Sevatheda Fynes, Chandra Sturrup, Pauline Davis-Thompson and Debbie Ferguson finished in 41.95sec. In second place came another Caribbean nation, Jamaica, with a team anchored by Merlene Ottey. Jones had the final run for the US, but by the time she had the baton she had too much ground to make up.
The second handover between Torri Edwards and Nanceen Perry spelled
disaster for Jones. Perry set off far to soon and Edwards was nearly left with
nobody to hand over the baton to.
"Wait, wait," she screamed as Perry shot off down the track. Perry eased up
but the damage had been done.
Pauline Davis-Thompson of the Bahamas, running her last race, was thrilled
to go out with gold. "The Americans never respect us. Marion Jones was in their team and we beat
them. Now they will have to show us some respect," she enthused.
The 4x400m was another matter altogether, as the US team led from start to finish with Jones producing an exceptional third leg to give the Americans an unassailable lead. The US team of, Jearl Miles-Clark, Monique Hennagan, Jones and La Tasha Colander-Richardson, finished in 3min 22.62sec with Jamaica in silver and Russia in bronze. Britain's team crumbled amid the expectation, never recovering from Natasha Danvers disastrous first leg which left Britain in last place. Donna Fraser, Allison Curbishley and Katharine Merry clawed back into sixth place but they still finished well behind the medal places.
Sunday Times