My future Olympian |
So then, unless he falters with a false start, the world expects Usain
Bolt to win the sprint double; a record or two would be icing on the cake. The
field for the men's 100 metres remains crowded, though and Asafa Powell is as
anxious for that gold as Yohan Blake is greedy. The race in Olso on June 7th, was
the clearest evidence I've seen that Bolt will have no room for antics before
the finish line. Without a doubt, that was the best race I have seen 'Safa run,
even compared to those he has won. He competed from start to finish; Bolt will therefore
have to compete with Asafa and the rest of the field this time around and not
just with the clock.
Tyson Gay sees no other competitor but Bolt, and Justin Gatlin is
desperate to erase his sordid past. Oh, and let's not forget Nesta Carter and
Lerone Clarke who, if either makes it past the National Trials would like to
prove their big-stage-individual-events sprint bona fides. Beyond the Jamaicans
and the Americans, the Frenchman Christophe Lamaitre, my favourite spoiler,
will not be ignored. The fierceness of the competition notwithstanding, I can
now see at least two Jamaicans on the podium for the men’s 100 metres, and I am
willing Asafa to get nothing less than a silver medal at the 2012 London
Olympics.
For the men's 200 metres sprint, I am slightly less bullish but see
gold and (a possible) silver for Bolt and Blake respectively. I’ll stick my
neck out to say that Walter Dix cannot beat Yohan Blake on the stretch to the
finish but Blake will have to overcome the affable and experienced Wallace
Spearmon. Gatlin will want to assert himself but will have to tussle with Dix
for fourth or fifth. I can only hope our Nickel Ashmeade improves on his New York 19.94 seconds
to keep the Dutchman Churandy Martina at bay as the bronze medal is anyone’s
hunk of metal. Marvin Anderson has a tough road among this lot for although his
SB of 20.21 seconds in New York
on June 9th was encouraging I do not expect the top three to run
over 20.00 seconds on the day.
VCB |
Shelly-Ann |
Gonzales |
Novlene |
Our pool of 400 metres women remains shallow, with Novlene
Williams-Mills as the standard bearer. Patricia Hall seems to be improving well
and Rosemarie Whyte is, well running but the “Jamerican” Sanya Richards-Ross
and Amantle Montsho of Botswana
are Novlene's strongest competitors. If Williams-Mills holds her form and runs
a smart race, she has a good shot at a medal but she doesn't have the luxury of
underestimating any competitor; especially not Francena McCorory of the US who could
well elbow her way into the top three. This may be Christie Ohuruogu’s last
hurrah for Great Britain
and she must not be discounted; she has nothing to lose and will find a
herculean effort.
Kaliese |
Melaine |
I have no grand expectations for the men’s 400 metres hurdles, this
pipeline needs urgent replenishment. Isa Phillips has produced a personal best
so far of 50.59 seconds but I anticipate that the London final will see at least the top five
finishers at sub-50.00 seconds. The lanky Puerto Rican, Javier Culson will not
allow either, Bershawn Jackson or Angelo Taylor of the US, to steal his
thunder. The crop thins out at the 800 metres mark so it's all hope and pray
from here. Not sure what the
circumstances are with Kenia Sinclair but I miss her tenacity.
A medal in the men’s 110 metres hurdles is highly unlikely, although
when you jump over obstacles the risk of error increases exponentially. Dwight
Thomas has to compete with Liu Xiang of China and the American duo David
Oliver and Jason Richardson. The young Cuban Orlando Ortega seems set to be a
spoiler while his countryman, Dayron Robles, recovers from a leg inflammation
which kept him out of the NY leg of the Diamond League on June 9, 2012. Thomas’
SB of 13.36 seconds if it was repeated, would have put him in 4th at
that ill-fated New York
race; a race that did not include either Robles or Xiang. He will need to find
the 13.15 seconds he ran in Oslo
last June to contend. Xiang sounded the warning and produced 12.97 seconds
before his home crowd in Shanghai .
I for one am extremely pleased with Brigitte Foster-Hylton's
performance/recovery post-surgery, which has so far exceeded my expectations.
I'm a pragmatist though and the petite Australian Sally Pearson is still the
thorn in every female 100 metres hurdler's flesh. Brigitte will need to deliver a coup de grâce
on the day; Kellie Wells, Danielle Carruthers, Priscilla Lopes-Schliep, Dawn
Harper and Lolo Jones remain just as convinced of their title to a medal.
Let’s be clear, baton dropping, running out of boxes/lanes and even
false starts are the great equalizers so we can ignore those risks as
qualifiers for any given team. That said, we can expect magic in the relays, as
we will go through the full range of human emotions; that’s what relays evoke.
Without Powell, our men produced a record breaking 37.04 seconds, 4x100 metres
run in Daegu last year. With or without him a sub- 37.00 seconds run is
entirely possible. Our women are capable of delivering medal but the USA ’s talent
pool is deep and wide so a gold is ambitiously doable. Our women’s 4x400 metres
medal hopes are vastly more realistic than that our men’s; indeed I expect at least
a silver for our women.
The Olympic Games are sure to deliver manic responses and for all
Let’s see what highs and lows the trials throw up, more anon.
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