August 4, 2012
Katie Branham
USA Track & Field
Marketing & Communications Coordinator
317Â-713Â-4672
Katie.Branham@usatf.org
Rupp wins historic silver; Jeter, Claye add to U.S. medal total
LONDON — Not since Billy Mills’ storied sprint to win the 1964 Olympic Games has an American man graced the podium of the men’s 10,000 meters. That changed Saturday night at Olympic Stadium when Galen Rupp made his own dash into history to take second in the 10km, highlighting a night that also saw Carmelita Jeter win a silver medal, Will Claye a bronze and the host Great Britain three golds.
Placing second in 27:30.90, Rupp (Portland, Ore.) became just the third U.S. man ever to win an Olympic medal in the event, after Mills’ gold and a silver by Lewis Tewanina in 1912. It was also the fastest time ever by an American at the Games. Rupp’s training partner, world champion Mo Farah of Great Britain, won in 27:30.42 to give coach Alberto Salazar a 1-2 punch of his own.
10,000m drama
It was 25 laps of pure drama – part NASCAR, part roller-derby as speed and tactics melded. Six laps into the race, Zersenay Tadese of Eritrea stretched out the pack, with the leaders including Moses Kiprop of Kenya and Tariku and Kenenisa Bekele of Ethiopia. Rupp ranged from sixth to 10th place, running near Farah as Americans Datahan Ritzenhein (Beaverton, Ore.) and Matt Tegenkamp (Portland, Ore.) strode a few places back.
Until just past the 6,000m mark, Tadese handled most of the leading duties, coming through 5,000m in 14:05.79. >From that point, a series of surges kept a pack that included Tadese, Teklemariam Medhin of Eritrea, Tariku Bekele, Kiprop and others.
With 3,200m to go, the race was clearly one of both speed and strategy. Masai, Muchiri, Bekele, Rupp and Kenenisa Bekele were most in the mix. Rupp sat in fourth place with six laps to go, right ahead of Kenenisa Bekele and Farah.
Farah took the lead with four laps left, and the pace ratcheted up as Gebre Gebremariam of Ethiopia took his turn at the lead. hWen the sprint was on, Rupp came from fourth to second as he closed on Farah. That left Tariku Bekele in third in 27:31.43 and Kenenisa, one of the greatest runners in history, fourth in 27:32.44. Ritzenhein finished 13th in 27:45.89 and Tegenkamp was 19th in 28:18.26.
USA, Jamaica dominate women’s 100
With the U.S. and Jamaica taking up five lanes in the women’s 100m final, a battle was in the works. The outcome was the best top-to-bottom race in women’s 100m history that saw Jeter (Gardena, Calif.) edged for gold by the defending Olympic champion, fast-starting Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce of Jamaica, who won in 10.75. Jeter’s 10.78 was the fastest runner-up time ever in the Olympics. Jamaica’s Veronica Campbell-Brown finished well to nab the bronze at 10.81, the best-ever third-place time, and Tianna Madison’s (Sanford, Fla.) lifetime-best 10.85 was the best fourth-place time in any competition, anywhere, in history. Allyson Felix (Santa Clarita, Calif.) clocked a PR 10.89 to place fifth.
Earlier in the day Jeter won semifinal heat 1 in 10.83, the fastest-ever legal-wind Olympic semifinal, while Felix was second in heat 2 in 10.94 and Madison was second in heat 3 in a then personal-best of 10.92.
Claye claims bronze
Competition in the men’s long jump rivaled the 10,000 for shifts in place and position. In the end, Claye came away with the bronze with a best mark of 8.12m/26-7.75.
After opening with a 7.98m/ 26-2.25 jump, Claye improved in the second round to 8.07m/26-5.75, putting him in second place. He held that position until he was knocked to fifth during a tumultuous fourth round of jumping that saw all but first place traded. Undeterred, Clay responded in that fourth round with his farthest leap of 8.12m/26-7.75 to retake second by 1cm over Sweden’s Michael Torneus.
He was knocked to third by Mitchell Watt of Australia in the fifth round when the Aussie jumped 8.13m/26-8.25, leaving Claye in third, 1cm back. At that point, Only 3cm separated fifth and second as Greg Rutherford of Great Britain was firmly in the lead with the eventual winning jump of 8.31m/27-3.23. Watt improved to 8.17m/26-9.75 in the final round and Claye fouled, giving him the bronze.
Marquise Goodwin (Austin, Texas) fouled on his first attempt, leaped a cautious 7.80m/25-7.25 in the second round, and his third jump of 7.76/25-5.5 left him ninth – one spot short of the final eight cut-off for earning three more attempts.
Rupp (5,000m), Jeter (200m, 4×100 relay) and Clay (triple jump) all have at least one more event to contest at these Games.
Finals roundup
2008 Olympic champion Stephanie Brown-Trafton (Galt, Calif.) opened the women’s discus with a throw of 63.01m/206-8 to sit in fifth place after one round of throwing; that mark was to remain her best of the day and she finished eighth. Sandra Perkovic of Croatia won with the farthest throw in Olympic or World competition since 1996 at 69.11m/226-9 in round three. Russia’s Darya Pischalnikova claimed silver with 67.56m/221-8 and Yanfeng Li of China took the bronze with 67.22/220-6.
The youngest athlete on Team USA, Trevor Barron (Bethel Park, Pa.) finished 26th in the men’s 20km race walk in 1:22:46 in a race in which Ding Chen of China was first (1:18:46), Erick Barrondo of Guatemala was second (1:18:57) and Zhen Wang of China was third (1:19:25). Barron was on pace to set a personal best through the halfway mark, but after receiving two red cards by the 12km mark he slowed his pace rather than risking disqualification.
Sharon Day (Costa Mesa, Calif.) had the third-best performance of her career in the heptathlon, scoring 6,232 points to place 16th. Great Britain’s Jessica Ennis smashed her national record to win by 306 points with 6,955, ahead of Lilli Schwarzkopf of Germany (6,649) and Tatyana Chernova of Russia (6,628). Chantae McMillan (Rolla, Mo.) ended up 29th with 5,688 points, while Hyleas Fountain (Daytona Beach, Fla.) withdrew prior to the 800 meters with lower back pain.
Heating Up
American women will occupy three of eight lanes in Monday’s 400m final. American record holder Sanya Richards-Ross (Austin, Texas) won the first semifinal Saturday night in 50.07, American indoor record holder Francena McCorory (Hampton, Va.) won heat 2 in 50.19, and 2004 4x400m gold medalist DeeDee Trotter (Orlando, Fla.) was second in the third semifinal in 49.87.
Three Americans will compete in Monday’s final of the men’s 400m hurdles. Two-time Olympic gold medalist and defending champ Angelo Taylor (Atlanta, Ga.) was second in heat 2 in 47.95, Michael Tinsley (Round Rock, Texas) won heat 3 in 48.18, and defending silver medalist Kerron Clement (Los Angeles, Calif.) qualified on time by placing third in heat 1 in 48.12.
Competition resumes Sunday morning with the women’s marathon.
Team USA Medal Count – 5 total
Silver (2)
Carmelita Jeter, W100, 10.78
Galen Rupp, M10,000m, 27:30.90
Bronze (3)
Will Claye (San Diego, Calif.), MLJ, 8.12m/26-7.75
Reese Hoffa (Athens, Ga.), MSP, 21.23m/69-8
Athlete Quotes
Galen Rupp, 10,000m: “I’m thrilled for Mo. It’s unreal. Two training partners coming in first and second. I couldn’t be happier. I wouldn’t be where I am today without him. I’m the lucky one – I get to train with the best middle distance runner in the world.
“I knew if I could be close to Mo in the end good things would happen, so I was just kind of keying off of him, and I saved a little bit for the last 200, last 150, last 100 and even last 50. At this level you are never going to get in the top three if you can’t beat somebody in that last bit. That is something we’ve been working on for years now and it is awesome to see it come through.”
Matt Tegenkamp, 10,000m: “To close the way
they did, it was brutal, and not unexpected. I just thought I would respond better. That was not even a kick, that was a grind. That was a 5k race within a 10; a championship 5.”
Dathan Ritzenhein, 10,000m: “When we started as slow as we did, I knew it was going to pick up at some point, and I was ready for it and covered it well, but there were a couple of guys in there I knew wouldn’t be in the pace for long, and unfortunately I got stuck behind someone. I tried to work my way up right until the end, but unfortunately I spent a good seven laps just off the pace and it hurt me in the end.
Carmelita Jeter, 100m: “I am so blessed to be there. It was a tough race. I gave it my all. I got a medal at the Olympics, and it feels so good. The crowd was alive and my family are all here; it means a lot to me. It was a power-filled final. I’m just glad I got to the finish. I hope I represented the USA. It was my first Olympics and I ran a season best and got silver.”
Allyson Felix, 100m: “The start was typical, it just needs work. I’m happy I got a personal best, and I just feel really good going into the 200, and my speed is where it needs to be and I am motivated. I’m feeling really good.”
Tianna Madison, 100m: “I got in the blocks and thought this is the time for a perfect start. Anything less than first smarts a bit, but I looked at the board and saw 10.84 and I thought ‘we did it.’ When it was time to put up a time, I did it, and I am just so proud of myself and the team I have behind me, my husband John and my coach Rana. I feel like I won, I really do.
Will Claye, Long Jump: “It is awesome. Long jump is an event where people have counted me out, people don’t know me as a long jumper. To come here and medal has given me even more confidence in the triple jump, and God-willing I can get the gold medal in triple jump. This is surreal. The crowd is crazy for everyone. My family is here, and this feels like home to me. I couldn’t ask for a better competition.”
Marquise Goodwin, Long Jump: “I started off, fouled my first jump which was my farthest jump. It went down from there. I couldn’t get on the board. Disappointing day. I let everybody down, but I’m glad to be here. Will Claye is out there representing USA, most importantly we have somebody in the final; he’s gonna get a medal. Lot of people here are Olympians, only a few get a medal, and I’m not quite there. I can’t call myself one of those guys.”
Stephanie Brown-Trafton, Discus: “I was in sixth going into the last three rounds. My second throw was around 66 meters, but it was out of sector, so that was disappointing, because I was feeling kind of lackluster today. I didn’t have a lot of energy today, so you know having the best throw be just out of sector, who knows? I don’t know if it would have put me in medal position, but it may have given me some inspiration to throw a little farther. I’m not necessarily happy with the results today, but as a season overall, I can’t complain about being at the Olympic final, making it to the top eight. I’d love to walk out with a medal, but it just didn’t happen today.”
Trevor Barron, 20km race walk: “I felt good. I decided I was going to go with the pack as long as I could. Once they picked it up a little faster than I was willing to go, I started to get a few red cards, and at that point I started to slow down. I had two cards by 12k, so I had to play the last 8 safe. Overall it was great. This is once every four years that we have a crowd like this and it is motivating. I had people cheering for me that I’ve never seen before, and that was exciting.”
Sharon Day, Heptathlon: “I felt good about the 800. It was a roller coaster ride; there were definitely some lows, definitely some highs, but good overall. Sometimes you have expectations and you don’t always meet those, but with every event you have to put them behind you and move on.”
Michael Tinsley, 400m Hurdles: “I was very pleased. It was a good race today. Tomorrow I am going to do the same thing – execute and focus on my lane.”
Kerron Clement, 400m Hurdles: (on what he will do differently in the final) “I’m just going to wait, stay focused, zone in and run a little harder.”
Angelo Taylor, 400m Hurdles: “The first eight hurdles were good. Nine and 10 not so good. I will just have to look at film and correct.”
(on if he is ready to defend his title): “Oh yeah, most definitely.”
Sanya Richards-Ross, 400m: “The race went really well. Coach wanted me to execute to 350, I felt like I did to 300 and I’m happy. I was very pleased with the execution. I’m so happy three Americans are in the final and I’m happy to be leading the charge.”
Dee Trotter, women’s 400m: “I know you all want to know about my glitter face. Today it is like an explosion on my face. A little more dramatic than yesterday. Tomorrow I will bring it bigger and better.”
(On what she will do to prepare): “Rest. Pray. Recover. I will rely on the fantastic team USA Track & Field has put together.
Francena McCorory, women’s 400m (on her plan for tomorrow): “Just to execute and get out and do what my coach tells me to do. I will just pray and just give it all I got.”
Alberto Salazar, coach of Galen Rupp and Mo Farah: “The race plan for Mo and Galen was we felt they could outsprint anybody in the race, and that we didn’t care if it was a fast pace or slow pace, they weren’t going to try to win it until the last 400, maybe even 200m. I’ll be honest, I thought we were going to medal, and I thought we were going to get 1-2. It’s not something I was publicizing…but I was sure we would get two medals…It was overwhelming, it is the greatest feeling perhaps that I’ve ever had, even greater than anything I ever did in my own athletic career. Other than getting married and my kids’ births, I would say this is the best feeling I’ve ever had in my life.”
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.