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"Women’s
discus is US’s first track
and field gold"
BEIJING (AP)—Their most
accomplished hurdler went down,
their best sprinter went out.
Instead of racking up medals,
the Americans entered the fourth
day of the Olympic track meet
a grand disappointment in the
making.
Then up stepped Stephanie Brown
Trafton. Then Jenn Stuczynski.
Then a trio of hurdlers. Suddenly,
a U.S. team that entered Monday
with four medals and no golds
had nine medals, two of them
gold.
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In the 400-meter hurdles, the last
event of the evening, Angelo Taylor
led a U.S. sweep—the first by
any country since 1960. Winning silver
and bronze were Kerron Clement and
Bershawn Jackson.
Moments before, Stuczynski was assured
of a pole vault silver. She then watched
as Russia’s Yelena Isinbayeva
went higher and higher, culminating
in a new world record.
Those medals were not huge surprises.
Not so the gold by Brown Trafton,
the American team’s first of
these Olympics.
Considered a field filler more than
a medal contender, Brown Trafton threw
the discus 212 feet, 5 inches (64.74
meters) on her very first attempt—a
throw that held up.
“The Star-Spangled Banner”
finally played at the Bird’s
Nest. Brown Trafton stood higher than
anyone on the medals stand. Yes, a
tear or two came to eye, but mostly
she just stood there smiling.
“I came to the Bird’s
Nest to lay a golden egg, and that’s
what I did,” Brown Trafton said.
“I am surprised we haven’t
won more gold. But you know what?
I hope this sets a trend.”
The biggest disappointment of the
meet, of course, belonged to China,
which lost defending champion 110-meter
hurdler Liu Xiang, one of the country’s
biggest Olympic stars, to a foot injury.
He lined up for his first qualifying
heat, took a few strides out of the
blocks, heard a gun that signaled
a false start by another runner and
then tore his numbers off and limped
dejectedly to the tunnel, grimacing
and clutching his leg. A tendon in
his right foot flared up a couple
of days ago, leaving him unable to
go.
At least for the morning, the Liu
news sent everything else at this
meet to the back page—maybe
a good thing for an American team
off to an unexpectedly poor start.
Tyson Gay, the defending world champion,
didn’t make it out of semifinals
in the 100-meter dash—the race
won by Usain Bolt in a world-record
9.69 seconds. The Americans came up
with only one of six possible medals
in the men’s and women’s
sprints—a bad start to a meet
where they anticipated dominating
the medal count.
There were other low points: Moments
after Liu withdrew, two-time Olympic
silver medalist Terrence Trammell
scratched from the 110 hurdles, straining
his left hamstring and clearing only
one hurdle before pulling up in the
opening heat.
And in the 1,500, world champion Bernard
Lagat failed to make it out of qualifying,
as did American teammates Leo Manzano
and Lopez Lomong.
There was Deena Kastor, the American
record-holder, pulling out of the
marathon with a broken foot. There
was the 4-5-8 finish of the American
women in the 100; they protested that
there was a false start—by one
of them, no less— but that fell
on deaf ears.
Tyson Gay of United States leaves
the track after the men's 100-meter
semifinal during the athletics competitions
in the National Stadium at the Beijing
2008 Olympics in Beijing, Saturday,
Aug. 16, 2008..
Reese Hoffa was thought to have a
chance to lead an American sweep in
the shot put—a possible momentum
builder in the meet’s first
event—but Hoffa finished seventh
and the team settled only for Christian
Cantwell’s silver.
In fact, this was turning into a very
Jamaican celebration. Their women
swept the 100, and Bolt had his world
record and cruised through the quarterfinals
of the 200 on Monday, looking for
the first sprint double since Carl
Lewis in 1984.
But before that, a celebration for
Brown Trafton, who didn’t make
it out of Olympic qualifying four
years ago and had only two throws
over 200 feet before this year.
Not great credentials, but none of
that matters now.
She won the first gold for a U.S.
woman in the discus since Lillian
Copeland in 1932 and only the second
medal of any color since then.
The 28-year-old from Galt, Calif.,
said she recognized that the win was
a big deal—and not just for
herself.
“I’m surprised we haven’t
won more gold,” she said. “We
need as many gold as we can.”
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