We won the gold medal in the women’s 4x100-meter relay, and that’s the important thing. Of course, after watching our ultra-safe run, and also the way in which Debbie Ferguson-Mckenzie kept pace with Kerron, if the USA women had made it to the finals, it might have been a much different story! Remember that a USA team of Lauryn Williams, Allyson Felix, Muna Lee and Carmelita Jeter had run 41.58, the eighth fastest time in history, just a couple of weeks ago in Germany.
Our 42.06 seconds yesterday was nothing in comparison, and while a respectable time, certainly not an impressive one. In fact, it doesn’t even come near the 41.73 seconds ran by the quartet of Lawrence, Simpson, Bailey and Campbell-Brown in Athens five years ago!
But what make me realize how unimpressive our performance was is seeing how well the in-transition Bahamas team ran behind us to snatch the silver (42.29 seconds). Do you realize that this team was comprised of a mixture of a 19-year-old athlete, two “old” women, and a 400-meter sprinter running on a sprint relay team? To be specific:
Sheniqua Ferguson, a 19-year-old talent with a 100-meter personal best time of 11.38 and a 200-meter personal best of 22.85;
Chandra Sturrup, a woman who will be 38 years old in less than a month from now (her PB, set back in 2005, is 10.84, I believe);
Christine Amertil, a 30-year-old 400-meter runner who had never before medaled in an outdoor global meet, although she had made the 400-meter finals in Athens in 2004.
Debbie Ferguson, a 33-year-old woman who surely was the most overworked of all the athletes at the Berlin IAAF World Championships?! Debbie ran eight grueling rounds in the 100 and 200-meter races, and also ran in the semi-finals of the relay before returning to anchor her team! (I hope her government gives her special recognition for carrying such a heavy load.)
Yet our highly rated 4x100-meter team, which boasted two women with the two fastest times this season, and also boasted four women who had each made the finals of either the 100 or 200-meter races, could only manage 41.02 seconds with a fast-closing make-shift Bahamian team behind us?
I guess safe baton exchange was the name of the game!
In the case of the men, while we got an IAAF World Championships record, all I can say is look out for the USA and the Trinis in 2011. As in 2008, the curve running did not make an impact on me!
Our 42.06 seconds yesterday was nothing in comparison, and while a respectable time, certainly not an impressive one. In fact, it doesn’t even come near the 41.73 seconds ran by the quartet of Lawrence, Simpson, Bailey and Campbell-Brown in Athens five years ago!
But what make me realize how unimpressive our performance was is seeing how well the in-transition Bahamas team ran behind us to snatch the silver (42.29 seconds). Do you realize that this team was comprised of a mixture of a 19-year-old athlete, two “old” women, and a 400-meter sprinter running on a sprint relay team? To be specific:
Sheniqua Ferguson, a 19-year-old talent with a 100-meter personal best time of 11.38 and a 200-meter personal best of 22.85;
Chandra Sturrup, a woman who will be 38 years old in less than a month from now (her PB, set back in 2005, is 10.84, I believe);
Christine Amertil, a 30-year-old 400-meter runner who had never before medaled in an outdoor global meet, although she had made the 400-meter finals in Athens in 2004.
Debbie Ferguson, a 33-year-old woman who surely was the most overworked of all the athletes at the Berlin IAAF World Championships?! Debbie ran eight grueling rounds in the 100 and 200-meter races, and also ran in the semi-finals of the relay before returning to anchor her team! (I hope her government gives her special recognition for carrying such a heavy load.)
Yet our highly rated 4x100-meter team, which boasted two women with the two fastest times this season, and also boasted four women who had each made the finals of either the 100 or 200-meter races, could only manage 41.02 seconds with a fast-closing make-shift Bahamian team behind us?
I guess safe baton exchange was the name of the game!
In the case of the men, while we got an IAAF World Championships record, all I can say is look out for the USA and the Trinis in 2011. As in 2008, the curve running did not make an impact on me!
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