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My World Champs Predictions (involving Jamaican Athletes)

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  • My World Champs Predictions (involving Jamaican Athletes)

    MY WORLD CHAMPS PREDICTIONS (INVOLVING JAMAICAN ATHLETES)

    The IAAF World Athletic Championships are almost upon us. Last time out in Berlin in 2009 Usain Bolt and company lit up the championships making them the most memorable in Jamaica’s track and field history. As a result expectations are high for this renewal in Daegu, South Korea where the weather has not been the best in the last week or so.

    Despite the expectations, however, there are some realities we have to face with regards to what was accomplished in 2009 and what will be accomplished over the 10 days of the championships in 2011. Injuries and change of form will affect Jamaica’s output at these games and my predictions will reflect those realities.

    So let’s begin.
    These are my selected results.

    MEN’S 100-metre dash – Usain Bolt, Asafa Powell, Yohan Blake. Bolt’s form has been in question all season. This has been due primarily to the fact that he has not been as dominant this season as we have seen him over the past two and a half seasons when he recorded the fastest times in history over the short sprints. But while Bolt is not at his best, he still knows how to win and that is why he will prevail over Powell who is perhaps in the form of his life and the talented and fast-rising Blake.

    MEN’S 200 metres – Usain Bolt, Walter Dix, Christophe LeMaitre. The 200 metres has been poor this year with Bolt’s 19.86s being the fastest time in the world by far. As far as I am concerned Bolt has a lock on this event with the American Walter Dix and the Frenchman battling for the other two medals.

    MEN’S 400 metres – Leshawn Merritt, Kirani James, Jermaine Gonzales. Merritt will defend his title simply because he is the only man in the field who has gone under 44 seconds and he has had 21 months to prepare. He will hit form after the rounds and win a close one over James and Gonzales who may have run out of time to prepare for those rounds following knee surgery that caused his early season preparation to be delayed by about four months.

    MEN’S 110-metre hurdles – Dayron Robles, Liu Xiang, David Oliver. This race features the three fastest sprint hurdlers in history but Robles’ sublime hurdling skills and Xiang’s fluid style will overcome the powerful Oliver who has been fastest over last season. Dwight Thomas could get in if the big three mess up but only if he puts his perfect race together and gets close to 13-seconds flat.

    MEN’s 400-metre hurdles – Angelo Taylor, Bershawn Jackson, Javier Culson. Taylor and Jackson always bring their ‘A’ game to championships and will out-work Culson in the finals. Jamaican prospects Leford Green and Isa Phillips should be in the finals with Green the most likely to medal given deliberate progression this season under the guidance of Lennox Graham who is hoping his young charge will be in the shape of his life for these championships. The lack of races since the national championships though could work against Green.

    MEN’S 4×100 metre relay – Jamaica, USA, Trinidad. Once Jamaica gets the baton round the gold is theirs. Too much talent as compared to too little for the USA without Tyson Gay and Mike Rodgers for these championships.

    MEN’S 4×400 – USA, Bahamas, Belgium. Jamaica does not have sufficient depth to medal in this event, especially with the talented Ricardo Chambers out with yet another injury. The team of Gonzales, Green and Hylton are a man short.

    WOMEN’s 100 metres – Veronica Campbell Brown, Carmelita Jeter, Kelli-Ann Baptiste. Defending champion Shelly Ann Fraser Pryce could end up among the medals but as of now there are still too many questions about her conditioning for me to include her in the medals. However, if she comes out in good shape she will be contending for gold.

    WOMEN’S 200 metres – Veronica Campbell Brown, Carmelita Jeter, Allyson Felix. The 400 metres will sap some of Felix’s leg power and it will cost her in the 200 metre finals where she will be up against two women who are much faster and who she will have to catch down the stretch.

    WOMEN’s 400 metres – Amantle Montsho, Sanya Richards, Allyson Felix.
    Montsho is the woman to beat this season and her improved strength will be too much for the Americans down the stretch. Rosemarie Whyte (49.84 pb) will have to bring her ‘A’ game to be among the medals but I believe the quality of the top three will be too much to overcome. Shericka Williams has not shown the form that would give her supporters any confidence and she would have to come with her personal best 49.32 if she hopes she challenge for a medal.

    WOMEN’S 100-metre hurdles – Sally Pearson, Kelly Wells, Danielle Carruthers. No defending champion Brigette Foster Hylton and no Deloreen Ennis London means no shot at a medal for Jamaica’s women.

    WOMEN’S 400-metre hurdles - Kaliese Spencer, Lashinda Demus, Melaine Walker. No woman has ever defended her world title in this event and I expect this trend to continue. If there is any change in the order it would be Walker coming away with the silver because she is as tough as nails and if it comes down to guts she will get the better of Demus. After her impressive 52.79s in London, the fastest time in the world this year by more than half a second, the gold is Spencer’s to lose.

    WOMEN’S 800 metres - Mariya Savinova, Jenny Meadows, Yuliya Rusanova. Kenia Sinclair will have to find a time close to 1:57.00 to come within sniffing distance. She would hope that her 1500 metre runs this season will allow her to get there. Caster Semenya, contrary to popular belief, is not playing possum and may not even make the finals.

    WOMEN’S 4×100 - USA, Jamaica, Bahamas. USA is too strong for a Jamaican team that has too many questions surrounding Shelly Ann Fraser Pryce, Kerron Stewart and Sherone Simpson.

    WOMEN’S 4x400m – USA, Jamaica, Russia. This will be a dog fight for the top three places but the Americans with Felix and Richards will be a little too strong for the Jamaicans and the Russians.

    http://gleanerblogs.com/sports/?p=692
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

  • #2
    [QUOTE]
    Karl you said

    MEN’S 4×400 – USA, Bahamas, Belgium. Jamaica does not have sufficient depth to medal in this event, especially with the talented Ricardo Chambers out with yet another injury. The team of Gonzales, Green and Hylton are a man short.

    We have this guy name Bolt that is really not needed on the 4*100 team why not let him anchor this team, this team is a winner with Bolt, time for some out the box thinking, we have a ton of man that can run the 4*100 let bolt anchor the 4*4. Riker and Leaford can run even with the first two legs on pretty much all the teams, then gunz and bolt take it home.

    If Ja sitting at 6 or 7 gold pre relay we should go for it, it is difference between winning the race for most gold.

    Comment


    • #3
      That is an interesting suggestion...but I am thinking Bolt is not in top shape and the 400M is a 'dry mouth, high feeling 'like yuh jus smoke', chest burning last 80 - 90 meters run...

      ...but that is out of the box good thinking because I am with you a fit Bolt can surely run that relay leg in 43 change.

      Good suggestion, boss!
      ...and as you said we can run away with that 4 x 100M without Bolt...and run below 37.5 too!
      "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

      Comment


      • #4
        Is just one 400,just the final, him can handle that easy!!

        Comment


        • #5
          Not a Good Suggestion!

          Originally posted by Karl View Post
          ...but that is out of the box good thinking because I am with you a fit Bolt can surely run that relay leg in 43 change.

          Good suggestion, boss!
          ...and as you said we can run away with that 4 x 100M without Bolt...and run below 37.5 too!
          Not a good suggestion! In fact, it is a poor suggestion from a poster who I have a very high opinion of (that is, Stonigut).

          Before I look at the mile relay, let me just say that Usain Bolt has reached almost legendary status already. Among the several reasons for this was his membership on the fastest relay team in history, the Jamaican team that ran 37.10 seconds in Beijing back in 2008. This helped to cement Bolt’s superstar status.

          Continuing my look at the personal aspect for Bolt, based on Stonigut’s suggestion you would like to have him run on a second or third-rate 4x400-meter relay team, which whether anyone likes it or not, Jamaica’s men have been for several years now. I doubt if Bolt (who, in any case, dislikes the 400-meter race) will improve our chances beyond a silver. At the same time, the glowing status he currently holds will glow just a bit less.

          On the other hand, and this is the important factor which was ignored in the post above, Bolt on the 4x100-meter relay team improves our chances significantly of smashing our own world record, thereby cementing ourselves firmly as the team which, by the start of the second decade of the 21st century, had run the THREE fastest 4x100-meter times in history!

          Without going into individual times for 400-meter athletes from the USA, Bahamas and Jamaica (I can easily do this, but nobody reads my posts closely anyway, so why bother?), the Jamaican 4x400-meter men’s relay team without Usain Bolt does not necessarily stand a great against a Bahamian mile relay team with 400-meter men like Demetrius Pinder, Chris Brown, Ramon Miller, etc. or a USA team simply by desperately flinging Bolt on anchor!

          What the hell is this? Is Bolt now the official savior of a country that likes to boast about being the Caribbean “sprint factory,” a term first used by NBC’s Bob Costas at the 1996 Olympic Games?

          In fact, the fight for the 4x400-meter gold medal between the Bahamas and the USA will be closer than many probably suspect. I see even Belgium as having a better chance at a bronze than Jamaica.

          Maybe I’m still bitter at our eighth place finish in Beijing? I dunno….

          Comment

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