My Top Five: Relays Where Jamaica Disappointed
(Part I: The Women)
Although less than stellar baton exchanges have in the past ruined the chances of Jamaica’s female 4x100-meter relay teams to win gold at the level of the Olympic Games and the IAAF World Championships, sometimes injury has been the culprit. Below are my “Top 5 Women’s Sprint Relays” where, in my opinion, Jamaica could have won the gold but for injury or questionable baton passing.
2008 Olympic Games (Beijing):
Virtually everyone expected Jamaica’s all-time most superb women’s relay team to not only win the 4x100-meter gold medal, but to break the world record in the process. And that team had promised much, as it was the first time in history that a women’s relay team was comprised of four athletes who had ALL won gold and silver medals in the sprints at that specific global meet!
Sadly, backstretch runner Sherone Simpson was not able to connect with curve runner Kerron Stewart, and soon the end of the 20-meter exchange zone was reached, ending the team’s chance at a medal.
1992 Olympic Games (Barcelona):
The year before, at the 1991 IAAF World Championships in Tokyo, the 4x100-meter women’s team of Dahlia Duhaney, Juliet Cuthbert, Beverley McDonald and Merlene Ottey had won Jamaica’s first women’s relay gold medal at a global event.
In 1992 at the Barcelona Olympic Games, the Jamaican women were expected to do the same. Unfortunately, ace sprinter Juliet Cuthbert suffered an injury during the final and so the team was not able to complete the race.
1996 Olympic Games (Atlanta):
Thanks to one of the greatest anchor legs ever run by any athlete, the great Merlene Ottey was able to run down Russia’s Irina Privalova and snatch the bronze medal behind the Pauline Davis-anchored Bahamas (silver) and the Gwen Torrence-anchored USA (gold). The problem for Jamaica was not only did both the Bahamas and the USA have very good baton exchanges, but more so because curve runner Nikole Mitchell suffered a hamstring pull some ten meters or so before the handoff. In other words, the injured Nikole had to literally limp the final few meters in order to hand the baton to Merlene.
2003 IAAF World Championships (Paris):
Brigitte Foster-Hylton was running anchor on a solid Jamaican team when she pulled up, and Jamaica did not complete the race, which was won by France (anchored by Christine Arron) with the Torri Edwards-anchored USA a very close second.
2000 Olympic Games (Sydney):
Yes, the Jamaican team of Tayna Lawrence, Veronica Campbell, Beverley McDonald and Merlene Ottey won the silver behind the powerful Bahamas squad (Sevatheda Fynes, Chandra Sturrup, Pauline Davis and Debbie Ferguson), but there is no question in my mind that, if not for the messed-up baton exchange between McDonald and Ottey, Jamaica would have won its first Olympic Games 4x100-meter gold medal.
My only consolation of sorts is that the USA team of Chryste Gaines, Torri Edwards, Nanceen Perry and Marion Jones had horrible baton changes throughout, in particular the exchange between curve runner Perry and anchor leg runner Jones (where Perry had to literally hold Jones’s hand and place the baton in it).
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