Track And Field News
Discuss (8 comments)June 1, 2008
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Bolt sets world record in 100 meters at Reebok Like a bolt out of nowhere, Usain Bolt is now the world's fastest man. The Jamaican sprinter, who doesn't even consider the 100 meters his best race, set the world record Saturday night with a time of 9.72 seconds at the Reebok Grand Prix, .02 seconds faster than the old record held by his countryman, Asafa Powell. Bolt was using the 100 for "speed work" and to avoid having to run the more grueling 400, when, suddenly, he ran the world's second-fastest time last month at 9.76. Even then, he said he wasn't sure if he would give up the 400 meters for the 100 for the Beijing Olympics. |
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Never Satisfied, American Vaulter Edges Upward Sixteen years ago, when track and field authorities concluded that women could pole-vault without breaking their necks, Jenn Stuczynski was a 10-year-old in Fredonia, N.Y., participating in softball, volleyball, basketball and golf. Now, assuming she makes the United States team, and she should, she will be a medal contender this summer in the pole vault in the Beijing Olympics. In the last 12 months, she has raised the American record to 15 feet 10 ½ inches, then to 16 feet, then, two weeks ago in Carson, Calif., to 16- ¾. The only woman who has jumped higher is Yelena Isinbayeva of Russia, who set the world record of 16-5 1/4 three years ago. On Saturday, at the Reebok Grand Prix track meet at Icahn Stadium on Randalls Island, Stuczynski won at 15-9 and missed three times at a world record attempt of 16-5 ½. Her second try at the record came close. |




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