Showing posts with label 100-metre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 100-metre. Show all posts

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Speed demons - Islander Jared Connaughton will be among sprinters going up against Olympic speed king Usain Bolt in Toronto


Speed demons
Islander Jared Connaughton will be among sprinters
going up against Olympic speed king Usain Bolt in Toronto

CHARLES REID
The Guardian


Jared Connaughton of New Haven, P.E.I.
Jared Connaughton of New Haven, P.E.I.

Bullet proof and thick-skinned describes many an Olympic-quality sprinter. It's born from knowing there's always someone faster.

In this case, its the 100-metre men’s sprint at the inaugural Festival of Excellence exhibition track meet on Thursday, June 11, in Toronto.

It’s where Jared Connaughton of New Haven and six other sprinters will be staring down Usain Bolt, the 2008 Olympic 100-metres gold medallist and world record holder (9.69) who is considered in the world of track and field to be the fastest man alive.

But ask Connaughton, 23, what the race holds for him and he’s blunt with his answer, despite the eight-man field boasting half with sub-10 second times.

“I’m pretty confident. The last three or four weeks training has been a breakthrough,” said Connaughton from Arlington, Texas, where he lives and trains. “How that fares against Usain, I don’t know, but against the rest of the field it could be formidable.”

The men’s 100 metres headlines the festival, which also includes an 800-metre women’s wheelchair race, men’s and women’s 400-metre races, men’s 110-metre hurdles, a men’s and women’s mile and women’s 100-metre hurdles.

A strong 100-metre lineup includes: American Shawn Crawford, who won Olympic gold in 2004 in the 200 metres and a silver behind Bolt in the same event last summer at the Beijing Olympics; Anson Henry of Pickering, Ont., (Connaughton’s teammate on Canada’s 4x100-metre men’s relay team); Jamaicans Marvin Anderson and Mario Forsythe; Americans Bernard Williams and Ivory Williams.

The men’s 100-metres lifts off at 8:21 p.m.

TSN will be broadcasting the festival live.

Bolt is the lightning rod at the event.

His reported $250,000 appearance fee dwarfs Connaughton’s $1,000 guaranteed payday.

Prize money is available, but is doled out according to finish.

Bolt is coming off an injured left foot suffered after an April car crash last month in his Jamaican homeland but is now healthy and back running.

It’s a good thing, too, as he’s the only runner eliciting that kind of cash and the main draw.

Tickets for one of Varsity Stadium’s 7,000 seats range from $75 to $250.

Connaughton, a 200-metre semifinalist in Beijing, got the invite when his agent worked the organizers, who wanted more Canadians in the race, and secured him a spot.

And while he’s not treating it as a major championship, it’s his first first race in front of a large home country audience and he carries certain goals.

“I’d really like to go and run (between) 10.01 and 10.10. I ran a 10.26 in April and I feel at least two 10ths faster than that. Mathematically, that’s a 10.06,” said Connaughton, who ran the fastest 100-metre race in the country last year in 10.15. “The focus is always on myself, not Bolt. I’m putting my efforts solely on myself. He’s not focused on me.”

Connaughton leaves for Toronto on June 9.

After the race, he’s returning to P.E.I. on June 12 until the Canadian senior track and field championships, June 25-28, also in Toronto.

Connaughton then joins Henry, Hank Palmer and Brian Barnett on the Canadian men’s relay team at the world track and field championships in Berlin in August.



Monday, June 2, 2008

Bolt strikes for 100m world record at New York meeting

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5hh2IjM6I0US9yn9Y8wwN8EBRlQAQ

Bolt strikes for 100m world record

at New York meeting

NEW YORK (AFP) — Jamaica's Usain Bolt set the 100m world record here Saturday, clocking 9.72sec at the Reebok Grand Prix athletics meeting.

Bolt, 21, lowered the record of 9.74sec set by compatriot Asafa Powell at Rieti, Italy, last September.

With a favorable wind of 1.7m/sec, Bolt finished ahead of 100m and 200m World Champion Tyson Gay of the United States (9.85) and American Darvis Patton (10.07).

Bolt, the 200m world championships silver medallist, had signalled his arrival on the 100m scene in this Olympic year in early May, when he clocked 9.76 - then the second-fastest time in history - at a meeting in Jamaica.

Bolt's performance on a night disrupted by thunderstorms and lightning, jolted a crowd of 6,490 that included a big Jamaican contingent.

Bolt had already set the athletics world buzzing on May 3, when he clocked 9.76 - second fastest in history - at a meeting in Kingston.

Even after that, the lanky Jamaican, runner-up to Gay in the 200m at last year's world championships, had said he thought the longer sprint was for him.

China's superstar hurdler Liu Xiang opted not to defend his 110m title, pulling out of the race complaining of a tight hamstring.

The world record holder, Olympic and world champion still made an appearance on the track, standing next to an announcer as he explained to the crowd Liu's decision not to risk the defense of his Olympic title in Beijing in August.

Liu then addressed the large Chinese contingent in the stands in his native language.

In his absence, world silver medalist Terrence Trammell won in 13.11sec.

Women's 100m world champion Veronica Campbell of Jamaica easily won the renewal of her rivalry with American Lauryn Williams.

After a false start, Campbell powered to victory in 10.91sec, fastest in the world this year.

"I'm running good," said Campbell, who improved on the 10.93 posted by American Allyson Felix in Doha on May 9. "My object is to run faster than I did last year. I accomplished that and I'm happy.

"I'm so happy to come in and execute the race as planned."

She finished ahead of Americans Marshavet Hooker (10.94) and Muna Lee (10.97), while Williams was fourth (11.13).

Wallace Spearmon won the 200m with a time of 20.07, second-fastest of the year behind Gay.

"It was my first 200 (of the year)," Spearmon said. "Not a bad one, not a great one, but it's a start."

America's former world athlete of the year Sanya Richards posted a dominant 400m victory in 50.04. Jamaica's Novlene Williams was second in 50.70.

Kenya's Paul Koech set a US record in the men's 3,000 meter steeplechase with a solo run from four laps out, clocking 8:01.85.

More News Stories on Bolt's 100m World Record

Monday, May 5, 2008

Connaughton's win expected to open doors to big events

http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/index.cfm?sid=131820&sc=99


Connaughton's win expected to open doors to big events
Island runner prevails in 100-metre event
The Guardian

Jared Connaughton of New Haven, P.E.I., turned in a time of 10.15 seconds to win the 100-metre event at the University of Texas at Arlington open track meet Saturday.

The UTA Maverick graduate, running unattached, recorded the 10th fastest time in the world this outdoor season and beat Ontario's Justyn Warner of Texas Christian and unattached Tyree Gailes. Both were race timed in 10.31.

In doing so, Connaughton now has his Olympic A standard. Ontario's Shannon King of Elite Edge Track was fourth in 10.34.

His 10.15 is expected to open the doors to highly-prestigious meets like The Golden League in Germany and Oslo this summer as well as Brazil.

Connaughton said he felt he reached a bit at the end of the race and it certainly was not perfect and he felt he has more in the tank.

"Even though it is my personal best to date, I feel the best is yet to come,' he said.

Connaughton has the best 100-metre (10.15) and 200 (20.70) in Canada.

This time follows a Canadian 100-metre best time at LSU and impressive third legs of Canadian national team men's relay A squad, a second-place finish at the LSU Alumni Gold meet and fifth at the Penn Relays U.S. vs. World.