Helene Elliott

Track and field trials will haunt also-rans

Allyson Felix suffers the biggest upset in the 100-meter dash final, and narrow wins and misses are occurring regularly and will surely happen again before the trials conclude next Sunday.
Helene Elliott
June 29, 2008
EUGENE, Ore. -- A leg cramp at the worst possible time. Or the doubly unspeakable bad luck of both calves cramping at once.

Going out fast in the early rounds and having nothing left at the end.

 
An incomprehensible, unthinkable miscalculation.

After two days of the U.S. Olympic track and field trials, the margin between making the team and watching the Beijing Games from the couch has been established as agonizingly tiny -- yet big enough to haunt the non-qualifiers for the next four years.

In the biggest upset, Allyson Felix of Los Angeles, touted as a potential champion in the sprints and relays, finished fifth in the 100-meter dash final Saturday, two places past the cutoff for a Beijing berth.

With a time of 10.96 seconds she was merely .06 of a second behind third-place finisher Lauryn Williams.

Not that it's likely to be much consolation, but 100-meter world champion Veronica Campbell-Brown of Jamaica finished fourth in her country's Olympic trials Saturday and may not get a Beijing berth in that event.

The difference for Campbell-Brown between a sure spot and limbo?

A hundredth of a second.

Events here have played out like that too. Narrow wins and misses are occurring regularly and will surely happen again and again before the trials conclude next Sunday.

"I've been on something like six [national] teams, every one since 2001," Williams said, "and this is the hardest team to make, for sure. And the one I'm most grateful for."

Felix, who's also entered in the 200, said she had no regrets.

"I don't think I could have done anything more," she said, her composure intact even if her quadruple gold chances were not.

Not being able to do anything more was the problem for Marshevet Hooker, who had the fastest times in the first two rounds but finished fourth Saturday in 10.93 seconds.

"It was a great field," Hooker said.

Williams said she was so fearful of missing the team, she had nightmares Friday about friends texting her to console her. Not to worry. The Athens silver medalist finished behind Muna Lee (10.85) and Torri Edwards' 10.90 and was as surprised as anyone that Hooker didn't make the team.

"People were saying she was the one to beat up to that point and they kind of had her as a shoo-in and winning," Williams said.

"It's a testimony to how great the field was. It was anybody's game and at the last minute you'd better be able to pull something off, and that's what I did."

Not everyone has been able to come up with that miracle.

Katie McGregor was fourth in the women's 10,000 Friday for the second successive Olympic trials. And pole vaulter Tommy Skipper, a three-time NCAA champion at Oregon -- which gave him home-pit advantage at Hayward Field -- was eliminated Friday after he developed cramps in both legs and missed all three of his attempts at 18 feet and a half-inch.





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