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Thursday, August 21, 2008

US men, women both flub baton handoffs in relay


BEIJING (AP)—The U.S. men and women both dropped the baton in the Olympic 400-meter relays Thursday night and failed to advance out of the first round.

First, men’s anchor Tyson Gay, part of the American team that won the relay at last year’s world championships, did not get the red metal stick from third-leg runner Darvis Patton.

Then, about 25 minutes later, women’s anchor Lauryn Williams flubbed her exchange with Torri Edwards, their baton dropping to the ground, too. At the 2004 Olympics, Williams started running too early and missed a handoff from Marion Jones in the final.

“If people want to assess the blame to me, that’s OK. I mean, I can take whatever it is that people are going to dish out,” Williams said. “We had good chemistry. The hand was back there. She was there. I don’t know what happened.”

Unlike the men, who stopped racing, Williams scrambled back on the wet track to pick up the baton and complete the lap—more than 6 seconds after first-place Belgium finished in 42.92. It was a nice gesture, but the U.S. was disqualified.

Jamaica, continuing its strong showing at the Bird’s Nest, won the other preliminary women’s heat in 42.24.

Earlier, when Gay reached back for his exchange, he never got a grasp of the baton, which tumbled.

Afterward, Gay and Patton both took the blame.

Gay, who also failed to reach the final in the individual 100, said he felt the baton and “then I went to grab it and there was nothing. It’s kind of the way it’s been happening to me this Olympics.”

He said he never before dropped a baton in a relay and that he and Patton practiced all week without missing a handoff.

“That’s Tyson Gay. He’s a humble guy,” Patton said. “But I know it’s my job to get the guy the baton, and I didn’t do that.”

The new chief executive officer of USA Track & Field, Doug Logan, promised “a comprehensive review” of all of the team’s programs.

“Included in this assessment,” he said, “will be the way we select, train and coach our relays.”

Trinidad and Tobago won the heat in which the American men ran, with a time of 38.26. In that first heat, only four of the eight teams managed to make it all the way around the one-lap race in a light rain.

Jamaica won the second heat in 38.31, with former 100 world record-holder Asafa Powell running the anchor leg. Usain Bolt, who broke the world records in the 100 and 200 while winning those gold medals, had the night off—save for a Bird’s Nest appearance to collect his 200 gold—but is expected to run in Friday’s relay final.

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