USA TODAY US Edition

USA dominates in track and field

Contributi­ons from youngsters show future bright

- Paul Myerberg @paulmyerbe­rg USA TODAY Sports

The sprint distances belonged to Usain Bolt and Jamaica, as they have for the past three Olympic Games. Likewise with the longer distances, in which Kenya (and Mo Farah of Great Britain) again led the way.

New records were set. South Africa’s Wayde van Niekerk shattered Michael Johnson’s 17-yearold mark in the 400 meters. Kenyans set Olympic records in the men’s steeplecha­se and women’s 5,000. Ethiopia’s Almaz Ayana set a world record in the women’s 10,000.

There were memorable scenes. Bolt celebratin­g after his ninth career gold medal, crowing, “I am now the greatest.” The Bahamas’ Shaunae Miller diving across the finish line to capture gold in the women’s 400. Brazil’s Thiago Braz da Silva, the local hero, dueling France’s Renaud Lavillenie into the early hours of the morning before winning gold in the pole vault.

Then there was the USA. Leaving other countries to their individual stars and notable moments, the world’s dominant track and field power again lapped the field.

The USA claimed 32 medals: 13 gold, 10 silver and nine bronze. That’s the most for the USA in track since Los Angeles in 1984 (40) and the most in a non-boycotted Games since Los Angeles again in 1932. Only one other time between 1956 and this year (30, in 1992) had the USA even reached 30.

Only two other countries in Rio, Kenya with 13 medals and Jamaica with 11, collected doubledigi­t medals. Seven medals came from the middle distances and up.

To put the dominance into perspectiv­e, the USA took home as many medals as Kenya, Jamaica and Ethiopia combined.

They came from a variety of discipline­s, from sprints through longer distances, in jumps and throws, from male and female athletes. There were some firsts (women’s 1,500, 3,000 steeplecha­se, shot put) and plenty of “first time sinces.”

Ashton Eaton claimed his second gold medal in a row in the men’s decathlon. Likewise with Christian Taylor in the triple jump and the U.S. women in the 4x100 relay. The USA made history in the women’s 100-meter hurdles, becoming the first country to sweep the medal podium in the event.

Allyson Felix won another three Olympic medals to push her career total to nine; she is the most decorated female track athlete in U.S. history.

There were surprises. Sam Kendricks took bronze in the men’s pole vault. Ryan Crouser won the shot put — and set an Olympic record in the process — and Joe Kovacs took silver. Michelle Carter won the women’s shot put, the first gold ever for a U.S. woman in the event. A pair of medals came in the steeplecha­se; Emma Coburn was the first American to medal on the women’s side.

Matthew Centrowitz was the first American man to win gold in the 1,500 since 1908. Eventually, after appealing his original disqualifi­cation, Paul Chelimo (silver) became the first to medal in the men’s 5,000 since 1964. Jenny Simpson was the first to medal in the women’s 1,500.

There were records. Carter (20.63 meters) set the national record in the shot put.

Even in defeat, there were positives to come from the women’s marathon: Three runners finished inside the top nine, the best finish in the country’s history. And Galen Rupp became the first American man to medal since 2004 and the third since 1924.

And, admittedly, there were disappoint­ments. It’s hard to classify the failure of the men’s 4x100 relay as anything but a letdown: An exchange violation robbed the team of bronze, adding another footnote to the country’s inexplicab­le missteps in the discipline.

Yet the takeaway from the Rio Games won’t be simply of dominance. Come 2020, when the Olympics head to Tokyo, these Summer Games will be viewed as a changing of the guard, when the elder generation of U.S. track stars passed the baton to their younger teammates.

In sprints, 21-year-old Trayvon Bromell stands ready to fill the void left by Bolt’s retirement from Olympic competitio­n. Clayton Murphy, 21, and Boris Berian, 23, give the USA another pair of medal contenders in the 800 — where Murphy, also 21, already has a bronze to his credit.

Tori Bowie, 25, made the most of her Olympic debut, winning medals in the 100, the 200 and the 4x100 relay. Coburn is 25, Centrowitz is 26, and both are hitting their primes.

Crouser, 23, and Kovacs, 27, are poised to dominate in the shot put for years, as is Raven Saunders, the 20-year-old who finished fifth in the women’s event.

More than the medals themselves, it’s the performanc­es that will linger into Tokyo, where the USA will again be expected to dwarf the competitio­n. There’s the lesson from the Rio Games: The USA’s unequaled present in track and field is matched only by its future.

 ?? KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? The USA’s Emma Coburn races to a bronze medal in the women’s 3,000-meter steeplecha­se.
KIRBY LEE, USA TODAY SPORTS The USA’s Emma Coburn races to a bronze medal in the women’s 3,000-meter steeplecha­se.

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