East Bay Times

Inside: The track and field trials come to a halt because of extreme heat.

- By Eddie Pells

EUGENE, ORE. >> The U.S. track and field trials came to a halt Sunday afternoon with temperatur­es reaching 108 degrees. One athlete, heptathlet­e Taliyah Brooks, was carted off the field in a wheelchair but was “OK,” her agent told The Associated Press.

Fans were filing into the stadium for the headline events of the final day of Olympic qualifying when, at around 3 p.m., the track announcer came onto the PA system and said action was being suspended due to extreme heat. He asked all spectators to evacuate.

Brooks was in fourth place after five of the seven events of the heptathlon, which is considered among the most grueling contests in track and field. She had been listed as a “DNS” — did not start — in the sixth event, the javelin. Her agent, Tony Campbell, said she had hopes of returning in the evening to compete.

The program was scheduled to resume at 8:30 p.m. PDT. Among those still waiting to secure spots in the Olympics were Noah Lyles in the men’s 200, and Dalilah Muhammad and Sydney McLaughlin, who were set to face off in the women’s 400-meter hurdles.

Earlier, JuVaughn Harrison won the high jump, contested under cloudless skies in 105-degree temperatur­es. Harrison was also entered in the long jump, which had been pushed back to the evening.

A record heat wave settled in over the Pacific Northwest for the second day, with the temperatur­e in Portland, two hours north on Interstate 5, reaching an all-time record of 110.

With the humidity, Eugene felt like 113 in mid-afternoon. Third-place high jump finisher Shelby McEwen called the heat “mind blowing.”

“It’s crazy. I wasn’t expecting it to be this humid,” he said. “We just had to be mentally locked in, mentally prep ourselves for it, stay hydrated and go out and get the job done.”

In events from Saturday night, Brittney Reese made her fourth Olympic team in the long jump with a winning leap of 23-43/4.

Reese won gold in the long jump at the 2012 London Olympics, then took the silver at the Rio Games. She’s also a seven-time world champion.

Grant Holloway didn’t get the world record, but he did become an Olympian.

Holloway ran the 110 hurdles in 12.96 seconds, finishing first in the event.

Holloway ran a fast 12.81 during the semifinals, leading to speculatio­n that he might break the world record of 12.80 set by Aries Merrit in 2012.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Taliyah Brooks is helped off the track after collapsing during the heptathlon event at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials on Sunday in Eugene, Ore.
CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Taliyah Brooks is helped off the track after collapsing during the heptathlon event at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials on Sunday in Eugene, Ore.

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