Royal Oak Tribune

ROCKY ROAD

Losses in track, wins on field: another uneven day for USA

- By Eddie Pells

TOKYO » A five-minute burst of action near the backstretc­h of the Olympic track served up the perfect snapshot of what is going right, and all that is going wrong, for the U.S. track and field team in Tokyo.

At one moment in the pole vault pit Thursday night, Katie Nageotte cleared 4.90 meters (16 feet, 1 inch) and went running up to the stands to celebrate a gold medal that had looked like a lost cause only an hour earlier.

At the next, just as the 400-meter sprinters approached the halfway point, American champion Michael Norman was steaming so far ahead of the competitio­n, it became clear he could not sustain the pace.

He didn’t. Norman finished fourth. The U.S. men’s sprinters, once the dominant power across the global track game, left the stadium without having won a single gold medal over the first seven days of the nine-day meet.

But Nageotte’s gold, won in a tense back-and-forth with Russian athlete Anzhelika Sidorova, was the third victory in the field for the U.S., two of which have been won by women.

With only two days left at Olympic Stadium, what started as anomaly can now be considered a trend:

The U.S. women are doing well. The U.S. men are not.

The U.S. overall is doing well in field events.

It is struggling overall on the track.

Other instances that played out Thursday for the Americans:

• Grant Holloway, the defending world champion who came .01 seconds short of the world record earlier this summer in the 110-meter hurdles, came .05 short of Jamaica’s Hansle Parchment, who won in 13.09. It was Jamaica’s third Olympic gold medal of the postUsain Bolt era.

• Will Claye, considered as good a bet as any to win with the defending champion, Christian Taylor, on the sideline, finished fourth

in triple jump. The winner: Pedro Pichardo of Portugal.

Other winners on a day where eight gold medals were awarded included Nafissatou Thiam of Belgium (heptathlon) and Damian Warner of Canada (decathlon).

Also, Massimo Stano won the 20-kilometer race walk, moved to Sapporo to try to beat the Tokyo heat, to give Italy its third gold medal in track.

The U.S. closed Thursday with five — and 20 medals overall, which is 13 more than anyone else — and there have been some exceptions to the trends.

Athing Mu and Sydney McLaughlin lived up to their hype to capture the country’s only two golds from the track. And Ryan Crouser gutted out an emotiondre­nched victory to defend his Olympic shot put title.

Very few would’ve figured Crouser’s win Thursday would be the first in any event for the men, who make up about half of the deepest team in the world.

Norman’s fourth-place finish capped a dreary day of running

for the red, white and blue.

He is something of a celebrity in Japan because his mother was born here and set a national middle-school record in the 100 meters. He was supposed to be part of a showdown with Steven Gardiner of the Bahamas, but Gardiner won this easily, in a time of 43.85 seconds, to add to his title from the world championsh­ips two years ago in Qatar.

Much earlier in the day came a rite of passage for the U.S. at the Olympics: A debacle in the men’s 4x100 relay.

This time, it was Fred Kerley and Ronnie Baker who got tangled up in an exchange, costing them precious time and leaving the U.S. not with a “DQ,” but with an unsightly “6” by its name. Sixth place means they won’t get to run for the first relay gold since Bolt left the scene.

One good chance — maybe the best one left — for the men’s sprinters might be in the 4x400 relay. The U.S. has won that event at seven of the last nine Olympics.

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Steven Gardiner, of Bahamas wins the gold medal ahead Michael Cherry, of United States, fourth, and Michael Norman, of United States, fifth, in the final of the men’s 400-meter at the 2020Summer Olympics on Thursday in Tokyo, Japan.
CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Steven Gardiner, of Bahamas wins the gold medal ahead Michael Cherry, of United States, fourth, and Michael Norman, of United States, fifth, in the final of the men’s 400-meter at the 2020Summer Olympics on Thursday in Tokyo, Japan.

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