Athletics in Olympics: USA fails to make men's 4x100 relay final

The U.S. team featured two of the individual 100m finalists, Fred Kerley and Ronnie Baker, the world leader Trayvon Bromell, and Cravon Gillespie, who also ran the heats en route to their 2019 world championship-winning title.

Published : Aug 05, 2021 09:57 IST

Cravon Gillespie reacts after USA fails to make men's 4x100 relay finals.

The United States failed to make the Olympic men's 4x100 metres relay final after a ragged run saw the team finish a shock sixth in its semifinal on Thursday, the latest in a dire run of performances in an event it dominated for decades.

The U.S. team featured two of the individual 100m finalists, Fred Kerley and Ronnie Baker, the world leader Trayvon Bromell, and Cravon Gillespie, who also ran the heats en route to their 2019 world championship-winning title.

But, despite the depth of talent on show, the changeovers were poor and a shocking second handover saw them lose all momentum. Anchor Gillespie, a controversial inclusion ahead of Kenny Bednarek or Noah Lyles, made no impression in a mass finish, with China the surprise heat winner in 37.92.

 

Canada, brought home by 200m champion Andre de Grasse, was second, two-thousandths of a second behind, and Italy, helped by newly-crowned individual 100m champion Lamont Marcell Jacobs, posted a national record 37.95 to also advance. Germany (38.06) and Ghana (38.08) also finished ahead of the Americans (38.10) to take the two fastest losers' slots in Friday's final.

Jamaica led the way in the other semi, qualifying fastest in 37.82, ahead of Britain (38.02) and Japan (38.16).

After dominating the event for decades, winning at a remarkable 15 of the 18 Olympics it entered from 1920 to 2000, a succession of disqualifications and setbacks have contributed to the U.S. failing to win gold since.

In 2004 it was edged on the line by Britain, while it dropped the baton in 2008. It finished second again in 2012, only to be stripped of the medal due to Tyson Gay's doping positive and was disqualified again for a changeover offence after finishing third in 2016.

 

With a series of similar failures in the world championships, it adds up to a long tale of woe. It is also another setback for the men's team of the sport's traditionally most powerful nation at Tokyo, where it struggled to make anything like its usual impact.

Carl Lewis, who helped the U.S. to two Olympic and three world sprint relay golds, was one of many to take to social media to share his disappointment. "The USA team did everything wrong in the men's relay," Lewis tweeted.

"The passing system is wrong, athletes running the wrong legs, and it was clear that there was no leadership. It was a total embarrassment and completely unacceptable for a USA team to look worse than the AAU (American Association of Universities) kids I saw."