Record follows another failure in major meeting
Asafa Powell, the laid back son of a preacher man, has taken full possession of the world 100 metres record after yet another failure at a major championship. Powell, 24, clocked 9.74 seconds in his heat at the Rieti Grand Prix on Sunday to better the...
Asafa Powell, the laid back son of a preacher man, has taken full possession of the world 100 metres record after yet another failure at a major championship.
Powell, 24, clocked 9.74 seconds in his heat at the Rieti Grand Prix on Sunday to better the mark of 9.77 he had held jointly with American Olympic champion Justin Gatlin.
Last month the Jamaican tied up in the 100 metres final at the Osaka world championships to finish third behind American Tyson Gay after starting as the race favourite.
His bronze medal was the latest in a series of disappointments. Powell was disqualified in the quarter-finals at the 2003 Paris world championships. In the following year he finished fifth behind Gatlin at the Athens Olympics, his only defeat of 2007 in the race that really mattered.
A time of 9.85 seconds on a cool, wet June evening in Ostrava in 2005 promised great things for Powell and a week later he clocked 9.77 with the help of a following wind in Athens.
However, a groin injury excluded Powell from the Helsinki world championships in the same year, where Gatlin won the 100-200 double. The American is currently serving a drugs ban.
Powell is only the fourth non-American to hold the world 100 metres record since 1912 and the first since Jamaican-born Canadian Donovan Bailey clocked 9.84 seconds in the 1996 Atlanta Olympic final.
He is the beneficiary of a scheme set up in Jamaica by former hurdler Brigitte Foster to ensure youngsters do not feel impelled to move to the US or Europe for economic reasons.
The Caribbean has been a fertile environment for world class male sprinters but, since Hasely Crawford won the 1976 Olympic 100 final for Trinidad, they have won the highest honours for their adopted countries.
Ben Johnson, disqualified for doping after winning the 1988 Seoul Olympic final in 9.79 seconds, was born in Jamaica, as was Linford Christie who won the 1992 Olympic gold for Britain. Christie was succeeded by Bailey as world and Olympic champion.