Shelly-Ann Fraser wins one night after countryman Usain Bolt
By The Associated Press
Posted Sunday, August 17, 2008 5:03 AM ET
The Caribbean island of 2.8 million people capped the first gold-medal sweep of men's and women's 100m dashes since 1912 with a rare 1-2-2 sweep of the women's race. After never winning Olympic gold in the 100M, Jamaica got two in as many days.
Shelly-Ann Fraser won the women's dash Sunday, pumping her fist as she was clocked in 10.78 seconds. Teammates Sherone Simpson and Kerron Stewart finished in a dead heat for the silver, 0.20 second back -- the same margin Jamaica's Usain Bolt won by Friday night when he hot-dogged to the finish in 9.69.
Fraser knew she had won and smiled wide, showing those braces, and then went to pick up the green, yellow and black Jamaican flag. It was the widest margin of victory in an Olympic women's 100 final since 1988, when Florence Griffith-Joyner set the world record. "When I was thinking about it, I was getting ahead of myself," Fraser said about a gold medal. "I was like, 'Calm down. First you need to go out there and do it."'
She did, and after she crossed the finish line more than a body length in the lead, reggae music played in the background during a three-minute delay while judges looked at the photo finish. There was no way to split the difference, so Jamaica got the top three spots and didn't even have to settle for a bronze.
"It's about time," Stewart said when asked what the sweep meant. "We've been waiting on this. So many great athletes have come so close."
Jamaica's big win turned into a giant disappointment for the United States. Lauryn Williams finished fourth, Muna Lee fifth and Torri Edwards last. Lee, the only one of that U.S. trio with another chance for an individual medal -- in the 200 -- said she thought there was a false start.
Edwards herself said she thought she had false-started. The American team filed a protest, though it was swiftly rejected. "It was a flagrant and a blatant false start that was not recalled and had tremendous impact on the race," said Lee's coach, Vince Anderson, just before the rejection. "But they're not going to rerun the Olympic 100. Anyone who knows anything knows that."
Williams didn't sound like someone who felt she had been cheated. "We've dominated for years, and now it's their time," Williams said.
Making it even more impressive is that the woman widely considered Jamaica's best at this distance, defending world champion Veronica Campbell-Brown, wasn't even in the field, after failing to qualify at the country's Olympic trials. Her spot essentially went to Fraser, the least accomplished of the Jamaican sprinters -- at least until now. She is only 21 -- same age as Bolt -- and didn't have a time under 11 seconds before this year. The highlight on her resume before now was the silver medal she won as part of the Jamaican relay team at last year's world championships.
Speaking of relays -- it's not hard to pick a favorite for that women's 400 relay Friday. Simpson and Campbell were part of a gold-medal team in Athens four years ago, though it was hard to know whether Jamaica was truly the fastest team because Williams and Marion Jones botched their handoff and the traditionally strong American team didn't finish the race.