VIDEO: USAIN BOLT MAKES THIS YOUNG MAN’S DREAM COME TRUE…SO COOL!

Usain Bolt shows why he is such a great champion. Usain makes this young man’s dream come true right before he goes on to make history, becoming the first man in history to win both the 100m and 200m races in back-to-back Olympic games. The dude can’t stop smilling. Check out the video.

USAIN BOLT MAKES THIS YOUNG MAN’S DREAM COME TRUE from NGO TV on Vimeo.

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TYSON GAY READY FOR LONDON OLYMPICS TRACK & FIELD WITH 100M WIN

Tyson Gay tuned up for his Olympic showdown with Jamaican stars Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake with victory over 100m in the Diamond League meeting in London Friday.

In three weeks time just across the British capital, the American will be hoping to cross the line first again in the 100m final, but will be hoping to avoid the damp and cold conditions that all the sprinters faced at Crystal Palace.

The 29-year-old American came surging through to win in 10.03 seconds into a headwind, with Ryan Bailey second and Nesta Carter in third.

Carter’s Jamaican teammate Asafa Powell pulled out before the start of the meeting to rest an injury.

“I feel pretty good with the win. The weather wasn’t that bad, it’s very important to acclimatise and the weather helps me prepare mentally for the Games,” said Gay.

“I’m in pretty good shape — I want that Olympic gold,” he added.

Going to the Games, or watching at home? Send us your pictures and videos

Gay is the second fastest man in history behind Bolt, who suffered a surprise double defeat of 100 and 200m in the recent Jamaican trials.

In other action, home hope Mo Farah stormed to victory in the men’s 5000m with a blistering final two laps to win in 13 minutes 6.04 seconds.

The 29-year-old is the reigning world champion over that distance but hoping to double up in the 10,000m at the London Games.

He finished clear of Australia’s Collis Birmingham and Moses Kipsiro of Uganda.

The men’s 110m hurdles was won by American Aries Merritt with a superb season’s fastest time of 12.93 seconds in the testing conditions.

Merritt, the winner of the U.S. Olympic trials was set for a showdown with Liu Xiang, who had won his qualifer in impressive style, but the Chinese star pulled out of the final with a bad back.

Puerto Rican Javier Culson beat British world champion Dai Greene in the 400m hurdles, but in the women’s equivalent there was home success as Perri Shakes-Drayton stormed to victory in 53.77 seconds, a personal best.

Kenyan star Vivian Cheruiyot underlined her gold medal credentials with a fine win over 5,000m in 14 minutes 48.86 seconds.

JENEBA TARMOH: I’M NOT GOING TO RUN IN RUNOFF

It will be remembered as the most anticipated race never run. The runoff that turned into a walk away to conclude the US track trials.

Jeneba Tarmoh conceded the final Olympic spot in the 100 meters rather than meet training partner Allyson Felix at the starting line to break a third-place tie. She notified USA Track and Field early in the day of her intention to withdraw from the Monday night race, later saying it was simply because her heart wasn’t into the runoff.

In the original race on June 23, Tarmoh leaned across the finish line and looked up to see her name on the scoreboard in the third spot behind winner Carmelita Jeter and runner-up Tianna Madison. The 22-year-old Tarmoh then took a celebratory lap around the track, waving an American flag. She received a medal and held a news conference.

And then watched the moment evaporate as the race was ruled a dead heat. She was reluctant to take the line for a runoff from the start, especially since she believed she earned the final spot in the 100 fair and square.

”Running in this (runoff) came down to how I felt internally. Would my heart be at peace running or would I not be at peace? If I was at peace, I would have run,” Tarmoh told The Associated Press on Monday night. ”My heart was not at peace with running.”

In an email sent through her agent to USATF, Tarmoh officially conceded: ”I understand that with this decision I am no longer running the 100m dash in the Olympic Games and will be an alternate for the event.”

The unique race was scheduled to be shown in prime time on NBC in conjunction with the network’s coverage of the swimming trials. It would’ve been a boon for track. Now, it’s another blow for a sport that’s taken its fair share of late.

”This could’ve been something exciting for the sport, something new, something different,” said Olympic gold medalist Jackie Joyner-Kersee, whose husband, Bobby, coaches both sprinters. ”It would bring people in that don’t ordinarily watch. Reality at its best. This is reality. You’ve got everything — emotion, drama.

”But you don’t have a cast.”

And without a cast, track’s moment in the spotlight fizzled.

”It is very frustrating for me, for someone who would like more people watching sport our sport on a regular basis,” NBC sprints analyst Ato Boldon said. ”That anytime you hear a track and field story, it’s going to have a clumsy, awkward, or cringe-worthy ending.”

USATF President Stephanie Hightower said the organization was ”disappointed” that Tarmoh had a change of heart.

The controversy in the 100 overshadowed the entire trials because USATF had no protocol in place to deal with a dead heat. And after top officials scrambled to draft a tiebreaking procedure on the fly, the athletes didn’t want to talk about it until after the conclusion of the 200 — nearly a week later.

The tiebreak also didn’t exactly address this particular situation — an athlete commits to racing and decides not to at the last minute. The matter, however, was resolved once Tarmoh stepped aside.

”I feel very good about my decision. Most people don’t understand why. But I’m not here to explain anything,” Tarmoh said. ”I’m saying I’m at peace.”

Both athletes are represented by Nike, but Tarmoh insisted the shoe company didn’t play a role in the decision.

”Nobody got any kind of money,” Tarmoh said. ”Nike didn’t even know, in fact.”

Tarmoh said she would not pursue any legal action to get her spot.

”No legal action at all,” she said.

Tarmoh also said this hasn’t affected her relationship with Felix, who’s taken the young sprinter under her wing.

”I’ve told Allyson numerous times, `I have the utmost respect for you. I don’t want you to think I’m mad at you or anything negative,”’ Tarmoh said. ”She’s an inspiration to me, helping me on and off the track.”

There was no guarantee Felix would’ve run in the race, either. She said Sunday that she would allow her health to make the final decision. If she warmed up and didn’t feel right, that’s it, Felix was going to pull out of the competition. She wasn’t about to risk anything this close to London.

One of the faces of track, Felix will now race in both the 100 and 200 in London. She is the favorite to win her signature event, the 200, after winning silver medals in the last two Olympics.

Although Tarmoh didn’t qualify in the 200, she’s eligible to run in the Olympic 400-meter relay.

”The situation has been difficult for everyone involved,” Felix said in a statement. ”I had accepted the USATF decision and was prepared to run at 5 p.m. I wanted to earn my spot on this team and not have it conceded to me so I share in everyone’s disappointment that this runoff will not happen. All I can do now is turn my focus to London.”

This has been a debacle since Felix and Tarmoh crossed the line in 11.068 seconds. The options USATF presented to settle the tie were a runoff, coin flip or one athlete conceding the spot to the other.

The athletes and their agents met with USATF representatives Sunday, and Felix and Tarmoh chose to settle matters on the track. Tarmoh, however, was clearly unhappy with the choice.

On Sunday, she said felt ”like I was kind of robbed.”

A day later, she’s at peace even if millions of fans were looking forward to the race.

”I didn’t even think about that,” Tarmoh said. ”Honestly, when they said runoff, all I thought about was me and Allyson.

”It’s not because she’s my training partner. After I ran the 100 and saw my name as third place on the scoreboard, took my victory lap, got a medal, went to the press conference and then they tell me that you don’t have third place anymore? It kind of broke my heart a little bit.”

From Foxsports.com

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ALLYSON FELIX-JENEBA TARMOH RUNOFF IN JEOPARDY: TARMOH MAY WITHDRAW

According to a source, late Sunday night officials from USA Track and Field were working to convince sprinter Jeneba Tarmoh to participate in Monday evening’s unprecedented tie-breaking 100-meter runoff at Hayward Field to decide the final individual spot on the U.S. women’s 100-meter team in London. Tarmoh, 22, and training partner Allyson Felix, 26, a two-time Olympic silver medalist in the 200 meters are scheduled to race at shortly after 5 p.m., Pacific Time. NBC has committed to televising the runoff live to the Eastern and Central time zones, cutting into coverage of the U.S. Olympic Swimming Trials.

However, Sunday evening Tarmoh had decided to pull out of the race, although she had not officially withdrawn. Tarmoh had agreed to the runoff in an emotional meeting early Sunday afternoon. At the meeting, an SI.com story from June 26 in which chief photo finish judge Roger Jennings detailed the process by which last Saturday’s dead heat was called, was discussed by representatives of all parties. In that story and accompanying video Jennings explains how he called Tarmoh the winner and then after asking for USATF officials to review his call because of the importance of third place in the Olympic Trials, was overruled.

Later Sunday, in an afternoon interview with The Associated Press, Tarmoh said, “In my heart of hearts, I just feel like I earned the third spot. I almost feel like I was kind of robbed.” According to the source, any confusion about the photo finish is only part of Tarmoh’s reticence to participate in the runoff. A first-year professional, Tarmoh is also exahusted from the weeklong controversy and was disinclined to participate from the beginning.

Late Sunday night a USATF official asked SI.com for a copy of the Jennings story and said the organization was on a “fact-finding mission.” According to sources, USATF officials were meeting with timing officials Sunday night, seeking clarification.

While the path to setting up Monday’s runoff has been a carnival of ill-preparedness and bureaucratic sloth on the part of USATF, the race itself is likely to be one of the most-watched domestic track and field contests in the history of the sport. It removes the dense and slow-moving clutter that makes the sport largely inaccessible to a mass audience and reduces it to a one-on-one, high-stakes test of speed that will unfold in less time than a good NFL kickoff return. “We’re going to see a dramatization of what our sport can potentially be in the 21st century,” said former U.S. Olympic gold medal relay sprinter Jon Drummond. “This is going to be reality TV at its grandest.”

USA Track and Field announced the runoff Sunday afternoon in Eugene, which was scheduled as the last day of the trials, but now they have practically been extended by one day for the inclusion of a single event to decide the last open place on the team that competes in London at the end of this month. Plans for staging the event unfolded in real time during Sunday afternoon. “I found out at two o’clock, same time as the media,” said Vin Lanana, track coach at Oregon, co-chairman of local organizing committee and in effect the meet director. “It’s not simple. Safety and security are the issues. But we’ll put on a show.” Tarmoh will contest the race in lane four and Felix in lane five. If the race were to finish in another dead heat, a coin flip would decide the third member of the team.

The stakes are decidedly higher for Tarmoh. Felix is a two-time Olympic silver medalist in the 200 meters and on Saturday night at Hayward secured her third individual Olympic berth with a stunning victory in the 200 meters in a time of 21.69 seconds, the sixth-fastest time in history and fastest by any runner in 14 years. Tarmoh is trying to earn her first Olympic berth. Both sprinters, regardless of the outcome of the runoff, are officially members of the Olympic team in the 4X100-meter relay pool. It is unclear which might run in the final of the event, if Team USA makes the final, or which might run only in the rounds.

Accordingly, the two women come to this intensely pressurized event from vastly different angles and with subtly polarized attitudes : Felix, the international veteran and a well-compensated star in the vertical world of track and field, dislikes the runoff, but accepts it professionally. “Given the options placed in front us,” she said Sunday. “The best thing is to just run. I think, more than anything else, it’s just all going to be really weird. It’s not going to be neat or anything like that. Just weird.”

Tarmoh, meanwhile, a relative rookie in her first full year as a professional runner, is bitter, still feels the strange timeline of eight days earlier, when she was initially declared the winner of the race (see explanation below), and then after emotionally celebrating with a victory lap, was told that instead the race was a dead heat. “I’m not that excited at all,” Tarmoh told The Associated PressSunday. “This decision was really hard for me to make. I was pushed into a corner. They said if you don’t make a decision, you give your spot up. I work too hard to just give my spot up. I had to say it was a runoff.”

Sunday’s announcement brought some hope for closure after eight days of uncertainty, since Felix and Tarmoh crossed the line together on the evening of June 23 behind winner Carmelita Jeter and runner-up Tianna Madison. Initially the Hayward scoreboard showed that Tarmoh had secured third place with a time of 11.067 seconds, with Felix second in 11.068. But shortly afterward, USATF declared the race a dead heat.

(In an interview with SI.com three days after the race, chief photo finish judge Roger Jennings described the pressured scene in the booth above Hayward Field. It was Jennings whose eyesight designated Tarmoh the unofficial third-place finisher, but it was also Jennings who protested his own decision and called for a USATF ruling because the high stakes in place at the Olympic Trials. In any other race in the U.S., it is likely that Jennings’s initial ruling would have stood and Tarmoh would have been named to the team, with Felix as an alternate. (Jennings will also be the photo finish judge for the runoff).

Shortly after the dead heat was declared, USATF officials admitted in an awkward press conference that it did not have in place procedures to break a tie in the event of a third-place tie at the Olympic Trials. Twenty-fours hours later, on Sunday night at Hayward Field in Eugene, at another press conference that was more surreal than awkward, USATF unveiled tiebreaking procedures that included “coin toss protocols,” but essentially left it up to Felix, Tarmoh and their shared coach, Bob Kersee, to decide the time and place for their runoff. USATF said only that it would all be decided by Sunday night (and in the end, even that promise was broken).

What unfolded next was an uncomfortable week in which a frustrated Kersee frequently called reporters late at night to lobby for an extension beyond the Sunday deadline, with sparse response from USATF. Felix and Tarmoh ran qualifying and semifinal rounds of the 200 meters and were whisked through the media zone like celebrities stalked by paparazzi.

Theories abounded, the most popular of which was that Felix would decline her place in the 100 meters to concentrate on her better event. On Sunday, Felix said that was never in play, because she has been running 100-meter races throughout the spring and early summer to sharpen her speed for the 200. Her 21.69 owes in no small part to the three 100s that preceded it. “For me, it’s always been about the 200, and the 100 makes me better in the 200,” said Felix. “So I’m going to fight for that 100 meters.”

Another theory was that shoe-and-apparel giant Nike, which sponsors both athletes, would get involved on Felix’s behalf, because the company’s financial commitment to Felix is far more significant. There is no evidence that happened, but such action seldom leaves a trail. Three, that NBC, recognizing that a runoff makes much better television than a coin flip, would push to make it happen. (And that NBC’s freelance production trucks were contracted to leave Eugene no later than Tuesday morning). NBC officials said Sunday that the network did not get involved and, in fact, will incur significant cost to keep a production in place for the runoff.

The intensity grew on Saturday night with Felix’s spectacular 200-meter performance. Tarmoh finished only fifth in the race, leaving the 100 as her only Olympic possibility. Both runners said after the race that they would meet and decide together. Both said they talked frequently on Saturday night and Sunday morning. Felix said those conversations did not center on whether there would be a runoff, but how to deal with the runoff. “They were difficult conversations,” said Felix. “We were both emotional.”

At noon on Sunday there was a more official meeting that took place at a Eugene hotel. Along with Kersee, two representatives of USATF, and agents for both athletes were present. There was no certainty that the meeting would go well. Tarmoh’s representatives indicated to SI.com that they would use photo finish timer Jennings’ comments to challenge the dead heat decision. Tarmoh’s comments indicate that bitterness remains. But in the end, after two hours, a runoff was declared and track has been given an unexpected gift of sorts: A disaster that’s become a showcase. But it is not without peril.

The last such match in track and field was a made-for-television 150-meter race between 1996 Olympic 100-meter gold medalist Donovan Bailey of Canada and 200-400 gold medalist Michael Johnson of the United States. The idea behind that race was well-intentioned to attract attention to track and field (and make piles of money for the participants), but collapsed in disaster when Johnson pulled with an injury. The last truly anticipated showdown came when Johnson and Maurice Greene faced off the in the 200 meters at the 2000 Olympic Trials in Sacramento. Both athletes pulled up with injuries.

On Sunday, Greene, the 2000 Olympic gold medalist in the 100 meters, said, “I think [the runoff] is great. It gives our sport more attention. People will be talking about this for a long time. There is going to be a lot of pressure on the girls and I think the one that handles it best will win. That will be Allyson.”

But Felix also sounded one, last ominous tone in a serpentine story: “The most important thing is staying healthy,” she said. “‘m going to warm up and if I feel anything [wrong], I’m going to pull out.”

From Sports Illustrated

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USAIN BOLT FALLS TO BLAKE IN 100M

”The Beast” turned out to be quite an animal.

Not even Usain Bolt can argue with that.

The Fastest Man in the World wasn’t the fastest man in Jamaica on Friday night.

Instead, that honor was snatched away by Yohan Blake, the man they call ”The Beast,” who blew away Bolt out of the starting blocks and finished the 100-meter final in 9.75 seconds to upset the world-record holder by 0.11 second in the Jamaican Olympic trials.

A shocker? Well, that’s for the world to decide. One thing for sure, however, is that the calculus for the London Olympics has changed dramatically.

”Nine-point-seven-five, it’s awesome,” Blake said. ”I won the world championship, so I’ve got that. Now, I’m the national champion for Jamaica, so I’ve got that. And now, I go into the Olympics like this.”

Blake is, indeed, the reigning world champion, but that victory came with an asterisk because Bolt, the reigning Olympic champion, didn’t run that night in South Korea after being disqualified for a false start.

This was their first rematch, their first real race since then between the training partners. Bolt was considered the favorite, not only because of his world record – 9.58 seconds – but because Blake had never run faster than 9.82 in his life.

Well, now, he has.

The 9.75 seconds on a calm night in Kingston goes down as the best time in the world this year and also breaks the four-year-old National Stadium record; both previous marks were 9.76 – both held by Bolt. Only Bolt, Asafa Powell and Tyson Gay have ever run faster.

As much as the numbers, though, it was all that daylight between Blake and Bolt at the finish line that told this story. Blake got ahead early and, for a while, looked to have more of a tussle on his hands with Powell, who finished third, than with Bolt. As he always does, Bolt rallied at the end, leaning at the line – to make sure he held onto second.

Ahead of him, it was Blake spreading his hands out to his sides and letting out a primal scream. Bolt just pulled up. No pretending to shoot a bolt of lightning into the sky – the now-famous ”To the World” pose – or anything else to celebrate on this night. Later, Bolt offered Blake congratulations, shaking his hand and using the other to amiably palm the head of an opponent eight inches shorter than him.

While all that – the daylight at the finish, congratulating someone else when it was over – was a downer for Bolt, the scene at the start was even worse.

Always the toughest part of the race for the 6-foot-5 defending Olympic champion, Bolt lumbered out of the blocks this time and had to churn those long legs to make up big ground simply to get in the mix.

Afterward, he said something near the start line was bothering him, beginning with the semifinals, where he also got off to a bad start.

”I had to ignore it,” Bolt said. ”I had trouble getting out, but I kept feeling like I could not give up.”

He couldn’t, if only because there are only three spots available in the 100 and Powell – the man who held the world record before Bolt broke it for the first time in 2008 – is a factor in every race he runs. He finished in 9.88 – 0.02 behind Bolt and 0.06 faster than Michael Frater, who will be a part of the Jamaican 400 relay team, which also is trying to defend its Olympic title.

In the women’s 100, defending Olympic champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce won in a Jamaican-record 10.70 seconds – equaling the seventh-fastest time ever – with Veronica Campbell-Brown in second and Kerron Stewart third.

Fraser-Pryce’s form hadn’t been great for much of this year, but she got back into the flow with a 10.92 in New York earlier this month. She won easily over Campbell-Brown, who finished 0.12 seconds behind, at 10.82.

”I always had faith because of my training,” Fraser-Pryce said. ”I came out here to do my best. I did my best. It worked out. I’m going to the Olympics.”

Campbell-Brown provided the surprise at the 2008 trials when she finished fourth in the final and didn’t make the 100 field.

She ended up winning her second straight 200 title at the Olympics and, this time, is back in line for a double.

”I don’t like to go back in the past,” Campbell-Brown said about the 2008 disappointment. ”I’m just thankful for what I have today. I got my spot in the 100 meters. I’m happy for that.”

Left out this time was Sherone Simpson, who was part of the 100 medals sweep in Beijing. She finished fourth.

Earlier, the defending Olympic champion in the 400 hurdles, Melanie Walker, earned her return trip with a win in 54.77 seconds.

Bolt earned his spot on the Jamaican team, too, and knows there are four more weeks to go before the trip to London. That’s plenty of time to get in shape and get ready to – what? – catch someone instead of avoid being caught. The man who coaches them both, Glen Mills, said Blake came into this race in far better shape than Bolt.

”We’re right where we want to be, going into London,” Mills said. ”We just want to keep them healthy. That’s the key.”

But there are two more days of racing left. It starts Saturday morning with heats in the 200, the race Bolt has always considered more his ”job,” while the 100 is more like a hobby.

It was widely believed Blake might provide a better challenge to Bolt in the 200 because he holds the world’s second-fastest time at 19.26. Bolt’s record is 19.19. The 200 final is scheduled for Sunday.

”He’s a tough cookie, and I think he’ll survive,” Mills said about Bolt.

Blake will, too.

He changed the story line on this night.

Instead of talking about what it would take to catch The World’s Fastest Man, he was fielding questions of a different sort: Is there pressure being the front-runner?

”No pressure at all,” he said.