Gail Devers etched her name in the record books once
again to post
one of three world-leading marks Saturday at the USA Indoor
Track & Field
Championships, in front of a sold-out crowd of 3,152 fans at the
Reggie
Lewis Track & Athletic Center in Roxbury.The top two finishers in each event at the USA Indoor
Championships qualify
to compete for Team USA at the 2003 World Indoor Track & Field
Championships
March 14-16 in Birmingham, England, as long as they have
achieved the IAAF's
"A" qualifying standard.
Devers wasted no time in continuing her record-breaking year,
running 7.74
seconds in the semifinals of the women's 60m hurdles to improve
on her own
American record of 7.78, set February 7 at the Verizon Millrose
Games. The
time was also a world leader. Devers came back to win her first-
ever U.S.
indoor title in the hurdles with her time of 7.85 in the finals.
Four-time
U.S. indoor champ Melissa Morrison was second in 7.88.
Youth was served in the 60m sprints and the men's triple jump,
with a pair
of world leaders coming out of men's competition. Justin Gatlin,
the
21-year-old former NCAA champion from Tennessee, posted a world-
leading time
of 6.45 in the Verizon men's 60 meters to beat out Terrence
Trammell, who
was second in 6.48.
Twenty-three-year-old Southern Cal grad Angela Williams, the
only four-time
winner of the women's 100m at the NCAA outdoor championships,
won her first
post-collegiate title Saturday with a time of 7.16. Two-time
defending
champion Chryste Gaines was second in 7.18.
The men's triple jump served up an exciting, three-way battle
between the
United States' three top young jumpers: defending USA indoor
champion Tim
Rusan, 25; 2002 U.S. indoor runner-up Kenta Bell, 25; and 2002
NCAA and USA
outdoor champion Walter Davis, 23.
Bell first took the lead in the second round up jumping with a
mark of
17.06m/55-11.75. Davis responded on the very next jump of the
competition
with 17.23/56-6.5 to take the lead. Rusan, however, came back
later in the
round with a world-leading jump of 17.45m/57-3 to post what
would stand as
the winning mark as well as a huge personal best. A 2002
graduate of St.
Augustine's in Raleigh, N.C., Rusan passed on his remaining
attempts, while
neither Davis nor Bell improved their marks.
Defending champion Allen Johnson ran a stunning race in the
men's 60m
hurdles, overtaking Terrence Trammell over the final two
barriers to win in
7.39 seconds, the fastest time in the world this year and
just .01 off the
meet record. Trammell was second in 7.43.
The men's pole vault also featured exciting competition as Derek
Miles won
his first U.S. indoor title in a marathon competition that
lasted nearly
three hours. Miles was the only man to clear 5.75m/18-10.25.
Jeremy Scott of
Allegheny, a Division III college, was second at 5.70m/18-8.25,
a personal
best and Division III record.
Jason Lunn won a tactical 1,500m to earn his second consecutive
U.S. indoor
title with a time of 3:42.23. Fellow Stanford alumnus Michael
Stember was
second in 3:42.73. Charlie Gruber led the field through 800
meters in 2:01.9
and 1,200 in 3:01.6. Stember then broke the race open, with Lunn
in tow.
Lunn's kick in the final straight gave him the victory while
Stember
celebrated the Stanford sweep as the duo crossed the line. Alan
Webb was
seventh in the race in 3:44.45.
Regina Jacobs was anything but a surprise winner in the Nike
women's 1,500m,
running with the pack until a lap remained, sprinting to a win
in 4:15.81 on
the last lap. Sarah Schwald placed second in 4:17.23. Jacobs
hopes to have
"something special" for the women's 3,000m final on Sunday.
In other events, 1997 World Outdoor bronze medalist Tyree
Washington won his
first U.S. title in the 400 meters with his time of 46.43. Corey
Nelson was
second in 46.53. Monique Hennagan won her second consecutive
indoor 400m
crown with her time of 52.54, easily winning over second-place
Megan Addy
(53.88). Vanitta Kinard also was a repeat winner, in the women's
triple
jump, with a best of 13.72m/45-0.25. Teresa Bundy was second
with a jump of
13.70m/44-11.75.
Joanne Dow successfully defending her women's 3,000-meter race
walk
championship with a time of 13:07.68; Michelle Rohl was second
in 13:21.19.
Nicole Teter, who set an American record in winning the 2002 USA
Indoor
Championship at 800 meters, won her heat in the event Saturday
with a time
of 2:03.24, the fastest qualifier of the day. David Krummenacker
had the
fastest time in the men's 800 semis, 1:49.83.
Competition at the USA Indoor Championships concludes Sunday,
with all
remaining event finals.
For complete results from the 2003 USA Indoor Track & Field
Championships,
visit the USATF Web site, www.usatf.org. Athlete quotes also will be
posted
online.