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  • USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Friday, February 27, 2003


    Fans set to vote for Top 25 moments in U.S. track & field


    INDIANAPOLIS – Beginning on Saturday, February 28 fans are invited to join USA Track & Field in selecting the Top 25 moments in American track and field during the past 25 years. Until June 20, 2004, fans will be able to vote for what they consider to be the top moment in the sports of track & field, long distance running, and race walking by visiting www.usatf.org <http://www.usatf.org/> .


    In 2004, USA Track & Field will celebrate its 25th anniversary as an independent, national governing body (NGB). In 1979, The Athletics Congress – later renamed USATF – became the NGB for track & field and held its first Annual Meeting, in Las Vegas.


    To help mark the 25th anniversary, track & field fans were invited from January 5 to February 22 to nominate any ‘moment’ on or off the field of play in any of the sport’s disciplines, at any level – from youth to masters. Events must have occurred between 1979-2004. They need not have taken place at a USATF event, but all athletic performances must have been recorded by an American athlete.


    Fans submitted more than 900 nominations online at www.usatf.org <http://www.usatf.org/> . The final list of 38 nominees, on which fans will vote, is included below. The Top 25 moments will be selected by a panel of the sport’s experts, in conjunction with fan voting.


    Beginning the week of June 28, the Top 25 moments will be announced, one per week, in reverse order. At the opening general session of the 2004 USATF Annual Meeting in Portland, Ore., the top 3 moments will be announced.

    To place your vote online, visit www.usatf.org


    Final Nominees



    * Michael Carter of Jefferson High School in Dallas throws the high school boys’ shot put 81 feet, 3.5 inches at the 1979 Golden West Invitational. The mark still stands and is generally considered to be the greatest prep mark in history.

    * Evelyn Ashford wins both sprints at the 1979 World Cup, defeating East German world-record holders Marlies Gohr in the 100 and Marita Koch in the 200.


    * The Athletics Congress (TAC), later renamed USA Track & Field, holds its first Annual Meeting as the national governing body of the sport in the U.S. in December, 1979. The event is the sport’s first independent of the Amateur Athletic Union. At the meeting, a unanimous vote calls for the repeal of amateur eligibility requirements.



    * Craig Virgin becomes first American man ever to win a World Cross Country title at the 1980 Championships. He repeats as champion in 1981.



    * Alberto Salazar wins three straight New York City Marathon titles from 1980-’82, including a then-record 2:08:13 in 1982.



    * The NCAA holds its first ever women’s competition, the NCAA Cross Country Championships, in 1981, marking a significant milestone for women’s track and field.



    * Evelyn Ashford (10.79) and Calvin Smith (9.93) set women’s and men’s 100-meter world records in back-to-back races at the 1983 U.S. Olympic Festival in Colorado Springs.


    * Mary Decker wins the 1,500 and 3,000 meters at the 1983 World Outdoor Championships in Helsinki, in a feat that became known as the “Decker Double.”



    * Carl Lewis long jumps 28 feet, 10.25 inches for a world indoor record at the 1984 Millrose Games, a record that still stands 20 years later.



    * Edwin Moses wins 122 consecutive races, including 107 finals. The streak lasts nine years, nine months and nine days, spanning from 1977 to 1987. After his first loss in almost 10 years, he goes on to win 10 more consecutive races, including the 1987 World Championships title.



    * Joan Benoit-Samuelson wins the first Olympic women’s marathon, at the 1984 Olympics.



    * Valerie Brisco wins gold in the 200, 400 and 4x400m relay at the 1984 Olympics. Her 400m time of 48.83 still stands as the American record.



    * Carl Lewis wins four gold medals at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, matching a feat accomplished only by Olympic icon Jesse Owens, in 1936.



    * Roy Martin runs 20.13 in the 200 meters in Indianapolis to set a national high school and USA junior boys’ record that still stands.



    * Jackie Joyner-Kersee becomes the first woman to score over 7,000 points in the heptathlon when she breaks the world record with 7,148 points at the 1986 Goodwill Games in Moscow.



    * Florence Griffith Joyner obliterates the world record in the 100 meters, running 10.49 at the 1988 Olympic Trials in Indianapolis.



    * Butch Reynolds breaks Lee Evans’ world record in the 400 meters, running 43.29 seconds in Zurich in 1988.



    * Florence Griffith Joyner breaks the 200-meter world record, running 21.34 at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul. She adds gold medals in the 100 meters and 4x100m relay, and runs anchor on the silver medal-winning 4x400m relay.



    * Jackie Joyner-Kersee scores 7,291 points in the heptathlon to break her own world record and win the gold at the 1988 Olympics.



    * Mike Powell breaks Bob Beamon’s legendary world record in the long jump, soaring 8.95 meters (29 feet, 4.5 inches) at the 1991 World Championships in Tokyo to edge Carl Lewis in what is considered the greatest long jump competition in history.



    * Lynn Jennings wins her third consecutive world title at the 1992 World Cross Country Championships.



    * Kevin Young breaks Edwin Moses’ world record at the 1992 Olympic Games with his time of 46.78.



    * Evelyn Ashford anchors Team USA to victory – and her third consecutive relay gold medal – in the 4x100m at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona.



    * In 1995, at age 48, Philippa Raschker makes a statement as a trailblazer by placing third in the women’s pole vault at the USA Outdoor Championships, behind future Olympic gold medalist Stacy Dragila.



    * Kim Batten (52.61) and Tonja Buford-Bailey (52.62) both break the existing world record in the 400-meter hurdles in finishing first and second at the 1995 World Championships.



    * Bob Kennedy becomes the first American to break 13:00 in the 5,000 meters, running 12:58.75 at Stockholm in 1996. He runs 12:58.21 later that summer in Zurich, which still stands as the American record.



    * Michael Johnson sets what many consider to be a virtually unbreakable record, running 19.32 seconds in the 200 meters at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. He also won the 400 meter gold to become the only man in history to win both the 200 and 400 meters at a single Olympic Games.



    * Carl Lewis wins his ninth gold medal, and fourth long jump gold, at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. He becomes only the second man in Olympic history to win four golds in a single event, and the second man to win 9 gold medals overall.



    * Gail Devers becomes only the second woman in Olympic history to repeat as gold medalist in the 100 meters, winning the 100 at the 1996 Olympics to follow her 1992 victory. She adds gold in the 4x100m relay.



    * Maurice Greene becomes the first man ever to win the 100 and 200 meters in a World Championship at the 1999 Worlds in Seville. He adds 4x100m relay gold.



    * Michael Johnson breaks the world record in the 400 at the 1999 World Championships with his time of 43.18 seconds.



    * Marion Jones wins three gold medals (100, 200, 4x400 relay) and two bronze medals (long jump, 4x400m relay) at the 2000 Olympic Games. Her feat makes her the only woman ever to win five track & field medals at a single Olympic Games.



    * Stacy Dragila becomes the first female Olympic pole vault gold medalist at the 2000 Olympic Games.



    * Alan Webb runs 3:53.43 to place fifth in the mile at the 2001 Nike Prefontaine Classic, breaking the national high school record of 3:55.2 set 36 years earlier by Jim Ryun.



    * Maurice Greene, Tim Montgomery, and Bernard Williams sweep the men’s 100 meters at the 2001 World Championships in Edmonton, re-establishing U.S. global dominance in the 100.



    * Tim Montgomery runs 9.78 to break the world record in the 100 meters, at the 2002 Grand Prix Final in Paris.


    * Khalid Khannouchi sets the world record in the marathon at the 2002 London Marathon with his time of 2 hours, 5 minutes and 38 seconds.


    * Spike named the new USATF mascot in 2002.

    To cast your vote, visit www.usatf.org <http://www.usatf.org/>

  • #2
    Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

    Hard to pick.... great moments indeed. I just may go with Spike though...

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

      So Powell's breaking of Beamon's WR is a nominee, but Beamon's jump itself it not?

      Also, * In 1995, at age 48, Philippa Raschker makes a statement as a trailblazer by placing third in the women’s pole vault at the USA Outdoor Championships, behind future Olympic gold medalist Stacy Dragila.

      What? One of the top-25 events in US Track and Field History? Come on.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

        >Hard to pick.... great moments indeed. I just may go with Spike though...

        Oh, COME ON ... Garry, did you add the Spike item just for grins?
        "Run fast and keep turning left."

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

          >So Powell's breaking of Beamon's WR is a nominee, but Beamon's jump itself it
          >not?>>


          It's marks since the track federation became separate from the AAU: only since 1979.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

            Duh. I guess reading things in whole is a good idea.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

              * Edwin Moses wins 122 consecutive
              >races, including 107 finals. The streak lasts nine years, nine months and nine
              >days, spanning from 1977 to 1987. After his first loss in almost 10 years, he
              >goes on to win 10 more consecutive races, including the 1987 World
              >Championships title.

              Erm... isn't this stretching the definition of 'moment' a bit too much ? 9 years sounds like a pretty long moment to me :-D
              Było smaszno, a jaszmije smukwijne...

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

                And this one has got to be everyone's favourite:

                >* Spike named the new
                >USATF mascot in 2002.
                Było smaszno, a jaszmije smukwijne...

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

                  If USATF gets decertified by the USOC, maybe that could replace Spike on the list.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

                    A little imagination, please. While an important "inside baseball" moment, including the following won't do a thing to fire up SPORTS FANS about track and make them understand the sport is worth watching. The self-serving Spike item is beneath discussion.


                    >* The Athletics Congress (TAC), later renamed USA >Track & Field, holds its first Annual Meeting as >the national governing body of the sport in the >U.S. in December, 1979. The event is the sport's >first independent of the Amateur Athletic Union. At >the meeting, a unanimous vote calls for the repeal >of amateur eligibility requirements.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

                      Seems like they should have withheld the press release until the web voting was ready . . . or am I blind and unable to see the link at usatf.org?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

                        >* The Athletics Congress (TAC), later renamed USA
                        >>Track & Field, holds its first Annual Meeting as >the national governing body
                        >of the sport in the >U.S. in December, 1979. The event is the sport's >first
                        >independent of the Amateur Athletic Union. At >the meeting, a unanimous vote
                        >calls for the repeal >of amateur eligibility requirements.


                        Let me get this straight, the TAC was formed in 1979? that would come to quite a surprise to many of us who competed in the first TAC championships in 1978!!!!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

                          My steel-trap memory must be failing me. Someone, get me a TAFN and tell me what org governed the 1978 TAC?

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

                            19.32

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: USATF To Let Fans Vote On Big Moments

                              OK, now the voting link is up and clearly visible . . . You can vote for 5 of the selections, with voting continuing through June 20.

                              Comment

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