Athletics: Coleman gets another chance at break 'his' record
Send a link to a friend
[February 09, 2018]
By Gene Cherry
(Reuters) - World silver medalist
sprinter Christian Coleman gets another chance to break the 60
meters world record this weekend, a mark he believes already belongs
to him.
"I do believe I am the record holder, and I think a lot of people do
as well regardless of if it is official," the 21-year-old American
told Reuters in a telephone interview ahead of Saturday's Boston
Indoor Grand Prix.
Coleman opened his season with an astonishing 6.37-second dash in
the 60m at a meeting in Clemson, South Carolina last month, crossing
the line 0.02 seconds quicker than countryman Maurice Greene's
20-year-old world record mark.
However, the performance is not likely to ratified as a new global
record because electronic starting blocks were not used.
The blocks, which measure false starts, are required for
record-recognition purposes, the International Association of
Athletics Federations (IAAF) says.
The global governing body is now waiting for USA Track & Field
(USATF) to decide whether to submit the mark for possible
ratification.
"It will still be my PR (personal record) and nobody else has a
faster PR," Coleman said. "In my opinion it is a world record."
Despite his claim, Coleman does not expect the performance to be
approved.
"I am thinking it is not because they didn't have the exact
specifications," said Coleman, who drove for more than an hour after
the race to meet an anti-doping official at a roadside stop to
undergo a drugs test, another record requirement.
"I'm not too concerned about it," he added. "I know I have the
capabilities to do it (break the record again).
With his training going so well, the time had not really come as a
shock, Coleman said. "The only part that surprised me was that it
happened so early in the season."
A bigger audience will be watching on Saturday when Coleman returns
to the indoor arena to go up against 300m world record holder Noah
Lyles.
"The key will be for him just to go out there and do what he did in
Clemson," Greene told Reuters.
"The unique thing is when you get in a race and nobody is around you
(like Clemson), it's like a tune-up race, you are very comfortable,
you are very relaxed.
"But now he will have a couple of names beside him. So the intensity
level comes up. The more comfortable Christian is, the more relaxed,
he is going to run better."
[to top of second column] |
Silver medalist Christian Coleman of the U.S. celebrates.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
MAINTAINING SPEED
Greene, a former world record holder in the 100m, believes Coleman
can eventually run the 60 in 6.35 or 6.36 seconds.
"I told him, 'Now you know you can run that fast, don't worry about
trying to chase it (the world record), start perfecting your race',"
the 2000 Olympic champion said.
The start is already there.
"He does not look that tall, but he has very long legs," Greene
said. "He's able to cover ground and he's very powerful. He's so
explosive, everybody else is just chasing."
Learning to maintain his top speed will be a key, both in the 60 and
the outdoor 100 meters, the retired Greene suggested, adding he
believed Coleman could run the 100 in 9.7 seconds this year, a time
only seven runners have ever achieved.
"Instead of him being upright about 20 or 25 metres and being top
speed there, I would rather him hit his top speed a little further
down the track, maybe about 40-45 metres," Greene said.
Coleman agreed
"Like Maurice said, I've got to work on holding my form and not
slowing down as fast at the end," the U.S. collegiate champion said.
He would also like to correct a flaw from his Clemson race.
"I had a decent start," Coleman said. "Then I kind of felt an
imbalance on my third and fourth steps and that kind of threw me off
in my transition."
Precious 100ths of a second could be dropped with improvement there,
all other things being equal, Greene said.
"If he can push it out, and pick up his top-end speed a little
further down the track, he is going to fly."
(Reporting by Gene Cherry in Salvo, North Carolina; Editing by John
O'Brien)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |