Men’s Long Jump
Qualifying
8:20 PM Friday, August 12th
Final
7:50 PM Saturday, August 13th
World Record: Mike Powell (USA)
8.95m, 1991
Best Mark Past 10 Years: Dwight
Phillips (USA) 8.74m, 2007
Olympic Record: Bob Beamon 8.90m,
1968
A Standard: 8.15m
2012 Olympic Medalists
Greg Rutherford (Great Britain) 8.31, Mitchell Watt (Australia)
8.16, Will Claye (USA) 8.12
2015 World Championship Medalists
Greg Rutherford (Great Britain) 8.41, Fabrice Lapierre (Australia) 8.24, Jianan Wang (China) 8.18
2016 World Leaders
Jarrion Lawson (USA) 8.58, Marquise Goodwin (USA) 8.45,
Marquis Denedy (USA) 8.42, [Michel Torneus (Sweden) 8.44A]
Team USA
Jeff
Henderson, 27 (8.52/8.19), Jarrion Lawson, 22 (8.58/8.58), Marquis Dendy, 23
(8.42/8.42)
Great
Britain’s Greg Rutherford is the defending world and Olympic champion for the
long jump. He holds a personal best of 8.51 meters from 2014 and, after an 8.31m
victory in Rome, has shown flashes of the form that earned him his hardware in
the past. He’s certainly the favorite entering this event.
However,
the US Long Jump Contingent will be one of the best we have seen in recent
years. And it won’t include World #2 Marquise Goodwin or Olympic Bronze
Medalist Will Claye. Leading the charge, having won the US Championship’s, is
Jeff Henderson. Henderson has a PR of 8.52 in the long from 2015, but he barely
cracked the top 10 in Beijing last year. At the US Champs, Henderson clocked a
mammoth leap of 8.59 which would have been the world lead if it wasn’t for the
wind.
In the
same series, Jarrion Lawson clocked an 8.58 which, since it was marked with
legal wind, will count on the all-time lists. It was one heck of a leap for the
Collegiate who pulled off the 100-200-LJ triple at NCAAs and made the finals in
all three events when he returned to Eugene for the Trials. Lawson is currently
the world leader (he’s 20 centimeters ahead of his next closest Olympic
competitor), but it is worth noting his jump was clocked in windy conditions.
The
same is true for Marquis Dendy, the third US squad member. The recent Florida
grad jumped his PR of 8.42 in the trials as well. However, he jumped an 8.39 in
2015 when he made his first world squad and also is the reigning indoor world
champ after jumping 8.26 in Portland this past March.
This is
a super talented bunch for the USA and, potentially, we could have multiple
medalists on the award stand in Rio. But someone is going to have come up
clutch. In last Olympics, you could medal with jumps under 8.20 meters. The
same is true for last year’s world championship meet. In 2016 there have
already been 17 athletes over this distance. So there are plenty of options for
the medal stand. It will come down to who can perform under the bright lights.
Among
the chief contenders will be Rushwal Samaai from South Africa (23 years old,
8.38 season best), Fabrice Lapierre of Australia (8.31 this May, 8.40 PR from
2010, 2015 silver medalist) and Michael Torneus of Sweden (jumped 8.44 at
Altitude, but hasn’t been above 8.22 at any season prior to this).
I might
be biased, but I’m thinking this will be the year for a breakthrough from the
USA in the Long Jump. This used to be one of our country’s greatest events, but
we really struggled in 2015. I’m banking on Henderson leading the charge with
vengeance on his mind. Lawson is a huge talent, but I’m a little skeptical of
those Hayward marks from the trails. Even still, 8.58 is flying so anything in
that ball park would put him gold medal range. But still, I give the nod to the
slightly more proven and experienced Dendy.
But I
still think Rutherford gets another gold. He’s been clutch in the championships
and so I’ll put my chips in with him.
1.
Rutherford,
2. Henderson, 3. Dendy
Update: looks like marquis dendy will not be jumping in rio as he was not on the start list in this one. Instead mike hartfield (8.34 personal and season best) will be taking his spot.
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