Women’s 100m
Preliminary
Round 10:55 AM Friday, August 12th
Heats
9:40 PM Friday, August 12th
Semi-Finals
8:00 PM Saturday, August 13th
Finals
9:35 PM Saturday, August 13th
World Record: Florence
Griffith-Joyner (USA) 10.49, 1988
Best Mark Past 10 Years: Carmelita
Jeter (USA) 10.64, 2009
Olympic Record: Florence
Griffith-Joyner (USA) 10.62, 1988
A Standard: 11.32
2012 Olympic Medalists
Shelly-Ann Fraser Pryce (Jamaica) 10.75, Carmelita Jeter (USA)
10.78, Veronica Cambell Brown (Jamaica)
10.81
2015 World Championship Medalists
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (Jamaica) 10.76, Dafne Schippers (Netherlands) 10.81, Tori Bowi (USA) 10.86
2016 World Leaders
Elain Thompson (Jamaica) 10.70, English Gardner (USA) 10.74, T-Murielle
Ahoure (Ivory Coast), Tianna
Bartoletta (USA), Tori Bowie (USA)
10.78
Team USA
English
Gardner, 24 (10.74/10.74), Tianna Bartoletta, 30 (10.78/10.78), Tori Bowie, 25
(10.78/10.78)
There’s
been plenty of talk about Usain Bolt and his pursuit of a third straight
Olympic Gold, but don’t overlook Shelly-Ann Fraser Pryce. SAFP is also looking
for a third straight gold and she would, technically, grab it before gold if
she wins Saturday night’s final. But she will have a lot of ground to make up
on the competition. She has only run 10.93 this season and she couldn’t pull
out the win in most recent Diamond League appearance either. That win belonged
to Marie Josse Ta Lou of the Ivory Coast who ran under 11 seconds for the first
time in London. She’s part of an intriguing duo for the Ivory Coast that
includes Murielle Ahoure, who has a season best of 10.78 this year and has run
under 11 seconds each of the past 5 seasons.
You
also have Dafne Schippers of the Netherlands in the hunt for a medal. She has
run 10.83 this season and is the defending world silver medalist in this event.
She’s actually better at the 200 (she ran a blistering 21.63 last year) but ran
10.81 for 100 last season will only get stronger during the rounds. The
experienced Veronica Campbell-Brown is on the performance list as well. She
holds a best of 10.76 but that time came in 2011. She’s now 34 years old, but
she still managed to run a 10.83 (tied for 6th in the world this
season) in Florida against Ahoure.
But
those fast ladies will all be chasing four of the fastest women of all time. Elaine
Thompson clocked an amazing 10.70 this season in Kingston on July 1st.
That’s tied for 5th all time (and one of the women ahead of her is
Marion Jones). She ran 10.84 last season as well, but competed in only the 200
for Jamaica at the World Championships (where she ran 21.66 for 2nd,
that’s a faster PR than Allyson Felix). She clearly has that extra strength to
run her best marks at the rounds.
Then
there are the US women: English Gardner, Tianna Bartoletta and Tori Bowie. At the
trials, they each ran under 10.80 in the 100m, joining an elite group of USA
women all time. Gardner is the 4th fastest US woman 100m runner in
history and Bartoletta and Bowie were both right behind her. Tianna is the
defending world champion in the long jump (she will contest that event in Rio
as well) and Bowie is the defending bronze medalist from worlds. So neither of
them are slouches in the talent department either.
Gardner
was surprisingly bounced in the semis last year, but she was fourth in Moscow
at the 2013 championships. She won the Prefontaine DL meet in 10.81 and the
Oregon grad looks incredibly sharp and motivated to leave with a medal for the
first time. Bowie has also been a beast on the international circuit in 2016. She’s
US champ at 200, so she’s got the strength, but she also ran a 10.80 in May at
Doha to win the DL there (over Dafne Schippers). Bartoletta tends to focus more
on the Long Jump, but she was the 4th place finisher in London in
2012. I doubt she’s forgot that just yet.
This
one is a tough one to call. It really seems like Fraser-Pryce may not have the fitness
to compete this year. But it’s hard to count out such an accomplished 100m
runner going for history. The thing is, if she is even slightly off her game,
there’s too much talent in this event to get a medal without your best stuff.
So for that reason, I’ve left her out of my top 3. USA could potentially sweep
the medals (these girls are that good), but I’m not completely sold just yet
(Eugene produced some fast/long straightaway marks at the Trials). I actually
like Bowie the most of the three as a medal threat although she was 3rd
at the trials.
1.
Thompson,
2. Schippers, 3. Bowie
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