 Kirani James became a history man tonight – although he is still a teenager.
Kirani James became a history man tonight – although he is still a teenager.
 
The 19-year-old from Grenada (pictured top) became the second  youngest ever winner of the Olympic 400 metres title as he ended a  sequence of seven victories in this event by runners from the United  States.
That sequence was always going to come to an end, of  course, given that, for the first time ever in a non-boycotted Games,  the US did not have a single representative in the final which was won  in such emphatic fashion in 1996 and 2000 by the American who still  holds the world record of 43.18sec, Michael Johnson.
But even the  great Johnson got a small chip taken out of him by James, as his  winning time of 43.98sec – the first time a non-US teenager had beaten  44 seconds – eclipsed the world champion's UK all-comers record.
"It  just shows I'm on the right track," said James, after a race which saw  silver go to fellow 19-year-old Luguelin Santos – who, less than an hour  earlier, had been uplifted by seeing his 35-year-old  Dominican  Republic team-mate Felix Sanchez reclaim the 400m hurdles title he won  at the Athens 2004 Games. Santos,  who clocked 44.46, was followed home by Lalonde Gordon of Trinidad and  Tobago, who recorded a personal best of 44.52 to complete a clean sweep  for the smaller nations.
Santos,  who clocked 44.46, was followed home by Lalonde Gordon of Trinidad and  Tobago, who recorded a personal best of 44.52 to complete a clean sweep  for the smaller nations.
Grenada's population is a mere 110,000 –  and James, who comes from a small fishing village, happily predicted  that a good number of them might now be celebrating a victory which came  a year after his startling defeat of the 2008 Olympic champion, LaShawn  Merritt, to win the world title in Daegu.
"It's a huge step for my country in terms of stepping up to the plate in track and field," said James.
"This victory is putting us on the map.
"There is probably a huge street party going on right now."
There  may also be a few celebrations taking place in Sunderland, where Kirani  has been training in preparation for the Games in facilities organised  by Britain's former world mile record holder and world 1500m champion,  Steve Cram.
Merritt, who returned in 2011 from a two-year doping  ban, had secured his right to run at these Games by overturning the  International Olympic Committee (IOC) ruling against doping offenders  competing at the next Games. However, he pulled up in the heats here with an injured hamstring.
However, he pulled up in the heats here with an injured hamstring.
For  Sanchez, who had won 43 consecutive 400m hurdles races as he secured  two world titles before claiming the 2004 Olympic crown, the effort  ended in tears – a bucketful of tears, on top of the podium, after  recording a time of 47.63 that matched his winning Olympic effort eight  years earlier.
He revealed afterwards that he had had the word  "grandmother" written on his spikes in memory of the relative who had  died during Beijing 2008 and to whom he had pledged another Olympic  medal.
"When I was on the podium I felt the rain falling on me like my grandmother's tears," he said poetically.
Britain's  team captain and world champion Dai Greene, who had been nonplussed  after only managing to qualify for the final as a fastest loser, put  everything into an effort which eventually saw him finish just one place  off the podium in 48.24.
Michael Tinsley of the US took silver  in a personal best of 47.91, with Puerto Rico's strong favourite, Javier  Culson, only managing third place in 48.10.
Sanchez is one of  two athletes to have known what it feels like to be unbeatable and who  were seeking to reclaim Olympic glories here.
The other was  Russia's Yelena Isinbayeva, whose quest to become the first woman in  Olympic history to win three straight titles in any event ultimately  ended with bronze in the pole vault competition. Jennifer Suhr of the US took gold on countback ahead of Cuba's Yarisley Silva after both had cleared 4.75 metres.
Jennifer Suhr of the US took gold on countback ahead of Cuba's Yarisley Silva after both had cleared 4.75 metres.
Britain's  Holly Bleasdale, who has already recorded the third best indoor mark of  the season with 4.87m, failed to progress beyond 4.45m and finished  equal sixth.
"The weather wasn't bad," said Isinbayeva, who  revealed she had suffered a muscle tear in May which had severely  limited her preparations for London.
"It was terrible." 
Yuliya  Zaripova of Russia earned gold in the women's 3,000m steeplechase in a  personal best of 9min 06.72sec, with Tunisia's Habiba Ghribi taking  silver in a national record of 9:08.37 ahead of Ethiopia's Sofia Assefa  who clocked 9:09.84.
In the shot put final, Nadzeya Ostapchuk  earned an emphatic victory over Valerie Adams, the New Zealander who had  beaten her at the previous year's World Championships, producing four  throws of over 21 metres, the best of which was 21.36.
Adams took silver with 20.70 ahead of Russia's Evgeniia Kolodko who recorded a personal best of 20.48.
By Mike Rowbottom at the Olympic Stadium in London
Source: www.insidethegames.biz
