Allyson Felix
FOURTH PLACED MEDAL
The unprecedented Olympic team runoff between Allyson Felix and Jeneba Tarmoh is off.
Tarmoh withdrew from the scheduled two-woman race hours before it was to be aired live in primetime during NBC's coverage of Olympic trials. The women tied for third in last week's 100 meters and needed a runoff to determine who would represent the United States in the upcoming London Olympics, reports Fourth-Place Medal.
ESPN reported Tarmoh wanted to concede her spot on Sunday but was told to sleep on the decision by the USA Track and Field officials whose incompetence led to this controversial process. Her agent said Monday that she will not run.
Tarmoh thought she earned the spot immediately after last week's race. A closer review by the photo official determined that the two had actually tied for the final spot on the team with a time of 11.068. Because U.S. track had no contingency plan for such a tie, things quickly delved into chaos. Should there be a runoff? Could it come down to a coin flip? Or would one of the women drop out, thus saving USA Track and Field the embarrassment of getting caught with its number down?
By Monday, it was too late for USATF to save face. And speaking of faces, Tarmoh is cutting off her nose to spite hers.
"She was uncomfortable with the idea of a runoff and a coin toss and she was no longer at peace with the idea," Tarmoh's agent said in a statement.
Tarmoh didn't qualify for the 200, so her only hope to compete in an individual event was to win the runoff. She could still earn a spot on the relay team, though USATF wouldn't be out of line to leave her off the team after her Oregon antics. Why would an Olympic team want someone who shuns competition, for whatever reason?
Being uncomfortable and not at peace with an idea is a reason to give up a possible berth in the Olympics? It's the opposite of the Olympic ideal. Does she hope that her protest will lead a larger one that gets her into the Games? Is she afraid of losing to Felix, so she took the easy way out? Does she think that laying on her sword will make her some sort of track hero?
Remember, Tarmoh: Unless you're Dan O'Brien, nobody remembers anything that happens at Olympic trials. (Remember Butch Reynolds, the most famous Olympic athlete in the summer of 1992? Of course you don't.) Even something as cowardly and futile as withdrawing from a race because you're not "at peace," won't make you remembered. Running in the Olympics: That's the way you build a legacy.
She has no more right to the 100m berth than Al Gore did to Florida after the networks called it for him the first time or that George W. Bush did after they messed up a second time. Just because the race lasts 11 seconds doesn't mean the after effects have to also.