SandJack TV
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • WNBA
  • Women’s Sports
  • Tennis
  • Boxing
  • Baseball
  • UFC
  • MMA
  • Netball
  • Racing
  • MORE
    • Athletics
    • Golf
    • Cycling
    • Formula 1
    • ESports
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • WNBA
  • Women’s Sports
  • Tennis
  • Boxing
  • Baseball
  • UFC
  • MMA
  • Netball
  • Racing
  • MORE
    • Athletics
    • Golf
    • Cycling
    • Formula 1
    • ESports
No Result
View All Result
SandJack TV
No Result
View All Result
Home Athletics

COACH TONY FUSCO ASKS: “MY MIDDLE SCHOOL KIDS GET THE BATON AROUND THE TRACK; WHY CAN’T THESE GUYS?”

August 17, 2024
in Athletics
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0 0
A A
0
COACH TONY FUSCO ASKS: “MY MIDDLE SCHOOL KIDS GET THE BATON AROUND THE TRACK; WHY CAN’T THESE GUYS?”
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


COACH TONY FUSCO ASKS:“MY MIDDLE SCHOOL KIDSGET THE BATON AROUND THE TRACK;WHY CAN’T THESE GUYS?” BY ELLIOTT DENMAN

Tony Fusco, my good friend, taught and coached at Eatontown, New Jersey’s middle school for years and years.,

He had a lot of success, too.

In the classroom and on the track.

(Eatontown is a feeder school for Monmouth Regional High School, which has sent two Golden Falcon grads, 1976 400 hurdler Quentin Wheeler and 1984 high jumper Milton Goode, to the Olympic Games.)

Tony Fusco’s young relay runners racked up many big wins and quick times along the way.

And they got the baton around the track – in both the 4×100 and 4×440 (yards that is), which evolved into the 4×100 and 4×400 (meters, that is.)

And, just like a few zillion other Paris Olympics-watchers, he was flummoxed to see the Team USA 4×100 men definitively botch it up – on the very first exchange of the final, no less, Christian Coleman to Kenny Bednarek.

Bednarek started too soon, had to put on the brakes, and USA medal hopes evaporated. Kyree King and anchor Fred Kerley ran sizzling legs….to no avail.

It was a flub, just as so many of their 21st-century predecessors have flubbed, too.

“Just can’t understand this happening….again…and again…and yet again,” Tony Fusco told me.

“What’s the big problem? My middle school kids get the stick around the track. Why can’t these guys? They’re supposed to be pros.”

Another New Jerseyan chimed in on the subject…with a bit more vehemence.

Said Willingboro’s own Olympic icon, Carl Lewis:

“It is time to blow up the system. This continues to be completely unacceptable. It is clear that everyone at USA Track and Field is more concerned with relationships than winning. No athlete should step on the track and run another relay until this program is changed from top to bottom.”

Five Games were held between the two World Wars and Team USA was brilliant in each.

In 2024, Canada (37.50) took the gold over South Africa and Great Britain.

Take note: (A) Team USA (running with a Coleman-Kerley-King-Courtney Lindsey lineup) had won its semifinal the day before in 37.4; (B) Noah Lyles’s Covid announcement scrambled all revised-lineup plans. (C) Team GB included U. of Houston coach Lewis’s star, Louie Hinchcliffe.This big debate, of course, is not late-breaking news.

The 4×100 joined the Olympic program in 1912 and right off the bat, Team USA flubbed that one, too. An out-of-the zone pass erased an apparent 42.2 semifinal win. Team GB went on to win the final in 42.4. anchoring in 42.2), 1924 (Alf Leconey anchoring in 41.0), 1928 (Henry Russell anchoring in 41.0), 1932 (Frank Wykoff anchoring in 40 flat) and 1936 (Jesse Owens leading off, Wykoff again anchoring, in 39.8)…That 1936 win, of course, is forever besmirched by…well, it’s the old-old story – the non-inclusion of Sam Stoller and Marty Glickman.

The Games resumed at London in 1948 and Team USA. anchored by Mel Patton, resumed winning, in 40.6…but only after a loud protest overrode the original (out of zone) DQ call on the Barney Ewell-Lorenzo Wright first exchange.

Team USA’s streak reached a magnificent eight with the wins in 1952 (Andy Stanfield anchoring in 40.1) and 1956 (Bobby Morrow anchoring in 39.5.)

Disaster finally ended the streak at Rome in 1960. Frank Budd’s great leadoff leg was nullified by second man Ray Norton’s too-soon take-off. Dave Sime’s rousing anchor rallied Team USA home first…and then the DQ call came in. The golds to Germany.

Next: a four-Games win streak: Bob Hayes-anchoring 1964 (39 flat), Jim Hines-anchoring 1968 (38.24, first time FAT became official), Eddie Hart-anchoring 1972 (38.19) and Steve Riddick-anchoring 1976 (38.33.)

Team USA really didn’t really lose the 1980 golds (won by the Soviet Union home team in 38.26); we simply stayed home by edict of President Jimmy Carter.

The record since has been spotty, up-and-down, hit-and-miss – but far more miss than hit in recent history.

Superstar/Immortal (take your choice) Lewis brought his nation’s team home first at LA in 1984 (37.83) but ’88 was a flubber. A substitution-caused hassle led to a DQ in the prelims.

West Virginia football star James Jett lived up to his name, anchoring a 37.40 win in 1992, But Canada was red-hot in 1996 and won it in 37.69. USA’s over-cautious silver medalists at least got the stick around within the zones.

Team USA (anchored by Tim Montgomery) won again in 2000 (37.61) But one more error in 2004 – on the Shawn Crawford-Justin Gatlin first handoff – and Team USA (which had won a 38.02 semifinal) saw the golds go to Great Britain in 38.07. Of course, no one knew it at the time – it was the start of a six-Games losing streak.

Team USA’s ambitions blew up again in 2008 (where Team Trinidad won in 38.06) and (at the start of the Usain Bolt era), to Team Jamaica in 2012 (world record 36.84) and 2016 (37.27.)

But Tokyo 2021 (Italy in 37.50 ) and Paris 2024 (Canada in an identical 37.50) were USA flubbers, too, and so here we are.

In summary: They’ve run the 4×100 26 times and Team USA has won 15 of them – but is zero-for six starting in 2004. (Great Britain, Soviet Union, Jamaica and Canada have won two each; Germany, Trinidad, Italy, one apiece.)

Thus, when the Games return to home territory at LA in 2028, Team USA will settle into its blocks in the Coliseum, get set…and (lugging a quarter-century burden) do its darndest to end a six-Games losing strek and five straight utter disasters. Now that will be pressure.

Veteran New Jersey runner Rich Meyers at least offers commiseration.

“Remember that the speed run by these athletes is incredible with many running sub 9 seconds (flying start, of course) for 100 meters. A small mistake by someone who is working with someone he doesn’t know (thanks to lack of team practice, late lineup shifts, etc) will be costly.

“Let’s not be so quick to be critical. (USA relay coach) Mike Marsh is an Olympian (and gold medalist) who has been there and done that.

“I don’t have an answer. Just trying to have folks understand the conditions.”

One of the finest and most prolific writers in our sport, Elliott Denman has written about our sport since 1956, when he represented the US in 1956 Olympic Games at the 50k race walk, the longest event on the Olympic schedule. A close observer of the sport, Elliott writes about all of our sport, combining the skills of a well honed writer with the style of ee Cummings. We are quite fortunate to have Elliott Denman as a friend and advisor.

View all posts



Source link

Tags: AsksBATONCoachFUSCOGUYSkidsmiddleSchoolTonytrack
Previous Post

Yikes! Wrestler admits to greasing during loss at Craig Jones Invitational: ‘It felt like a bar of soap’

Next Post

This Day in Track & Field, August 17, Albert Hill wins 800 meter at Antwerp Olympics (1920), Ireland sets WR for 4 x 1 Mile (1985), by Walt Murphy News and Results Services

Related Posts

LONDON ATHLETICS MEET RETURN FOR OLYMPIC CHAMPION KEELY HODGKINSON
Athletics

LONDON ATHLETICS MEET RETURN FOR OLYMPIC CHAMPION KEELY HODGKINSON

May 1, 2025
This Day in Track & Field, April 30, Joe McCluskey set steepe AR of 9:28.6 (1932), and other stories of the Penn Relays, curtated, edited and written by Walt Murphy
Athletics

This Day in Track & Field, April 30, Joe McCluskey set steepe AR of 9:28.6 (1932), and other stories of the Penn Relays, curtated, edited and written by Walt Murphy

April 30, 2025
2025 Spring Racing/Training Program, April 30, 2025, week 7, day 3, seventh week of year, Wednesday is an easy day!
Athletics

2025 Spring Racing/Training Program, April 30, 2025, week 7, day 3, seventh week of year, Wednesday is an easy day!

April 30, 2025
500 days to go: Ultimate Championship finals rundown and qualified athletes revealed
Athletics

500 days to go: Ultimate Championship finals rundown and qualified athletes revealed

April 29, 2025
Niamh Fogarty Breaks 41-Year Irish Discus Record
Athletics

Niamh Fogarty Breaks 41-Year Irish Discus Record

April 29, 2025
2025 Spring Racing/Training Program, April 29, 2025, week 7, day 2, seventh week of year, Tuesday is a speed day!
Athletics

2025 Spring Racing/Training Program, April 29, 2025, week 7, day 2, seventh week of year, Tuesday is a speed day!

April 28, 2025
Next Post
This Day in Track & Field, August 17, Albert Hill wins 800 meter at Antwerp Olympics (1920), Ireland sets WR for 4 x 1 Mile (1985), by Walt Murphy News and Results Services

This Day in Track & Field, August 17, Albert Hill wins 800 meter at Antwerp Olympics (1920), Ireland sets WR for 4 x 1 Mile (1985), by Walt Murphy News and Results Services

Latest Update on Kate Martin’s Bruised Achilles From Aces Coach Becky Hammon Could Relax WNBA World

Latest Update on Kate Martin’s Bruised Achilles From Aces Coach Becky Hammon Could Relax WNBA World

No Result
View All Result
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
WNBA team power rankings: early predictions for 2025 season

WNBA team power rankings: early predictions for 2025 season

October 24, 2024
All 26 Call of Duty Servers Locations and Why It’s Important

All 26 Call of Duty Servers Locations and Why It’s Important

August 13, 2024
Fact Check: Did Caitlin Clark Sue Angel Reese for  Million?

Fact Check: Did Caitlin Clark Sue Angel Reese for $10 Million?

March 26, 2025
All Fortnite Reload Weapons – Best and Worst Fresh Guns

All Fortnite Reload Weapons – Best and Worst Fresh Guns

November 13, 2024
Euro 2024: Slovakia v Romania

Euro 2024: Slovakia v Romania

0
Manchester United target Khvicha Kvaratskhelia close to joining Paris Saint-Germain – Man United News And Transfer News

Manchester United target Khvicha Kvaratskhelia close to joining Paris Saint-Germain – Man United News And Transfer News

0
The Phillies Lock up Another Part of Their League-Best Rotation

The Phillies Lock up Another Part of Their League-Best Rotation

0
DeMar DeRozan’s Future at Bulls in Doubt: Report

DeMar DeRozan’s Future at Bulls in Doubt: Report

0
WNBA: How Kelsey Plum and a new coach can revitalize the LA Sparks

WNBA: How Kelsey Plum and a new coach can revitalize the LA Sparks

May 2, 2025
WNBA Legend Lisa Leslie Explains Sparks Need to ‘Fit Around’ Kelsey Plum

WNBA Legend Lisa Leslie Explains Sparks Need to ‘Fit Around’ Kelsey Plum

May 2, 2025
rewrite this title Alexis Díaz Has Lost His Job for Real. So It Goes.

rewrite this title Alexis Díaz Has Lost His Job for Real. So It Goes.

May 2, 2025
How to Watch the 2025 WNBA Season

How to Watch the 2025 WNBA Season

May 2, 2025
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact Us
SAND JACK TV

Copyright © 2024 Sand Jack TV.
Sand Jack TV is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • NFL
  • NBA
  • WNBA
  • Women’s Sports
  • Tennis
  • Boxing
  • Baseball
  • UFC
  • MMA
  • Netball
  • Racing
  • MORE
    • Athletics
    • Golf
    • Cycling
    • Formula 1
    • ESports

Copyright © 2024 Sand Jack TV.
Sand Jack TV is not responsible for the content of external sites.