Felix, Gay chasing spots on U.S. team

Tyson Gay crosses the finish line ahead of the pack during the 100-meter B race at the Adidas Grand Prix track and field meet on Randall's Island, Saturday, June 9, 2012, in New York.  (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
Tyson Gay crosses the finish line ahead of the pack during the 100-meter B race at the Adidas Grand Prix track and field meet on Randall's Island, Saturday, June 9, 2012, in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

— Now that everyone knows which two races Allyson Felix will run, it’s time to find out if Tyson Gay is fit enough to win even one.

Over the next 10 days, two of America’s best-known sprinters will try to qualify for a trip to the London Games, but while Felix heads into the Olympic trials at the top of her game, Gay remains a question mark after months of struggling with injuries.

Felix finally ended the drama and said she’ll try for the 100-200 double, instead of the 200-400 she’d been training for over much of the past year.

“I said from the beginning that what’s most important for me is what’s going to help me run my best 200,” Felix said Thursday, explaining the decision she and coach Bobby Kersee reached. “Bobby felt running the 100 helps my 200, and for me, that’s what it’s all about.”

Felix takes to the track today, while Gay’s first heat in the 100 will come Saturday.

The former UA Razorbacks All-American has spent most of the past year on the shelf with a hip injury. Gay’s first race back was in New York earlier this month, where he ran 10.00 seconds into a headwind and said he felt good.

The men’s 100, however, might be the most competitive event at the Olympic trials, where three spots are available in each event and there are no concessions made for injuries, false starts or anything else. Among those Gay will have to beat are 2009 national champion Michael Rodgers, Olympic bronze medalist Walter Dix, 2004 Olympic gold medalist Justin Gatlin and two-time Olympian Darvis Patton.

If Gay somehow gets through that, Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake will be waiting in London.

“I definitely know people are counting me out,” Gay said. “I’d probably count someone out, too, if they hadn’t raced in over a year. I only have one race going into trials. I’m not really thatsharp, so I understand that comes along with the sport. I think I can do it.”

Felix, a three-time world champion at 200 meters, is still trying to win her first Olympic gold at that distance. She tried the 200-400 last year at world championships in Daegu, South Korea but finished second in the 400, then followed with a fatigued third-place finish in the 200.

“Daegu helped me see for myself how doing the 400 first, then coming back trying to sprint, how that worked,” Felix said.

Not well, as it turned out.

But while she was making her decision, another American star, Sanya Richards-Ross, was quietly going about setting up her own chance at the double that Felix chose not to try. Richards-Ross, whose specialty is in the 400, holds the world’s fastest time in the 200 and 400 this year and will try to qualify for both.

Like Felix, Richards-Ross has unfinished business. She was a favorite in the 400 inBeijing but slowed at the end. She finished third, a result that left her crying under the stands that day.

The reason she can try for the 200-400 while Felix chooses not to is that Richards-Ross’ key event is the 400 - the one that comes first on the Olympic schedule.

“Whatever happens in the 200 will be extra, a lot of fun,” she said. “If it were flipped, I’m almost sure Coach [Clyde] Hart wouldn’t want me to do it.”

In the men’s 400, LaShawn Merritt, running well after serving a 21-month ban for using a banned male-enhancement product that also has been identified as a steroid precursor, is the defending Olympic champion andtrying to stay ahead of 2004 Olympic gold medalist Jeremy Wariner. Merritt calls the episode that led to his punishment an embarrassment.

“It happened,” he said. “I had to deal with it, with the poor judgment call on myend, and it’s over.”

It’s track and field, so of course there is more than one doping story to tell.

Gatlin was the 2004 Olympic champion but later served a four-year doping ban, a ban he still claims is the result of a masseuse using a testosterone cream on him without his knowledge.

“Everyone has coined the phrase as ‘redemption,’ ” Gatlin said when asked how it feels to return to Olympic trials after missing 2008. “For me, it’s almost like a welcomehome party. I don’t think anybody had the expectation of me coming this far, but just to come back and be able to compete was a victory within itself.”

As many as 120 spots on the Olympic team will be handed out by the end of competition July 1.

Among the other key events to watch:

The women’s 100 meters, where world champion Carmelita Jeter has this year’s best time and the best chance of breaking up Jamaica’s dominance in the women’s sprints.

The women’s 100 hurdles, where the most recognizable athlete, Lolo Jones, is anything but a shoo-in to make the top three and earn a chance to compete for the gold she lost when she fell on the ninth hurdle in Beijing. Dawn Harper won the race that day and remains America’s top hurdler.

The decathlon, where the Americans have a realistic chance of going 1-2-3 in London if defending champion Bryan Clay stays healthy, twotime world champion Trey Hardee’s elbow holds up after major surgery and last year’s world runner-up Ashton Eaton lives up to his potential.

The long-distance races will be headlined by Bernard Lagat and Galen Rupp in the 5,000, Matt Centrowitz and Jenny Simpson, both surprise medalists in the 1,500 last year in South Korea, and, of course, Lopez Lomong, whose inspirational journey from a “Lost Boy” of Sudan to American Olympian helped earn him the role of U.S. flag bearer at the 2008 Games.

Sports, Pages 20 on 06/22/2012

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