U.S. OLYMPIC TRACK AND FIELD TRIALS

Eaton sets world mark

Ashton Eaton and Curtis Beach react after the 1500m during the decathlon competition at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials Saturday, June 23, 2012, in Eugene, Ore. Eaton finished the decathlon with a new world record. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)
Ashton Eaton and Curtis Beach react after the 1500m during the decathlon competition at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials Saturday, June 23, 2012, in Eugene, Ore. Eaton finished the decathlon with a new world record. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

— Meter by meter, Ashton Eaton kept swallowing up real estate on a track that has always felt like home.

Second by second, the clock to the side of that track ticked away, daring him to cross the finish line in a time that would put his name in the record books.

Eaton was every bit as relentless and stubborn as that clock Saturday. He set a personal best in the exhausting 1,500-meter finale and is now the world-record holder in the decathlon - the cream of the crop in the event that determines the world’s best athlete.

“It’s like living an entire lifetime in two days,” Eaton said.

He finished the grueling two-day event with 9,039 points in the U.S. Olympic trials to beat Roman Sebrle’s 11-year-old mark by 13 points.

Eaton joined the likes of Bruce Jenner, Dan O’Brien and Rafer Johnson among the Americans who have held the world record. He did it on the 100th anniversary of the first Olympic decathlon, and many of the American greats who have made history in the event were on hand to watch Eaton do the same.

He did it in terrible weather - drizzle, rain, cold and then, finally, sunshine as he got ready for the final 1,500-meter push.

“He was in position for it, and he went for it and there was no letdown,” O’Brien said. “The most impressive thing was that he kept up his intensity in this weather.”

Eaton, the 24-year-old and a former NCAA champion for University of Oregon, neededa time of 4 minutes, 16.37 seconds in the 1,500 to break the mark. He finished in 4:14.48.

When it was over, he bent down and put his hands on his knees, then brought them up to cover his mouth. Tears were falling, elated and shocked all at the same time.

A few minutes later, he took the mini American flag he had been handed as a newly minted member of the U.S. Olympic team and stabbed it into the turf near the scoreboard that displayed his accomplishment: “World Record Decathlon. Ashton Eaton. 9,039 points.”

“I wanted it to be a special event because this is my home state, my hometown, my home university,” he said to the crowd at Oregon’s Hayward Field. “Just from thestart, I just wanted to perform well.”

What to do for an encore?

The world will see in six weeks in London, wherehe’ll go in as the favorite, along with the man he beat, defending world champion Trey Hardee, who finished 656 points back.

“Going into London, I’m not going to change a thing,” Eaton said.

Chances for an American medal sweep in London, thought to be a good possibility, were diminished when defending Olympic champion Bryan Clay fell during the hurdles. He finished 12th.

Pretty much everything else on this memorable evening in Oregon got second billing, although there was one big question mark when the night ended.

Nobody, however, covered more ground, or did it better, than Eaton.

He opened his pursuit Friday by setting world-best marks for the decathlon in his first two events, the 100 (10.21 seconds) and long jump (27 feet). He had a mark of 46 feet, 7 1/4 inches in shot put, cleared 6-8 3/4 in the high jump and ran the 400 in a driving rainstorm in 46.70 seconds to finish the first day in the mix for the world record.

He returned Saturday to equally dreary weather but didn’t slip. The results: 13.70 seconds in the 110 hurdles, 140-5 inches in the discus, and 17-4 1/2 in the pole vault. His javelin throw of 193-1 meant he would need to top his personal best by at least 2.57 seconds in the 1,500.

The sun finally peaked out shortly before Eaton made it to the starting line, illuminating his green and black shirt and neon-orange shoes. He stayed on pace the entire time and crossed the line with nearly 2 seconds to spare.

Sports, Pages 27 on 06/24/2012

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