Where am I?
Home > Chronicles > Sports > Athletics
Saturday, November 21 2009 08:35h
SPORTS FEATURE
Slaney Still Feels Regret Over Budd Race
`All I know is that I ran the race unlike any other time I raced`, America`s greatest middle-distance runner told Reuters.
Slaney Still Feels Regret Over Budd Race
The Newest Articles
Former U.S. Olympic track star Mary Slaney poses at her home in Eugene

Author
Author
Reuters
Photographer
Photo
Reuters
TEXT
Published: July 22, 2009 08:43h
Twenty-five years after her collision with Zola Budd left her sprawling on the Los Angeles Olympics track, Mary Slaney still wonders if the race that came to define her could have had a different outcome.

"All I know is that I ran the race unlike any other time I raced," America's greatest middle-distance runner told Reuters on a recent sunny morning.

Typically a front-runner, Slaney, then Mary Decker, said she followed her coach's advice when she let others lead a portion of the 3,000 metres final many believed would bring her the ultimate prize of an Olympic gold medal.

"And that's what I did," said the 50-year-old Slaney, reflecting on the moments before she became entangled with the barefoot-running Budd and tumbled into the infield, injured, while the race continued without her.

Her coach, Dick Brown, told a news conference the next day that he and Decker, who was already world champion, had planned to let the South African-born, British-vested Budd lead, if she wanted, until the final lap. Their concern, he said, was not Budd, but eventual winner Maricica Puica of Romania.

"I am thinking the Olympics are so important, maybe I should listen to the coach," Slaney, who paced early portions of the race, said in the recent interview.

Although she no longer replays the Aug. 10 race in her head, she admitted: "If I had to go back and say: 'Oh, are there any regrets?'...Well the big regret is that I didn't run the way I normally would have run."

BLAMED BUDD

At the time, Slaney blamed Budd's inexperience for the collision, even though Olympic officials cleared the teenager of fault.

Slaney, who had undergone several operations because of problems with her legs, had been denied the chance to compete in the 1980 Moscow Olympics because of the U.S.-led boycott.

Heavily criticised in 1984 for her reaction towards Budd, Slaney still feels the pain of what happened. "How is someone in their early 20s that's been training and trying to get to the Olympics since they were 10, and it happens to be on U.S. soil...," she began before trailing off with: "And oh, my God."

She admitted, though, that her reaction might have been different if she had been older at the time.

"You can't change it," said Slaney, who turns 51 on Aug. 4. "You don't know if it would be any different if it happened now...(but) I think as you get older, you are able to control things a little more with yourself."

She and Budd participated in several events over the years that followed, but "there is really not a relationship," the American said, describing Budd as "a nice person".

"It's not like I knew her before or really had the opportunity to know her after. It's just history. It's a part of the sport, part of what happened."

The two exchanged letters for a year. "We both wished people would just leave it alone and let us get on with running," Slaney said. "But that was not going to happen."

After all, as Slaney asked rhetorically, "How many Americans do you think remember the American that should have won that was lying on the track?"

The moment fixed Slaney's image in the eyes of the U.S. public. It also inspired her.

UNBEATEN SEASON

"In 1985 I just wanted every single time that I stepped on the track to prove that I was the best," Slaney said.

She had done so at the 1983 world championships, boldly winning both the women's 1,500 and 3,000 metres.

In 1985 she conquered the world again.

"That was a satisfying feeling to run the entire season being undefeated, run against everybody from the Olympics, essentially run all my fastest times except the 1,500...break the world record in the mile and win the overall grand prix," she said.

She never won an Olympic medal, though.

"It was something that she dearly wanted. For one reason or another, it never happened," said Ron Bellamy, sports editor of Eugene's newspaper, The Register-Guard.

Eighth in the 1,500 metres and 10th in the 3,000 at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, Slaney missed making the 1992 U.S. team by one spot in the 1,500 and failed to advance to the 5,000 finals at the 1996 Atlanta Games.

Even more upsetting was a controversial doping test at the 1996 U.S. Olympic trials which showed her ratio of testosterone to epitestosterone was higher than international rules allowed.

Slaney and her lawyers contended the test was unreliable for women taking birth control pills but the sport's international governing body, now the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), temporarily suspended her in June 1997. U.S. officials reinstated her after a hearing but an IAAF arbitration panel ruled in 1999 that she had committed a doping offence.

"It was an attack on my character, an attack on my entire running career," Slaney said. "I just felt like someone ripped my heart out."

Bellamy continues to believe Slaney was wronged.

"I'm not a scientist, I'm not an expert, but I do not believe that she cheated, would have thought of cheating, needed to cheat," he said, adding that her long, record-breaking career spoke for itself.

Along with 17 official and unofficial world records, Slaney at one point held the American record for every distance from 800 to 10,000 metres. Five U.S. records are still hers.

"I helped with the progression of female running, female sports in this country, which gives me a large amount of satisfaction," she said.

"But at the same time, I felt there was so much more...with all the injuries, all the surgeries and everything else. I feel like I would have liked more chances."

Related Articles
ADS
FOOTBALL

Cantona slams Domenech and Henry

I think that Raymond Domenech is the worst coach in French football since Louis XVI -...
FOOTBALL

Sudan on high alert for crunch Algeria-Egypt tie

State-owned flag-carrier Air Algerie unveiled plans on Sunday to fly 10,000 Algerian fans...
CLASH WITH POLICE

24 hurt as Egyptians clash with police

The interior ministry said 24 people, including 11 police, were hurt and 15 cars were...
NO PLACE FOR KLOSE

No place for Klose despite swine flu all-clear

The striker was not with the Germany squad in Hanover on Sunday for the memorial service...
POINTS PENALTY

UEFA overturn Dinamo Zagreb points penalty

Dinamo had also been banned from allowing fans into their stadium for their next two Europa...
FEDERER SUPPORTS HENRY

Federer supports Henry over handball storm

Today with the technology they have they should maybe do something. It seems football...
MATCH-FIXING SCANDAL

Europe rocked by fresh match-fixing scandal

Police carried out around 50 raids on Thursday in Germany, Britain, Switzerland and Austria,...

ADS
------------------





Copyright © 2006-2009 Javno.com   All rights reserved.