Quantcast Oregon Daily Emerald - University of Oregon news, sports & entertainment
College Media Network
  • Blogs
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Buy Photos
  • Advertising
  • Classifieds
  • Contact Us

|

Home > Sports

A dominating decathlon

Oregon's Ashton Eaton finishes fifth but sets personal best

by Andrew Greif | Copy Chief

PUBLISHED ON 7/1/08 IN Sports
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
Bryan Clay achieved a personal-best 173-0 in the discus throw in winning the decathlon Monday. His 8,832 points put him 59 away from Dan O'Brien's American record.
Media Credit: Jarod Opperman
Bryan Clay achieved a personal-best 173-0 in the discus throw in winning the decathlon Monday. His 8,832 points put him 59 away from Dan O'Brien's American record.

Oregon's Ashton Eaton (center) finished fifth in the first heat of the decathlon 110m hurdles Monday, running 14.26, while eventual decathlon champion Bryan Clay (right) finished third in 13.75. Trey Hardee, who will be joining Clay and Tom Pappas in Beijing as the second-place decathlete, won the heat in 13.71.
Media Credit: Jarod Opperman
Oregon's Ashton Eaton (center) finished fifth in the first heat of the decathlon 110m hurdles Monday, running 14.26, while eventual decathlon champion Bryan Clay (right) finished third in 13.75. Trey Hardee, who will be joining Clay and Tom Pappas in Beijing as the second-place decathlete, won the heat in 13.71.

Oregon sophomore Ashton Eaton set a new personal best in the decathlon - the seventh of his career - Monday after eclipsing his personal best for a decathlon pole vault, clearing the bar at 16-8.75. Eaton finished with 8,122 points, 390 away from an Olympic berth.
Media Credit: Jarod Opperman
Oregon sophomore Ashton Eaton set a new personal best in the decathlon - the seventh of his career - Monday after eclipsing his personal best for a decathlon pole vault, clearing the bar at 16-8.75. Eaton finished with 8,122 points, 390 away from an Olympic berth.

Bryan Clay's javelin throw of 231-05 was the decathlon's best mark and a personal best. Clay broke Dan O'Brien's record for most points in an Olympic Trials decathlon and came 59 points shy of O'Brien's American record.
Media Credit: Jarod Opperman
Bryan Clay's javelin throw of 231-05 was the decathlon's best mark and a personal best. Clay broke Dan O'Brien's record for most points in an Olympic Trials decathlon and came 59 points shy of O'Brien's American record.

Bryan Clay fell 59 points short of breaking the American record in the decathlon Monday night, but his experience in Eugene told him he's ready to break the world record.

Before Clay even started the final event of the decathlon, he had the 15th-best score in the world this year. He bounced back from a disappointing first day to come within nine seconds of Dan O'Brien's 1992 standard, scoring 8,832 points. It is the best score in the world this year by 328 points.

"I am ready to break the world record. There's no doubt in my mind that I'm ready to break the American record and the world record," Clay said. "It's just a matter of time at this point."

He'll have until August 21 to put all ten events together for his record attempt.

He won Monday despite setting only two personal bests on the second day.

Collegiate record holder Trey Hardee and defending U.S. champion Tom Pappas finished second and third with 8,534 and 8,511 points, respectively. It is Hardee's first Olympic team, and Pappas' third, the first decathlete in U.S. history to ever make three straight Olympic teams.

"This is really the only thing left," Hardee said, "and in my career I feel like what's missing is a good Olympic games."

Pappas, a Lane Community College alumnus from Azalea, Ore., was fifth in Sydney and did not finish in Athens due to a foot injury.

Oregon sophomore Ashton Eaton scored a personal best 8,132 points to take fifth place, eight points behind fourth-place finisher Jake Arnold.

Per his reserved style, Clay ran a personal best in his first event of the day, the 110m hurdles, but you wouldn't have known it by his reserved expression. Hardee scored 1,012 points by winning the 110m hurdles in a lifetime best of 13.71. Clay's personal best of 13.75 yielded third place overall.

Oregon's Ashton Eaton finished fifth in his heat in 14.26, hitting three of his first four hurdles, a shaky start to an otherwise positive day.

"I just went out and wanted to have fun today," Eaton said.

Hardee, Clay and Pappas, the three expected to make the U.S. Olympic team from the beginning, stayed in the top three through the next event, the discus. Clay set another best in throwing 173-0, almost 11 whole feet better than second place.

Clay's first-round throw set a Hayward Field decathlon record.

It was the same story in the javelin, where Clay threw under his best but still won by almost 11 feet, throwing 231-5.

While he was disappointed with his clearance of 16-4.75 in the pole vault, Pappas and Eaton cleared personal bests to score two of the three highest heights in the competition. Pappas cleared 17-0.75 for 972 points. Eaton's second flight winning height of 16-8.75 was the third time he'd bettered his previous best in the pole vault on the day.

It was one of the "ups" for Pappas on an inconsistent day.

"That's how it was yesterday too, just kind of one good event, one not so good," Pappas said.

Competing in front of sparse crowds throughout most of the all-day competition, the 1,500m was run under the lights and in front of 20,949 fans, the newest Hayward Field record for spectators. Still excited from the all-Oregon men's 800m team, the crowd tried, unsuccessfully, to summon Clay to the record in the final 400m, needing a time of 4:41, when his personal best is 4:38.93

His legs weren't going to let him do it, however.

"I was on pace through about 1,110 meters and then I tried to get it going and I just had nothing left in my legs," Clay said.

The American team for Beijing now holds the top three scores in the world this year. Like a number of winners already, Clay was making predictions for the Olympic Games.

"I think it's very, very possible that we could come home with the sweep," he said.

agreif@dailyemerald.com
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.


MULTIMEDIA
MORE MULTIMEDIA

AP NEWS VIDEO

Advertisement




Sponsored Links

Sex Toys

Advertisement