Michael Johnson (athlete)



         


Michael Duane Johnson, (born September 13, 1967), is a U.S. former athlete, considered by many to be the greatest sprinter of all time. He holds world records for the 200m (19.32 s), 400m (43.18 s) and 4×400 relay (2:54.20, as part of the USA team). He won four Olympic gold medals and was a world champion nine times.

Born in Dallas, Texas, he was the first man to win the 200 and 400 meters at the same Olympics, accomplishing the feat in 1996. (Two women have done the same: Valerie Brisco-Hooks in 1984 and Marie-José Perec in 1996.)

The real breakthrough onto the world stage came in 1991 when Johnson won the World Championship 200m title in Tokyo. At the 1992 Summer Olympics Johnson failed to qualify to the 200m final, but won a gold as a member of the 4×400 m relay team, which broke the world record (2:55.74).

After the disappointment of failing to make the final in his individual event at Barcelona, Johnson won 400m at the 1993 World Championships in Stuttgart. He won his second gold in 4×400m relay race with a new world record (2:54.29).

In the next World Championships at Gothenburg Johnson did his first "double" in a major tournaments. He won both 200m and 400m and in addition to that got a gold again as a member of a relay team.

The next year Johnson finally broke the 200m world record when he ran 19.66 s at the USA National Championships. With that performance he qualified to run at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta and prepared himself to attempt the "impossible" to win both titles — something no one had ever achieved. On July 29 he easily captured the 400m title in 43.49 s, beating Roger Black of Great Britain almost by second. At the 200m final on August 1, Johnson ran the opening 100 m in 10.12 s and finished the race in 19.32 s, a brilliant new world record. He reached a speed of 37 km/h.

This is the biggest improvement ever on a world 200m record. Most commentators could only find one comparable Olympic performance — Bob Beamon's 1968 long jump in Mexico.

At the beginning of 1997 Johnson injured himself during a race over 150m with Donovan Bailey for a million dollars, but managed to win his third 400m World Champion title. In 1998 injury again struck in and his next season was troubled with two injury scares curtailing his 400m races to just four before the World Championships in Seville. Had it not been for the IAAF's policy of allowing defending champions automatic entry, he would not have been in Seville because he failed to compete in the USA trials when he was injured. But he recovered and won his fourth 400m World Champion title with a new world record of 43.18 s. He later ran the last leg of the 4×400m relay team to add a ninth World Championship gold medal to his collection.

Johnson ended his fabulous career at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney by winning 400m and 4×400 relay race, thus bringing his total of Olympic golds to five. However, his gold medal count is likely to drop to four in the very near future.

In 2003, it was revealed that Jerome Young, who had run in preliminary rounds of the 4×400m relay, had been allowed to compete in Sydney despite a positive test for steroids in 1999. An appeals panel of USA Track & Field overruled the organization's doping expert, allowing Young to compete. The IAAF council has already voted to strip the relay team of its medal; the IOC was expected to follow suit before the opening of the 2004 Summer Olympics, but did not issue a final ruling as of September 2004.

Johnson has run 22 400-meter races under 44 seconds. In the 200m, he has six times under 19.80s and 17 sub-20 second performances. He also holds the world record at 300m ? 30.85s. The former record was 31.48s.

Michael Johnson was perhaps the most eminent figure in athletics in the 1990s. For much of the decade he was virtually unbeaten in the long sprints. Since retiring from competitive sport, he has acted as a TV athletics pundit.


Olympic medalists in athletics (men) | Olympic Champions in Men's 200 m
John Tewksbury | Archie Hahn | Bobby Kerr | Ralph Craig | Allen Woodring | Jackson Scholz | Percy Williams | Eddie Tolan | Jesse Owens | Mel Patton | Andy Stanfield | Bobby Joe Morrow | Livio Berruti | Henry Carr | Tommie Smith | Valeri Borzov | Don Quarrie | Pietro Mennea | Carl Lewis | Joe DeLoach | Mike Marsh | Michael Johnson | Konstantinos Kenteris | Shawn Crawford


Olympic medalists in athletics (men) | Olympic Champions in Men's 400 m

Tom Burke | Maxey Long | Harry Hillman | Paul Pilgrim | Wyndham Halswelle | Charles Reidpath | Bevil Rudd | Eric Liddell | Ray Barbuti | Bill Carr | Archie Williams | Arthur Wint | George Rhoden | Charlie Jenkins | Otis Davis | Michael Larrabee | Lee Evans | Vincent Matthews | Alberto Juantorena | Viktor Markin | Alonzo Babers | Steve Lewis | Quincy Watts | Michael Johnson (twice) | Jeremy Wariner



Olympic medalists in athletics (men) | Olympic Champions in Men's 4x400 m relay


1912 United States Mel Sheppard, Edward Lindberg, Ted Meredith, Charles Reidpath
1920 Great Britain Cecil Griffiths, Robert Lindsay, John Ainsworth-Davies, Guy Butler
1924 United States Commodore Cochran, Alan Helffrich, Oliver MacDonald, William Stevenson
1928 United States George Baird, Emerson Spencer, Frederick Alderman, Ray Barbuti
1932 United States Ivan Fuqua, Edgar Ablowich, Karl Warner, Bill Carr
1936 Great Britain Frederick Wolff, Godfrey Rampling, William Roberts, Godfrey Brown
1948 United States Arthur Harnden, Clifford Bourland, Roy Cochran, Mal Whitfield
1952 Jamaica Arthur Wint, Leslie Laing, Herb McKenley, George Rhoden
1956 United States Charlie Jenkins, Louis Jones, James Mashburn, Tom Courtney
1960 United States Jack Yerman, Earl Young, Glenn Davis, Otis Davis
1964 United States Ollan Cassell, Michael Larrabee, Ulis Williams, Henry Carr
1968 United States Vincent Matthews, Ron Freeman, Larry James, Lee Evans
1972 Kenya Charles Asati, Hezahiah Nyamau, Robert Ouko, Julius Sang

1976 United States Herman Frazier, Benjamin Brown, Fred Newhouse, Maxie Parks
1980 Soviet Union Remigijus Valiulis, Mikhail Linge, Nikolay Chernetsky, Viktor Markin
1984 United States Sunder Nix, Ray Armstead, Alonzo Babers, Antonio McKay
1988 United States Danny Everett, Steve Lewis, Kevin Robinzine, Butch Reynolds
1992 United States Andrew Valmon, Quincy Watts, Michael Johnson, Steve Lewis
1996 United States LaMont Smith, Alvin Harrison, Derek Mills, Anthuan Maybank
2000 United States Alvin Harrison, Antonio Pettigrew, Calvin Harrison, Michael Johnson
2004 United States Otis Harris, Derrick Brew, Jeremy Wariner, Darold Williamson







  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License