Sport: Only a Tick Away from L.A.
Track Star Carl Lewis takes aim at four Olympic gold medals
With 50 meters left to go at the USA/Mobil Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Indianapolis, Carl Lewis glanced over his shoulder. The view was sweet. He was demolishing an Olympic-caliber field in the 200-meter sprint, and he was doing it at a world-record pace. Then, a wide smile cracking his chiseled features, Lewis tossed away the record by throwing his arms into the muggy night air ten yards before the finish. The crowd of nearly 11,000 roared in delight at the gesture.
That cavalier action, in a world where reputations (and Olympic berths) hang on millimeters and hundredths of seconds, was perfectly in character. For by winning the 200, record or not, Lewis became the first American in nearly a century to gather three titles at a national outdoor championship.* The rare triple is roughly equivalent to a major league pitcher's chalking up a 1.50 ERA, winning 20 games and batting .350. Other sprinters have been superlative long jumpers, but Lewis is in a class by himself (he owns the indoor mark of 28 ft. 1 in.). At Indianapolis he made the second farthest outdoor long jump in history: 28 ft. 10¼ in., just 4¼ in. shy of the record.
Two hours later, Lewis proceeded to clock 19.75 sec. in the 200, missing the record held by Italy's Pietro Mennea by a slim .03 sec. The day before, his 10.27 time won the 100 meters (his best is 9.96 sec., .01 off Jim Hines' world mark). The University of Houston senior shrugged off his Indianapolis performances. "I don't worry about times and records. I'm my own competition," he said. "And I think there are going to be some absolutely unheard-of things coming from me."
The words echo Ali's youthful braggadocio; the prediction seems merely reasonable. Lewis, who turns 22 this week, possesses powers far from their peak. But he may already be the premier track and field athlete of his generationthe modern equivalent of his idol, Jesse Owens. Last year Lewis jumped nearly 30 ft., but fouled by an undetectable whisker. Meanwhile, track watchers are already muttering about a 9-sec. 100.
The impossible has intrigued Lewis since boyhood. Back in 1968, when Carl was seven, Bob Beamon of New York City leaped a record 29 ft. 2½ in. in the Mexico City Olympics, almost two feet farther than anyone else had ever managed. But when Lewis was ten, he marked off the distance in his Willingboro, N.J., front yard and thought about being the best in the world. Challenging records was a family tradition. His parents were both collegiate stars, who formed their own track and field club in 1969 and coach at competing high schools. His sister Carol, 19, is also a ranking long-jumper. Both she and Carl were set for the U.S.-boycotted 1980 Olympics in Moscow.
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