Jackpot
winners’ have Overall Grand Prix titles in their sights
IAAF
12 September 2002 – Paris –
This Saturday, at 2 pm, the start of the Men’s Hammer, launches the 18th
IAAF Grand Prix Final in Paris’ Stade Charlety, which will bring the 2002 IAAF
Grand Prix season to a dramatic climax. IAAF Consultant Mark Butler analyses the
prospects for the men’s and women’s Overall Grand Prix titles.
Beyond the lucrative
Individual Event Grand Prix Awards - graduating down from US$50,000 for first
place, to US$5000 for eighth – that will be distributed in Paris on 14 September,
the Overall Grand Prix Awards are also up for grabs in the French capital with
US$100,000, US$60,000 and US$30,000, to be presented to the three highest points
scorers respectively. Break a World Record and the prize torrent turns into a
deluge, with another US$100,000 on offer.
Having already secured a
four way share of the IAAF Golden League Jackpot amounting to 50 kilos of gold (approx
US$500,000), it is no surprise that the leading contenders for the overall IAAF
Grand Prix Awards are the same athletes who collected a share of that Jackpot
last Friday in Berlin.
Morocco’s Hicham El Guerrouj
(1500m), Felix Sánchez of the Dominican Republic (400mH) and the USA’s Marion
Jones (100m) each won seven out of seven Golden League meetings - scoring 12
points each - and also won at least one IAAF Grand Prix meeting (worth 8
points). As such during the season they have each accumulated a maximum possible
score of 92 Grand Prix points from eight meetings. The other Jackpot sharer,
Mexico’s 400m star Ana Guevara, restricted herself to the Golden League, so has
a total of 84 points from seven meetings.
MEN - Overall Standings
before the final
=1, Hicham El
Guerrouj MAR 92 points
Felix Sánchez DOM 92
3, Ben Limo
KEN 80
4, Christian Olsson SWE 78
5, Jonathan Edwards GBR 75
6, Tim Montgomery
USA 74
If both El Guerrouj and
Sánchez win in Paris, then each will have a total score of 116 points (92 + 24
for a win in the Grand Prix Final), with the Overall Champion being decided by
the best performance according to the IAAF Scoring Tables of Athletics.
The tables favour El
Guerrouj. His season's best 1500m of 3:26.89 would score 1289 points, which
corresponds to a 400m hurdles time of 46.54, substantially quicker than the
World record in that event! The seasonal best of Sánchez, 47.35, scores 1251 and
is the equivalent of 3:29.59 for 1500m, a time which El Guerrouj - whose
birthday it will be on the day of the final - has bettered three times in 2002.
Other comparisons within the
range of performances likely in the Grand Prix
Final:
Points 1500m 400mH
1230 3:31.07 47.83
1220 3:31.78 48.05
1210 3:32.49 48.27
1200 3:33.20 48.49
As Sánchez will attempt a
remarkable double in Paris and an hour and 35 minutes after running the hurdles
will return to race the 400m flat, which poses a tricky dilemma for the World
400m Hurdles champion. Should he go for broke and run a fast hurdles time, or
hold back and try to win with less effort. A slower hurdles time might leave him
fresher for his second race, but by giving El Guerrouj a softer target, he will
make it easier for the Moroccan to overtake him for the overall prize of
$100,000.
However, with home favourite
European champion Stéphane Diagana in the hurdles, Sánchez will need to run fast
just to win his specialist event. If Sánchez does lose in the hurdles, he can
still get maximum points by winning the 400m flat which is scheduled to take
place after El Guerrouj's 1500m.
No man has ever won two
events at a Grand Prix Final. However, in 1998 Marion Jones conquered this
prodigious task when winning the Long Jump and 100m. Sonia O'Sullivan also came
close with a first (3000m) and second (1 Mile) in 1993.
Even if he wins both events,
it should be noted that Sanchez can only have one set of points from
Paris credited to his
overall score.
Kenya’s long distance ace
Benjamin Limo is best-paced to take third place in the Overall stakes, but he
needs to win the 3000m to stay ahead of Sweden’s European champion Christian
Olsson, should the Swede defeat Britain’s World record holder Jonathan Edwards
in the Triple Jump.
WOMEN - Overall Standings
before the Final
1, Marion Jones
USA 92
2, Gail
Devers
USA 87
3, Ana
Guevara MEX 84
4 Tatyana Shikolenko RUS 83
=5, Berhane Adere ETH 82
Osleidys Menéndez
CUB 82
Four years after her
previous win, Marion Jones is set to collect a second Overall IAAF Grand Prix
title. She holds a five-point lead from US sprint hurdler Gail Devers, which
means Jones could finish second in the 100m and still win the title.
Yet to conceive that Jones
would happily settle for second is impossible, especially as her great rival
World 100m champion Zhanna Pintusevich-Block of the
Ukraine is also in the race,
giving the American Olympic champion all the motivation required.
In the 100m hurdles, Devers
faces another tough race against her Berlin conqueror Brigitte Foster of Jamaica,
which gives Ana Guevara the opportunity to move into second place overall,
should she maintain her unbeaten streak this year. The only previous Mexican
Grand Prix success was by Arturo Barrios, who won the 5000m in 1987 and 1989.