Hey...does anybody know how Robert Taylor managed to get the correct
information but the Hart and Robinson didn't?

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, May 14, 2004 12:48 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: t-and-f: Eddie Hart returns to sprint wars


Greetings, all

Buried in the results of last weekend's Modesto Relays is this intriguing
100:

Men 100 Meter Dash MASTERS

    Name                    Year School                  Finals  Wind
=====================================================================
  1 Kevin Morning               Unattached               11.25   2.8 
  2 Greg Turner                  Unattached               11.35   2.8 
  3 Eddie Hart                   Unattached               11.47   2.8 
  4 Peter Grimes                 Unattached               11.59   2.8 
  5 J. Smith                     Unattached               11.73   2.8 
  6 Calvin Carter                Unattached               13.33   2.8 
  7 Martin Adamson               Unattached               14.18   2.8 
  8 Benson Ford                  Unattached               14.61   2.8 
 -- Hubert Evans                 Unattached                 DNF   2.8 

If this is THE Eddie Hart of Munich fame (or infamy), we're talking some
incredible sprinting. Eddie just turned 55!

Here's Eddie's bio on Mirko's site:
http://www.tilastopaja.net/db/atm.asp?ID=11865

For you youngsters, here's a summary (copied from Web) of Eddie's Olympic
nightmare:

Eddie Hart and Rey Robinson had both been timed at 9.9 sec in the US trials
and were regarded as the only men capable of beating the great Russian
Valery Borzov. All three won their first-round heats in the morning, but
there was no sign of Hart or Robinson as the 4.15pm start time approached
for the second round.

Their coach, Stan Wright, working from an 18-month-old preliminary schedule,
thought their races were at 7pm and Robinson was just leaving the village
three-quarters of a mile from the track when he saw on an ABC-TV monitor the
very heat in which he was supposed to be running. Only the third and least
fancied American, Robert Taylor, arrived in time for his heat. He went on to
finish second in the final behind Borzov, who won the gold in 10.14 sec.

Me again: 

11.47 (albeit wind-aided) is amazing for M55. The listed world record is
11.57 by Briton Ron Taylor in 1991. Eddie is not a stranger to masters
(except for past 10 years). He ran a 10.87 for an American M40 record in
1989.

If Eddie is in fact back, welcome, Champ! Keep on trackin'

Ken Stone
http://www.masterstrack.com



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