Chryste Gaines
Chryste Gaines| Personal information |
|---|
| Full name |
Chryste Dionne Gaines |
|---|
| Born |
September 14, 1970 (1970-09-14) (age 46) Lawton, Oklahoma, U.S. |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Chryste Dionne Gaines (born September 14, 1970 in Lawton, Oklahoma) is an American athlete who competed mainly in the 100 metres.
A 1988 graduate of South Oak Cliff High School in Dallas, Texas,[1] Gaines competed for the United States in the 1996 Summer Olympics held in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., in the 4 x 100 metres where she won the gold medal with teammates Olympic 100m champion Gail Devers, Inger Miller and Gwen Torrence who won the Olympic 200m in Barcelona and a bronze in the 100m in Atlanta.
She returned to Sydney for the 2000 Summer Olympics as the sole survivor of the 4 x 100 meters, this time she lined up with double sprint gold medalist Marion Jones and fellow Americans Torri Edwards and Nanceen Perry but could only come away with the bronze medal.
In 2003, Gaines was issued a Public Warning and had her results disqualified for the detection of Modafinil.[2] The same year she was investigated as part of the BALCO scandal and in 2004 she received a two-year doping ban.[3]
Recently, she (with her other 4x100 meter teammates) had been asked to return her bronze medal won at the Sydney Olympic Games in 2000 as well as other achievements due to steroid use. She and five other members of the 2000 team would successfully appeal the IOC's decision to force them to return their 2000 medals in July 2010.[4]
See also
References
External links
|
|---|
|
- 1928
Rosenfeld, Smith, Bell, Cook (CAN)
- 1932
Carew, Furtsch, Rogers, von Bremen (USA)
- 1936
Bland, Rogers, Robinson, Stephens (USA)
- 1948
Stad-de Jong, Witziers-Timmer, van der Kade-Koudijs, Blankers-Koen (NED)
- 1952
Faggs, Jones, Moreau, Hardy (USA)
- 1956
Strickland de la Hunty, Croker, Mellor, Cuthbert (AUS)
- 1960
Hudson, Williams, Jones, Rudolph (USA)
- 1964
Ciepły, Kirszenstein, Górecka, Kłobukowska (POL)
- 1968
Ferrell, Bailes, Netter, Tyus (USA)
- 1972
Krause, Mickler, Richter, Rosendahl (FRG)
- 1976
Göhr, Stecher, Bodendorf, Wöckel (GDR)
- 1980
Müller, Wöckel, Auerswald, Göhr (GDR)
- 1984
Brown, Bolden, Cheeseborough, Ashford (USA)
- 1988
Brown, Echols, Griffith Joyner, Ashford (USA)
- 1992
Ashford, Jones, Guidry, Torrence, Finn (USA)
- 1996
Devers, Miller, Gaines, Torrence, Guidry (USA)
- 2000
Fynes, Sturrup, Davis-Thompson, Ferguson, Lewis (BAH)
- 2004
Lawrence, Simpson, Bailey, Campbell, McDonald (JAM)
- 2008
Borlée, Mariën, Ouédraogo, Gevaert (BEL)
- 2012
Madison, Felix, Knight, Jeter, Tarmoh, Williams (USA)
- 2016
Bartoletta, Felix, Bowie, Gardner, Akinosun (USA)
|
|
|---|
|
- 1977: Europe (Possekel, Lynch, Richter, Lannaman)
- 1979: Europe (Haglund, Réga, Richter, Hunte)
- 1981: East Germany (Siemon, Wöckel, Walther, Göhr)
- 1985: East Germany (Gladisch, Rieger, Auerswald, Göhr)
- 1989: East Germany (Behrendt, Günther, Möller, Oschkenat)
- 1992: Asia (Gao, Tian, Chen, Xiao)
- 1994: Africa (Idehen, Tombiri, Opara-Thompson, Onyali)
- 1998: United States (Taplin, Gaines, Miller, Guidry)
- 2002: Americas (Lawrence, Campbell, McDonald, Ferguson)
- 2006: Americas (Bailey, Ferguson-McKenzie, Mothersille, Simpson)
- 2010: Americas (Mothersille, Ferguson-McKenzie, Solomon, Baptiste)
- 2014: Americas (Bartoletta, Ahye, Henry-Robinson, Campbell-Brown)
|
|
|---|
|
1923–1979 Amateur Athletic Union | |
|---|
|
1980–1992 The Athletics Congress | |
|---|
|
1993–present USA Track & Field | |
|---|
|
| Notes |
- OT: 1928, 1932, and since 1992, championships incorporated the Olympic Trials, otherwise held as a discrete event.
- Distance:The event was over 100 yards until 1927; from 1929-31, 1955, 1957-8, 1961-2, 1965-6, 1969-70 and 1973-4
|
|---|
|
|---|
|
1927–1979 Amateur Athletic Union | |
|---|
|
1980–1992 The Athletics Congress | |
|---|
|
1993–present USA Track & Field | |
|---|
|
| Notes |
- Distances have varied as follows: 40 yards (1927–1932), 50 meters (1933–54), 50 yards (1956–64), 60 yards (1965–86), 55 meters (1987–1990)
|
|---|
|
|---|
|
| Qualification | | |
|---|
|
| Men's track & road athletes | |
|---|
|
| Men's field athletes | |
|---|
|
| Women's track & road athletes | |
|---|
|
| Women's field athletes | |
|---|
|
| Coaches | — |
|---|
|
|---|
|
| Qualification | | |
|---|
|
| Men's track & road athletes | |
|---|
|
| Men's field athletes | |
|---|
|
| Women's track & road athletes | |
|---|
|
| Women's field athletes | |
|---|
|
| Coaches |
- John Chaplin (men's head coach)
- Dick Booth (men's assistant coach)
- Dixon Farmer (men's assistant coach)
- Rob Johnson (men's assistant coach)
- John Moon (men's assistant coach)
- Jerry Quiller (men's assistant coach)
- Jay Silvester (men's assistant coach)
- Bubba Thornton (men's assistant coach)
- Karen Dennis (women's head coach)
- Sandy Fowler (women's assistant coach)
- Ernest Gregoire (women's assistant coach)
- Judy Harrison (women's assistant coach)
- Rita Somerlot (women's assistant coach)
- LaVerne Sweat (women's assistant coach)
- Mark Young (women's assistant coach)
|
|---|