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- OLYMPICS, Page 631992 SUMMER GAMESTrack Stars
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- GOLDEN OLDIE RETURNS ONCE MORE
- Carl Lewis, U.S.
-
- Only yesterday, it seems, he was entrenched as the world's
- premier sprinter and jumper. After four Olympic gold medals in
- 1984 and two in '88, F. Carleton Lewis (he strongly prefers
- Carl) last August recorded an astonishing 100-m world record.
- But almost simultaneously, the end of the Lewis era began to be
- visible.
-
- At the same August meet, he had watched Mike Powell sail
- past him to take the record and become the world's best long
- jumper. In June, Lewis ate the dust of Mark Witherspoon and
- Dennis Mitchell at the 100-m U.S. Olympic trials. Shockingly he
- failed to qualify for either the 100- or 200-m sprints. In
- Barcelona for his third Olympic appearance, the world's fastest
- man has an outside shot at being chosen for the 4 X 100 m-U.S.
- relay team. But he's only guaranteed a chance to compete in the
- long jump, and is not assured a medal there. Still he has stuck
- to his usual training regimen, and the preternatural Lewis
- aplomb, which so many have mistaken for ice water, may serve him
- one final time. "Experience does mean a lot," he says.
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- HOW HIGH CAN HE FLY?
- Sergei Bubka, Unified Team
-
- For the past eight years, Sergei Bubka's grip on the pole
- vault has been so unrelenting that every competition he enters
- becomes not a question of who will win but how high Bubka will
- soar.
-
- The son of a Russian army officer who grew up in the
- Ukraine, the unknown athlete at 19 literally vaulted onto the
- scene with a winning 18-ft. 8 1/4-in. jump at the 1983 Helsinki
- world championships. He has dominated the sport since -- winning
- the 1988 Olympic gold, taking 23 of the 25 meets he entered last
- year, and arcing 20 ft. or better four times. With his speed
- (10.2 sec. in the 100 m) and dazzling strength (his wedge-shaped
- upper body resembles a gymnast's), the 176-lb. Bubka is able to
- use a pole designed for someone weighing 44 lbs. more, allowing
- him extra spring. Sponsors reportedly give him as much as
- $25,000 to make an appearance, while Nike pays every time he
- sets a new world record. And at 28, the star grazer is probably
- still rising toward the peak of his parabola.
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- LEAGUE OF HER OWN
- Jackie Joyner-Kersee, U.S.
-
- As the heptathlon and long-jump champion of the 1988
- Games, she became the greatest -- and perhaps best known --
- woman athlete in the world. Her world-record point total in the
- seven-event heptathlon (7,291) is regarded as virtually
- unmatchable. But one warm night in Tokyo last August, the
- superhuman Jackie Joyner-Kersee seemed momentarily mortal. She
- pulled a hamstring muscle in the 200-m race and left the world
- championships on a stretcher. "I thought my career was over,"
- she says. It was just a temporary abdication though.
-
- After therapy, Joyner-Kersee, 30, is back in form, and
- favored to become the first to win the Olympic heptathlon twice.
- But these days Joyner-Kersee seems less concerned about her
- place in athletic history than with using her good fortune to
- help out in her hometown. Last November she chartered a plane
- to take 114 kids from East St. Louis, Illinois, to see the
- Thanksgiving Day parade in New York City. "People think it's
- special to be an all-around athlete," she says. "But it's more
- important to be an all-around person."
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