U.S. men, with Rai Benjamin anchoring, win 4×400 relay gold for third consecutive Olympics

by Pelican Press
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U.S. men, with Rai Benjamin anchoring, win 4×400 relay gold for third consecutive Olympics

SAINT-DENIS, France — No issues with this men’s relay team.

The quartet of Christopher Bailey, Vernon Norwood, Bryce Deadmon and Rai Benjamin completed the four laps around the track in an Olympic-record 2:54.43 to claim U.S. gold in the men’s 4×400 relay for the fifth time in the last six Olympics.

Benjamin, the gold medalist in Friday’s 400-meter hurdles, began the anchor leg with a lead and fought off Botswana’s Letsile Tebogo — the 200m gold medalist — at the finish line.

Botswana took silver with a time of 2:54.53. Great Britain took the bronze in 2:55.83.

One night earlier, the 4×100 relay team — featuring some of the fastest men in the world — squandered their chance at gold. After getting disqualified for the first exchange happening out of the zone, American sprint legend Carl Lewis demanded an overhaul of the relay program, which hasn’t won a medal in the 4×100 since 2004 or a gold since 2000.

But those problems don’t extend to the other relay. (Of course, the handoffs are far less intense when you have an entire lap to run.) The men’s 4×400 relay has been contested now in 26 Olympiads. America has won 19 of them, including nine of the last 11.

The 400-meter runners aren’t the most glorified of America’s sprinters. Their names aren’t on the marquee of USA Track and Field. But they’re gold medalists and record holders. They’ve consistently gotten the job done.

The Paris Games proved to be no different.

The United States finished third in the prelims, when 16-year-old Quincy Hall took the leadoff spot and became the youngest male track and field athlete to compete in the Olympics. Wilson didn’t put up a fast time, and the Americans trailed because of it. But he got valuable experience as one of the prodigies in track and field. With Bailey in the opening leg, the U.S. was second when he handed the baton to Norwood.

Norwood ran a 43.30 and handed to Deadmon, who pushed the U.S. to the front entering the final 400. And Benjamin — as he did in Tokyo, and in the 2023 World Championships, and in the 2019 World Championships — brought home the gold for the third consecutive Games.

Required reading

(Photo: Hannah Peters / Getty Images)




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