Asafa Powell
 |
Asafa Powell at the Jamaica National Stadium in 2004 |
Asafa Powell (born
11 November 1982) is a
Jamaican sprinter,
Commonwealth 100 m champion and current joint
100 m world record holder (with
Justin Gatlin).
Asafa Powell was going to be an electrical engineer before he decided to start running. His elder brother Donovan was a 100 m semi-finalist in the
1999 world championships. Unlike many of his compatriots, Powell decided against moving to the USA to further his career and continues to train in Kingston, Jamaica where he often runs on grass wearing flat shoes.
Powell first came to the attention of the athletics world at the
2003 world championships when he suffered the ignominy of being the 'other' athlete disqualified for a false start in the semi-final where
Jon Drummond memorably refused to leave the track having suffered the same fate.
The following season Powell was one of the gold medal favorites for
2004 Olympic 100 m, after clocking sub-10 second times a record-equalling 9 times in a season. However, Powell finished a disappointing fifth in the Athens final.
The following year, he gained some consolation by breaking the 100 m world record, in Athens again, on
June 14,
2005, setting a time of 9.77 s. This beat American
Tim Montgomery's
2002 record of 9.78 s (which was later disqualified due to doping allegations against Montgomery) by just one one-hundredth of a second. Coincidentally, Powell achieved the feat on the same track as
Maurice Greene's
1999 world record of 9.79 s. Wind assistance for Powell was measured at 1.6 m/s - a gentle breeze - within the
IAAF legal limit of 2.0 m/s.
Asafa won the 2006
Commonwealth Games title easily but had to get through a drama-filled semi-final which saw two disqualifications, three false starts and Powell himself running into another competitor's lane while looking at the scoreboard (he was held not to have impeded the other runner).
Powell's world record appeared to be broken on
May 12,
2006 by
Justin Gatlin's mark of 9.76 seconds. However, according to
IAAF rules, his unofficial time of 9.7660 should have been rounded to an official time of 9.77, not 9.76. Gatlin and Powell now share the record at 9.77 seconds. Powell then equalled his world record time on
June 11 2006 at
Gateshead International Stadium (the very precise time was 9.7629, rounded as well to 9.77).
To date Powell has legally run under 10 seconds 21 times. Only
Frankie Fredericks (27),
Ato Boldon (28) and
Maurice Greene (52) have more sub 10 times to their name.
On
April 24,
2006, Asafa was announced as global brand spokesperson for
Nutrilite. Asafa began taking
Nutrilite supplements three months before he broke the world record, and credits it with helping him overcome low energy levels during 2005. [
1]
* Height: 188 cm (6'2")
* Weight 87 kg (192 lb)
* Apart from holding the
100 m world record, Powell is also the only person to have run two legal times under 9.80 seconds.
100 m
200 m
Progression 100 m in 2005
Progression 100 m in 2006
60 m
100 m
200 m
*
World record progression 100 metres men*
*
Asafa Powell Fansite