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On August 22 in Beijing, China for the 2008 Olympic Games someone will be crowned the title known as the World's Greatest Athlete.

 

Traditionally, the title of "World's Greatest Athlete" has been given to the man who wins the decathlon. This began when King Gustav V of Sweden told Jim Thorpe, "You, sir, are the World's Greatest Athlete" after Thorpe won the decathlon at the Olympics in Stockholm in 1912. The current holder of the "title" is Czech National Roman Sebrle, who has held the title five of the past seven years as well as the highest score ever.

 

The word decathlon is of Greek origin (deka c-main +athlon c-main).

 

The contest is a menu of athletic events, testing an individual’s speed,strength, skill, endurance, and perseverance; it includes five events on each of two successive days. The first day is one of speedy movement, explosive power, and jumping ability; the second emphasizes technique and endurance.

 

Day 1

 

  • 100 Meters

  • Long Jump

  • Shot Put

  • High Jump

  • 400 Meters

 

Day 2

 

  • 100 Meter Hurdles

  • Discuss

  • Pole Vault

  • Javelin

  • 1500 Meters

 

USA Decathlon Olympic Trials Day 1: Sunday 6/29/2008

Bryan Clay clings to a 20-point margin over Trey Hardee after the first day of he US Olympic Trials Decathlon in Eugene. The Helsinki World champion’s total of 4476 was just a breath ahead of his 24-year-old rival at 4454, as five-time US champion (and Paris World champion) Tom Pappas was close by in third with 4405.

 

Bryan Clay set the tone of the competition quickly by sprinting the 100 metres in 10.39 (against a 0.4 wind), which was a decathlon PB. Trey Hardee followed Clay across the finish in 10.43, not far off his own best of 10.35.

 

After five events, Clay has 4,476 points and a 22-point lead over Trey Hardee.Tom Pappas, who was raised in Glendale and attended nearby Lane Community College, launched a monster throw of 56 feet 7½ inches in the shot put. He is third with 4,405 points.

 

Oregon sophomore Ashton Eaton used the day's best 400 meters time of 47.07 seconds to pull into fifth place. The overflow Hayward Field crowd of 20,733 clearly was playing favorites. This was obvious early

in the day during the long jump, the competition's second event. That was before many of the fans arrived, but the ones there would rhythmically clap before each attempt by Pappas and Eaton.

 

"Those guys, they get on the runway and everybody in the stands is clapping for them," Clay said. "It would be like me having a meet back home in Hawaii. I don't think they're going to do any better than they were ready to do. But when you're at home and you're doing stuff in front of your home crowd it just makes things a little easier."

 

 

It's shaping up as a very interesting conclusion, beginning at 11:30 a.m. today with the 110-meter high hurdles. Pappas is a five-time U.S. champion. He's been around the block. Hardee set the 2006 NCAA decathlon record. And who knows what to expect from Eaton, a relative novice, who came from behind to win this year's NCAA decathlon.

 

"I think because my training was going so well I expected to come out and not necessarily blow away the field, but I was expecting to do certain things in certain events," Clay said. "I really wasn't mentally prepared to have to fight for every single centimeter and every single hundredth of a second, and that's what I ended up having to do."

 

Today's decathlon events are the 110 hurdles, discus, pole vault, javelin and 1,500.

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