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Hillsborough High’s Erriyon Knighton finishes fourth at Olympics

The 17-year-old runs his first Olympics 200-meter final in 19.93 seconds. Canadian Andre de Grasse finally breaks through for gold.
 
Canada's Andre de Grasse, second from left, wins the men's 200-meter final at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Hillsborough High teenager Erriyon Knighton, third from left, places fourth.
Canada's Andre de Grasse, second from left, wins the men's 200-meter final at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. Hillsborough High teenager Erriyon Knighton, third from left, places fourth. [ PETR DAVID JOSEK | AP ]
Published Aug. 4, 2021|Updated Aug. 4, 2021

TOKYO — Andre de Grasse of Canada won the Olympic gold medal in the 200-meter race five years after finishing second to Usain Bolt.

De Grasse won in a national record time of 19.62 seconds, holding off two Americans for the medals Wednesday. Kenneth Bednarek won silver in a personal best 19.68 seconds and 2019 world champion Noah Lyles took bronze in 19.74.

Hillsborough High’s Erriyon Knighton, the youngest member of the U.S. men’s track team at 17, placed fourth in 19.93. Knighton, the youngest male athlete to represent the United States in track at the Olympics since Jim Ryun in 1964, had broken Bolt’s under-18 youth record earlier in the summer.

De Grasse’s win ends a string of close calls for the 26-year-old and fills out a medal collection that was only missing a gold. He won bronze four nights earlier in the 100 to go with the third-place medal he took in Rio de Janeiro, as well.

He also won a silver in the 200 there, though his stay in Brazil is best remembered for the time he had the audacity to mess with Bolt.

It was a semifinal race and the two were far ahead of the field and easily going to make the medal race. But De Grasse kept pushing. It forced Bolt to kick things back into overdrive.

Bolt won the race but playfully wagged his finger at De Grasse. The moment went viral, and Bolt insisted he wasn’t pleased. He came back to blow away De Grasse in the final, by nearly a quarter second, but the champion suggested the extra energy didn’t help in his futile quest to re-set his world record of 19.19.

It’s De Grasse’s first gold at a major event after amassing two silvers and six bronzes at Olympics and world championships since 2015.

“It’s persistence,” said Canadian decathlete Damian Warner, who hung out near the track to watch his teammate win. “He’s had to go against Usain Bolt, Yohan Blake, all these tough competitors. So it’s not like he’s just choking or losing in the final. He’s losing to some really great athletes.”

This time, he beat some — most notably, Lyles, who has been on a difficult road to the Tokyo Olympics. He has openly talked about his own mental-health issues and how the pandemic disrupted everything.

At one point, Lyles looked like he might be heading for an attempt at a 100-200 double. But his 100 at Olympic trials was a mess, and his best race of the season was the 200 final in Eugene, Ore.

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Lyles made a mistake the night before in the Olympic semifinals, slowing down too far before the line, getting edged out for the two automatic spots, and being forced to wait to see if his time would earn him a qualifying spot. It cost him in the final. Forced to start in Lane 3, where all the top competition races behind him, Lyles pushed out too quickly. He had the lead heading into the homestretch but had nothing more to give.

“Unfortunately, I couldn’t see anybody and was running for my life,” Lyles said. “I thought I was the one behind. I felt like I was the one chasing.”

Nope. De Grasse was doing the chasing. And catching. And, finally, winning. He’s the first sprint gold medalist for Canada since Donovan Bailey won the 100 at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.

Quite an accomplishment for a one-time point guard who got into track on a whim. On the bus in high school, he bumped into a friend, who challenged him to come out to the track. De Grasse thought he could beat his buddy, so he went out in his basketball shorts, started from a standing position and finished in 10.9.

Olympic bronze medalist Tony Sharpe was sitting in the stands that day, saw it and said, “Who is this guy?”

That was in 2012. Not a decade later, nobody is asking anymore.