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Maurice Greene (sprinter)

Maurice Greene (born July 23, 1974) is an American former track and field sprinter who competed in the 60 meters, 100 meters, and 200 meters. He is a former 100 m world record holder with a time of 9.79 seconds. During the height of his career (1997–2004) he won four Olympic medals and was a five-time World Champion. This included three golds at the 1999 World Championships, a feat which had previously only been achieved by Carl Lewis and Michael Johnson and has since been equaled by three others.

Maurice Greene
Greene after winning the 100 m event at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney
Personal information
NationalityAmerican
Born (1974-07-23) July 23, 1974 (age 49)[1]
Kansas City, Kansas, United States[1]
Height5 ft 9 in (1.76 m)[1]
Weight180 lb (82 kg)[2]
Sport
SportSprinting
Event(s)100 meters, 200 meters
College teamKansas
Medal record

His career was affected by a number of injuries from 2001 onwards, although he won the 100 meters bronze and silver in the sprint relay at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Greene was also successful indoors: he was the 1999 Indoor World Champion, was the world record holder in the 60-meter dash for nearly 20 years and remains the joint-fastest man over 50 meters. He raced sparingly after an injury in 2005 and officially retired in 2008. Over his career, he made the third most sub-10-second runs (52) in the 100m, tied with Usain Bolt and only surpassed by Asafa Powell and Justin Gatlin.

Following his track career he has become an ambassador for the IAAF and a TV personality, appearing on Identity, Blind Date, and Dancing with the Stars. Most recently he volunteered as a track coach at University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) for the 2012–2013 season.

Since then he has become a Physical Education teacher at American Leadership Academy in Arizona.[citation needed]

Early life edit

Greene was born in Kansas City, Kansas and attended F.L. Schlagle High School. In his youth and high school, he participated in both American football and track and field. After high school, Greene received a Track scholarship to the University of Kansas. Greene also attended[3] Park University and Kansas City Kansas Community College.

Sports career edit

Early career and breakthrough edit

In 1995 he took part in his first major international tournament at the World Championships in Gothenburg, but was eliminated in the 100 m quarter-finals. His next season was disappointing, as he failed to make the American team for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. After watching the Olympic final from the stands, Greene made his way to Los Angeles to seek the coaching of John Smith. He joined the start up HSI group. He went on to become the group's most visible member.

The following season would be his breakthrough. At the World Championships in Athens, Greene won the 100 m title. This marked the beginning of Greene's dominance in the 100 m. He successfully defended his title in 1999 and 2001 and captured the Olympic gold medal in the 2000 Olympics. He was also successful at the 200 m. At the 1999 World Championships, he also won the 200 m title, the first to win both sprint events at a World Championships. However, he did not run the 200 m at the 2000 Olympics after an injury at the US trials.

World record holder and athletic prime edit

In 1999 he set the 100 m world record at 9.79 s (+0.1 m/s wind), beating Donovan Bailey's standing world record of 9.84 s (+0.7 m/s wind), and lowering the world record by the largest margin since the advent of electronic timing. Greene also matched Bailey's 50 m indoor world record time, but the run was never ratified. He also set the 60 m indoor world record twice. His 60 m indoor record is currently at 6.39 seconds. In addition, Maurice Greene was the only sprinter to hold the 60 m and 100 m world records at the same time. The previous IAAF logo was created in Greene's image.

In 2002, Greene lost his 100 m world record to fellow American Tim Montgomery, who beat his time by 0.01 (9.78 s +2.0 m/s), while Greene himself was injured and watched the race from the stands; Montgomery has since been found guilty of using performance-enhancing drugs, and his record has been retroactively rescinded. The record was broken legitimately by Asafa Powell in 2005 with a time of 9.77 s (+1.6 m/s wind).

At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greene added to his medal tally with the bronze after finishing third in his attempt to defend his 100 m title to Justin Gatlin, and a silver as the anchor leg runner on the United States 4 × 100 m relay team, narrowly denied another Olympic Gold by the British team, who won by 0.01 seconds.

Greene ran 52 sub-10-second 100 m races during his career, which at the time was more than any other sprinter in history. This record has now been surpassed by Asafa Powell who has 97 100 m sub-10-second runs to his name and Justin Gatlin who has 64 100 m sub-10-second runs to his name and equalled by Usain Bolt who has the same amount of sub-10-second runs with 52.[4] Previously Greene had held the record for the most wind-legal sub-10-second clockings for 100 m in one season, when he ran 9 sub-10s in 1999. This record was also broken by Asafa Powell in 2006 (12), and it was improved by Powell in 2008 to 15.

On December 21, 2006, he appeared as one of the "strangers" on the NBC game show Identity. The contestant, a self-professed track and field fan, incorrectly identified him by name as Marion Jones, although she identified him as the "world's fastest man."

Post-running edit

On February 4, 2008, Greene announced his retirement from track and field in Beijing, citing nagging injuries and a wish to see new individuals succeed in the sport. Greene said he hopes to pursue coaching and business interests.

In April 2008, the New York Times reported that Greene had paid Mexican discus thrower Angel Guillermo Heredia $10,000, which Heredia claimed was in payment for performance-enhancing drugs. Greene admitted meeting Heredia and making the payment, but claimed it was common for him to pay for "stuff" for other members of his training group, and reiterated that he had never used banned drugs.[5][6]

Greene was a contestant on Season 7 of Dancing with the Stars, and was paired with two-time champion Cheryl Burke. He was eliminated on Week 8 of the competition, taking 5th place.[7] He hyperextended his leg during the competition. He later helped out in their pro-dancer competition and danced a Tango with future winner Anna Demidova. Greene also appeared on the American television series Blind Date where he was paired with a woman named Christie. Greene and Christie agreed that they would see each other again.

He has a tattoo that reads GOAT referring to his claim to be "Greatest of All Time".[8]

Media edit

In an event set up by ESPN's Todd Gallagher, Greene appeared in the book "Andy Roddick Beat Me With a Frying Pan" racing in a 100-meter race against the book's editor, who had a 31-meter head start and the help of a moving sidewalk. Greene lost by a nose.[9]

Maurice Greene hosted the monthly show "Greene Light" on Eurosport where he met stars of athletics, such as Blanka Vlašić, Allyson Felix and Churandy Martina.

Greene was also the cover athlete for the multi-platform video game International Track & Field 2000, which was developed by Konami.[10]

Personal bests edit

Event Time Date Venue Notes
50 m 5.56 February 13, 1999 Los Angeles, California, United States Tied world record (not ratified)
60 m 6.39 March 2, 1998 Madrid, Spain Equalled in Atlanta on March 3, 2001, former world record
100 m 9.79 June 16, 1999 Athens, Greece +0.1 m/s wind, former world record
200 m 19.86 July 7, 1997 Stockholm, Sweden +1.6 m/s wind

International competitions edit

Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
1995 World Indoor Championships Barcelona, Spain 4th 60 m
1997 World Championships Athens, Greece 1st 100 m
1998 Goodwill Games New York City, New York, United States 1st 100 m
1st 4 × 100 m relay
1999 World Indoor Championships Maebashi, Japan 1st 60 m
World Championships Seville, Spain 1st 100 m
1st 200 m
1st 4 × 100 m relay
Grand Prix Final Munich, Germany 2nd 200 m
2000 Olympic Games Sydney, Australia 1st 100 m
1st 4 × 100 m relay
2001 World Championships Edmonton, Alberta, Canada 1st 100 m
2004 Olympic Games Athens, Greece 3rd 100 m
2nd 4 × 100 m relay
2005 World Championships Helsinki, Finland 4 × 100 m relay DNF

National competitions edit

Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
1995 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Sacramento, California, United States 2nd 100 m
1997 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Indianapolis, Indiana, United States 1st 100 m
1999 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Eugene, Oregon, United States 1st 200 m
2000 U.S. Olympic Team Trials Sacramento, California, United States 1st 100 m
2001 USA Indoor Track and Field Championships New York City, New York, United States 1st 60 m
2002 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Palo Alto, California, United States 1st 100 m
2004 U.S. Olympic Team Trials Sacramento, California, United States 1st 100 m
2005 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Carson, California, United States DNF 100 m

Meeting wins edit

IAAF Golden League
Other

Dancing with the Stars edit

Week Dance(s)/Song(s) Inaba Goodman Tonioli Result
1 Foxtrot/"Doing it to Death"
Mambo/"I Do the Jerk"
6
7
6
7
6
7
Safe
2 Rumba/"Mercy Mercy Me" 7 6 6 Safe
3 Jive/"Rock Around the Clock" 8 8 8 Safe
4 Samba/"That's the Way (I Like It)" 6 7 7 Safe
5 Salsa/"Everything I Can't Have" 9 9 9 Safe
6 Viennese Waltz/"Gravity" 7 7 7 Safe
7 Cha-Cha-Cha/"Cupid Shuffle"
Team Paso Doble/"Rocks"
8
10
9
9
8
10
Safe
8
Quarter Finals
Quickstep/"Puttin' on the Ritz"
Paso Doble/"Let it Rock"
8
8
8
8
8
8
Eliminated

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. . Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on April 17, 2020. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  2. ^ "Maurice Greene". usatf.org. USA Track & Field. Retrieved June 18, 2017.
  3. ^ Layden, Tim. "Gold Standard Once going nowhere fast, sprinter Maurice Greene has found his stride, smashed the 100-meter world record and set his sights on Olympic stardom". Vault. Retrieved September 4, 2019.
  4. ^ IAAF All Time 100 Metre list
  5. ^ Wilson, Duff (April 17, 2008). "I.A.A.F. Seeks an Explanation From Greene About Drug Allegations". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 19, 2016.
  6. ^ "Maurice Greene denies link to doping scandal". The Daily Telegraph. April 14, 2008. Retrieved January 30, 2018.
  7. ^ Kicked Off TV: Maurice Greene voted off Dancing With The Stars February 12, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Weir, Tom (July 9, 2004). "Greene has 'Mo'mentum". USA Today. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
  9. ^ O'Neil, Brian (December 2, 2007). . Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Archived from the original on March 2, 2012. Retrieved August 19, 2016.
  10. ^ Kennedy, Sam (April 27, 2000). "Track & Field 2000 Ships". Gamespot. Retrieved July 8, 2022.

External links edit

Records
Preceded by Men's 60 m World Indoor Record Holder
February 3, 1998 – January 20, 2018
Succeeded by
Awards and achievements
Preceded by Men's Track & Field ESPY Award
1999
2001–2002
Succeeded by
Preceded by BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year
1999
Succeeded by

maurice, greene, sprinter, maurice, greene, born, july, 1974, american, former, track, field, sprinter, competed, meters, meters, meters, former, world, record, holder, with, time, seconds, during, height, career, 1997, 2004, four, olympic, medals, five, time,. Maurice Greene born July 23 1974 is an American former track and field sprinter who competed in the 60 meters 100 meters and 200 meters He is a former 100 m world record holder with a time of 9 79 seconds During the height of his career 1997 2004 he won four Olympic medals and was a five time World Champion This included three golds at the 1999 World Championships a feat which had previously only been achieved by Carl Lewis and Michael Johnson and has since been equaled by three others Maurice GreeneGreene after winning the 100 m event at the 2000 Summer Olympics in SydneyPersonal informationNationalityAmericanBorn 1974 07 23 July 23 1974 age 49 1 Kansas City Kansas United States 1 Height5 ft 9 in 1 76 m 1 Weight180 lb 82 kg 2 SportSportSprintingEvent s 100 meters 200 metersCollege teamKansasMedal record Men s athleticsRepresenting the United StatesOlympic Games2000 Sydney 100 m2000 Sydney 4 100 m relay2004 Athens 4 100 m relay2004 Athens 100 mWorld Championships1997 Athens 100 m1999 Seville 100 m1999 Seville 200 m1999 Seville 4 100 m relay2001 Edmonton 100 mWorld Indoor Championships1999 Maebashi 60 mGoodwill Games1998 New York City 100 m1998 New York City 4 100 m relayHis career was affected by a number of injuries from 2001 onwards although he won the 100 meters bronze and silver in the sprint relay at the 2004 Summer Olympics Greene was also successful indoors he was the 1999 Indoor World Champion was the world record holder in the 60 meter dash for nearly 20 years and remains the joint fastest man over 50 meters He raced sparingly after an injury in 2005 and officially retired in 2008 Over his career he made the third most sub 10 second runs 52 in the 100m tied with Usain Bolt and only surpassed by Asafa Powell and Justin Gatlin Following his track career he has become an ambassador for the IAAF and a TV personality appearing on Identity Blind Date and Dancing with the Stars Most recently he volunteered as a track coach at University of California at Los Angeles UCLA for the 2012 2013 season Since then he has become a Physical Education teacher at American Leadership Academy in Arizona citation needed Contents 1 Early life 2 Sports career 2 1 Early career and breakthrough 2 2 World record holder and athletic prime 2 3 Post running 3 Media 4 Personal bests 5 International competitions 6 National competitions 7 Meeting wins 8 Dancing with the Stars 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEarly life editGreene was born in Kansas City Kansas and attended F L Schlagle High School In his youth and high school he participated in both American football and track and field After high school Greene received a Track scholarship to the University of Kansas Greene also attended 3 Park University and Kansas City Kansas Community College Sports career editEarly career and breakthrough edit In 1995 he took part in his first major international tournament at the World Championships in Gothenburg but was eliminated in the 100 m quarter finals His next season was disappointing as he failed to make the American team for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta After watching the Olympic final from the stands Greene made his way to Los Angeles to seek the coaching of John Smith He joined the start up HSI group He went on to become the group s most visible member The following season would be his breakthrough At the World Championships in Athens Greene won the 100 m title This marked the beginning of Greene s dominance in the 100 m He successfully defended his title in 1999 and 2001 and captured the Olympic gold medal in the 2000 Olympics He was also successful at the 200 m At the 1999 World Championships he also won the 200 m title the first to win both sprint events at a World Championships However he did not run the 200 m at the 2000 Olympics after an injury at the US trials World record holder and athletic prime edit In 1999 he set the 100 m world record at 9 79 s 0 1 m s wind beating Donovan Bailey s standing world record of 9 84 s 0 7 m s wind and lowering the world record by the largest margin since the advent of electronic timing Greene also matched Bailey s 50 m indoor world record time but the run was never ratified He also set the 60 m indoor world record twice His 60 m indoor record is currently at 6 39 seconds In addition Maurice Greene was the only sprinter to hold the 60 m and 100 m world records at the same time The previous IAAF logo was created in Greene s image In 2002 Greene lost his 100 m world record to fellow American Tim Montgomery who beat his time by 0 01 9 78 s 2 0 m s while Greene himself was injured and watched the race from the stands Montgomery has since been found guilty of using performance enhancing drugs and his record has been retroactively rescinded The record was broken legitimately by Asafa Powell in 2005 with a time of 9 77 s 1 6 m s wind At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens Greene added to his medal tally with the bronze after finishing third in his attempt to defend his 100 m title to Justin Gatlin and a silver as the anchor leg runner on the United States 4 100 m relay team narrowly denied another Olympic Gold by the British team who won by 0 01 seconds Greene ran 52 sub 10 second 100 m races during his career which at the time was more than any other sprinter in history This record has now been surpassed by Asafa Powell who has 97 100 m sub 10 second runs to his name and Justin Gatlin who has 64 100 m sub 10 second runs to his name and equalled by Usain Bolt who has the same amount of sub 10 second runs with 52 4 Previously Greene had held the record for the most wind legal sub 10 second clockings for 100 m in one season when he ran 9 sub 10s in 1999 This record was also broken by Asafa Powell in 2006 12 and it was improved by Powell in 2008 to 15 On December 21 2006 he appeared as one of the strangers on the NBC game show Identity The contestant a self professed track and field fan incorrectly identified him by name as Marion Jones although she identified him as the world s fastest man Post running edit On February 4 2008 Greene announced his retirement from track and field in Beijing citing nagging injuries and a wish to see new individuals succeed in the sport Greene said he hopes to pursue coaching and business interests In April 2008 the New York Times reported that Greene had paid Mexican discus thrower Angel Guillermo Heredia 10 000 which Heredia claimed was in payment for performance enhancing drugs Greene admitted meeting Heredia and making the payment but claimed it was common for him to pay for stuff for other members of his training group and reiterated that he had never used banned drugs 5 6 Greene was a contestant on Season 7 of Dancing with the Stars and was paired with two time champion Cheryl Burke He was eliminated on Week 8 of the competition taking 5th place 7 He hyperextended his leg during the competition He later helped out in their pro dancer competition and danced a Tango with future winner Anna Demidova Greene also appeared on the American television series Blind Date where he was paired with a woman named Christie Greene and Christie agreed that they would see each other again He has a tattoo that reads GOAT referring to his claim to be Greatest of All Time 8 Media editIn an event set up by ESPN s Todd Gallagher Greene appeared in the book Andy Roddick Beat Me With a Frying Pan racing in a 100 meter race against the book s editor who had a 31 meter head start and the help of a moving sidewalk Greene lost by a nose 9 Maurice Greene hosted the monthly show Greene Light on Eurosport where he met stars of athletics such as Blanka Vlasic Allyson Felix and Churandy Martina Greene was also the cover athlete for the multi platform video game International Track amp Field 2000 which was developed by Konami 10 Personal bests editEvent Time Date Venue Notes50 m 5 56 February 13 1999 Los Angeles California United States Tied world record not ratified 60 m 6 39 March 2 1998 Madrid Spain Equalled in Atlanta on March 3 2001 former world record100 m 9 79 June 16 1999 Athens Greece 0 1 m s wind former world record200 m 19 86 July 7 1997 Stockholm Sweden 1 6 m s windInternational competitions editYear Competition Venue Position Event Notes1995 World Indoor Championships Barcelona Spain 4th 60 m1997 World Championships Athens Greece 1st 100 m1998 Goodwill Games New York City New York United States 1st 100 m1st 4 100 m relay1999 World Indoor Championships Maebashi Japan 1st 60 mWorld Championships Seville Spain 1st 100 m1st 200 m1st 4 100 m relayGrand Prix Final Munich Germany 2nd 200 m2000 Olympic Games Sydney Australia 1st 100 m1st 4 100 m relay2001 World Championships Edmonton Alberta Canada 1st 100 m2004 Olympic Games Athens Greece 3rd 100 m2nd 4 100 m relay2005 World Championships Helsinki Finland 4 100 m relay DNFNational competitions editYear Competition Venue Position Event Notes1995 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Sacramento California United States 2nd 100 m1997 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Indianapolis Indiana United States 1st 100 m1999 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Eugene Oregon United States 1st 200 m2000 U S Olympic Team Trials Sacramento California United States 1st 100 m2001 USA Indoor Track and Field Championships New York City New York United States 1st 60 m2002 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Palo Alto California United States 1st 100 m2004 U S Olympic Team Trials Sacramento California United States 1st 100 m2005 USA Outdoor Track and Field Championships Carson California United States DNF 100 mMeeting wins editIAAF Golden LeagueGolden Gala 100 m 1999 2000 2001 2002 Golden Gala 200 m 2000 Meeting de Paris 100 m 2001 2002 Meeting de Paris 200 m 1999 Internationales Stadionfest 100 m 1998 2000 Internationales Stadionfest 200 m 1999 Memorial Van Damme 100 m 1998 2000 Weltklasse Zurich 100 m 1999 2000OtherAthens Grand Prix Tsiklitiria 100 m 1999 Osaka Grand Prix 100 m 2000 New Balance Indoor Grand Prix 60 m 1999Dancing with the Stars editWeek Dance s Song s Inaba Goodman Tonioli Result1 Foxtrot Doing it to Death Mambo I Do the Jerk 67 67 67 Safe2 Rumba Mercy Mercy Me 7 6 6 Safe3 Jive Rock Around the Clock 8 8 8 Safe4 Samba That s the Way I Like It 6 7 7 Safe5 Salsa Everything I Can t Have 9 9 9 Safe6 Viennese Waltz Gravity 7 7 7 Safe7 Cha Cha Cha Cupid Shuffle Team Paso Doble Rocks 810 99 810 Safe8Quarter Finals Quickstep Puttin on the Ritz Paso Doble Let it Rock 88 88 88 EliminatedSee also editList of men s Olympic and World Championship athletics sprint champions List of 100 metres national champions men List of 2000 Summer Olympics medal winners List of 2004 Summer Olympics medal winners 100 metres at the Olympics 4 100 metres relay at the Olympics 100 metres at the World Championships in Athletics 200 metres at the World Championships in Athletics 4 100 metres relay at the World Championships in Athletics List of people from Kansas City KansasReferences edit a b c Evans Hilary Gjerde Arild Heijmans Jeroen Mallon Bill et al Maurice Greene Olympics at Sports Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on April 17 2020 Retrieved October 7 2019 Maurice Greene usatf org USA Track amp Field Retrieved June 18 2017 Layden Tim Gold Standard Once going nowhere fast sprinter Maurice Greene has found his stride smashed the 100 meter world record and set his sights on Olympic stardom Vault Retrieved September 4 2019 IAAF All Time 100 Metre list Wilson Duff April 17 2008 I A A F Seeks an Explanation From Greene About Drug Allegations The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 19 2016 Maurice Greene denies link to doping scandal The Daily Telegraph April 14 2008 Retrieved January 30 2018 Kicked Off TV Maurice Greene voted off Dancing With The Stars Archived February 12 2009 at the Wayback Machine Weir Tom July 9 2004 Greene has Mo mentum USA Today Retrieved May 12 2010 O Neil Brian December 2 2007 Sporting absurdity in all its gloriosity Pittsburgh Post Gazette Archived from the original on March 2 2012 Retrieved August 19 2016 Kennedy Sam April 27 2000 Track amp Field 2000 Ships Gamespot Retrieved July 8 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maurice Greene adidas athletes profile at the Wayback Machine archived January 21 2011 Maurice Greene at World Athletics nbsp Maurice Greene at www USATF org nbsp Maurice Greene at TeamUSA org archived nbsp Maurice Greene at Olympics com nbsp Maurice Greene at Olympedia nbsp RecordsPreceded byAndre Cason Men s 60 m World Indoor Record HolderFebruary 3 1998 January 20 2018 Succeeded byChristian ColemanAwards and achievementsPreceded byWilson KipketerMichael Johnson Men s Track amp Field ESPY Award19992001 2002 Succeeded byMichael JohnsonTim MontgomeryPreceded byMark O Meara BBC Overseas Sports Personality of the Year1999 Succeeded byTiger Woods Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maurice Greene sprinter amp oldid 1174051858, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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