TrackTown12: Eaton sets Decathlon World Record

TrackTown12: Eaton sets Decathlon World Record
Ashton Eaton reacts after the 1500m during the decathlon competition at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials Saturday, June 23, 2012, in Eugene, Ore. Eaton finished the decathlon with a new world record.

EUGENE, Ore. -- The men's decathlon events continued Saturday with the 110m Hurdles, Discus Throw, Pole Vault, Javelin Throw and 1,500m events.

Meter by meter, Ashton Eaton kept swallowing up real estate on a track that has always felt like home.

Second by second, the clock on that track ticked away — daring him to cross the finish line in a time that would put his name in the record books.

Eaton was every bit as relentless and stubborn as that clock Saturday. He set a personal best in the exhausting 1,500-meter finale and is now the world-record holder in the decathlon — the cream of the crop in the event that determines the world's best athlete.

Eaton finished with 9,039 points in the U.S. Olympic trials Saturday to beat Roman Sebrle's 11-year-old mark by 13 points.

The 24-year-old University of Oregon product needed a time of 4 minutes, 16.37 seconds in the 1,500 to break the mark at the school's Hayward Field. He finished in 4:14.48.

When it was over, Eaton bent down and put his hands on his knees, then brought them up to cover his mouth — elated and shocked all at the same time.

A few minutes later, he took the mini American flag he'd been handed as a member of the U.S. Olympic team and stabbed it into the right near the scoreboard on the field that displayed his accomplishment: "World Record Decathlon. Ashton Eaton. 9,039 points."

What to do for an encore?

We'll see in six weeks in London, where he'll go in as the favorite, along with the man he beat, defending world champion Trey Hardee, who finished 656 points back. Chances for an American medal sweep, thought to be a good possibility this year, were vanquished when defending Olympic champion Bryan Clay fell during the hurdles. He finished 12th.

 

110 Meter Hurdles - Reigning Olympic decathlon gold medalist Bryan Clay won't defend his title in London after he stumbled in the 110-meter hurdles at the U.S. track trials Saturday.

Clay was disqualified after missing the final hurdle. That took him out of the running for a top-three finish in the decathlon for a spot on the Olympic team.

Through seven events, Oregon native Ashton Eaton leads the decathlon with 6,464 points, followed by reigning world champion Trey Hardee with 6,269 points.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.