Tiebreaking runoff canceled after Tarmoh concedes to Felix

Tiebreaking runoff canceled after Tarmoh concedes to Felix »Play Video
This Saturday, June 23, 2012, photo provided by USA Track & Field shows the third-place finish of the women's 100-meter final from a photo-finish camera, shot at 3,000-frames-per-second, during the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials in Eugene, Ore. Allyson Felix and Jeneba Tarmoh, in foreground, finished in a dead heat for the last U.S. spot in the 100 to the London Games, each leaning across the finish line in 11.068 seconds. (AP Photo/USA Track & Field)

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — Jeneba Tarmoh has conceded her spot in the 100 meters rather than race against training partner Allyson Felix.

Tarmoh notified USA Track and Field on Monday of her intention to withdraw. Her agent, Kimberly Holland, already made it known that Tarmoh would not participate in a runoff Monday night to break a third-place tie at the U.S. track trials.

In an email sent through her agent to USATF, Tarmoh said: "I understand that with this decision I am no longer running the 100m dash in the Olympic Games and will be an alternate for the event."

USATF President Stephanie Hightower said the organization is "disappointed" Tarmoh had a change of heart.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Earlier

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — The runoff to settle a third-place tie in the women's 100 meters at the U.S. track trials is off — for now.

Sprinter Jeneba Tarmoh will not compete Monday against training partner Allyson Felix, Tarmoh's agent, Kimberly Holland, said in a text to The Associated Press. There's still the possibility the race will be held at a later date.

The runoff was scheduled to be held Monday night at Hayward Field. The last spot in the event for the London Games is on the line.

Felix already has qualified in the 200 after winning that race Saturday. Tarmoh is eligible to run in the Olympic 400-meter relay.

Tarmoh reluctantly agreed to the runoff. She felt she won on the track nine days ago.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press

Earlier report

EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — The runoff to settle a third-place tie in the women's 100 meters at the U.S. track trials may not make it to the starting line on Monday.

Sprinter Jeneba Tarmoh is reconsidering her decision to take part in the race against training partner Allyson Felix, according to a person with direct knowledge of the situation.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because no announcement was made. A message was left for an official at USA Track and Field.

The runoff — a winner-take-all race — is scheduled to be held at 8 p.m. EDT — 5 p.m. local time — at Hayward Field. The winner earns the last spot in the event for the London Games.

Tarmoh only reluctantly agreed to the runoff in the first place. She felt that she won her spot fair and square on the track eight days ago.

"In my heart of hearts, I just feel like I earned the third spot," she said Sunday. "I almost feel like I was kind of robbed."

Tarmoh leaned across the finish line and looked up to see her name on the scoreboard in the third spot behind winner Carmelita Jeter and runner-up Tianna Madison. The 22-year-old even took a celebratory lap around the track, waving an American flag. She received a medal and conducted a news conference.

Then, she found out about the dead heat. From reporters, no less.

The situation has been a debacle since Felix and Tarmoh crossed the line in an identical time of 11.068 seconds. USATF had no protocol in place to resolve such a deadlock and quickly scrambled to adopt a tiebreaking procedure.

The options were either a runoff, coin flip or one athlete conceding the spot to the other.

The athletes and their agents met with USATF representatives at a hotel Sunday to work out a deal and Felix and Tarmoh chose to settle matters on the track.

Tarmoh, however, was clearly unhappy with the choice.

"This decision was really hard for me to make," said Tarmoh, who didn't qualify in her other event, the 200 on Saturday night, but will be eligible for the Olympic 400 relay team. "I was pushed into a corner. They said if you don't make a decision, you give your spot up. I work too hard to just give my spot up. I had to say it was a runoff."

USATF has drawn criticism for not having policies in place long before the trials. Every other sport has a plan. In swimming, for instance, there are swim-offs to break ties.

Bobby Kersee, who coaches both sprinters, has been outspoken on the tiebreaking tumult and pushed for a Tuesday competition, just to give them more time to recover from two races and six rounds. The United States Olympic Committee doesn't officially need the list of names for the squad until that day anyway.

The sprinters have the stage to themselves on Monday and the runoff would be a boon for track. It's scheduled to be shown in prime time on NBC in conjunction with the network's coverage of the swimming trials.

"This will reintroduce people to the sport and showcase world-class athletes and great competition," new USATF CEO Max Siegel said. "I actually think (a runoff) is the best way to solve it. It's a reflection of both of their competitive spirits. They want to be fair and prove what they've worked hard."

And then when it looked like everything was heading toward a showdown, Tarmoh threw a wrinkle into the plans just 18 hours before they were going to step into the starting blocks.

Sports Illustrated was the first to report that Tarmoh was thinking of not running.

Felix said her legs were feeling a little exhausted, especially after turning in a personal-best of 21.69 in winning the 200, her signature event and one she is favored to win in London. It was an electric performance that was almost overshadowed by the flap.

After she finished, all anyone wanted to know was how she was going to break the tie in the 100.

"I didn't get to really enjoy it," Felix said. "As soon as I came off (the track), that's the first time that I actually thought about the process. Of course, I wasn't thinking I wanted to do a coin toss, but that's the first time I sat down and went through things in my head."

Felix didn't realize how big of deal the controversy was until after the 200. She was sequestered from social media until that race and had no idea the topic was being discussed on shows such as "CNN" and National Public Radio.

"Any attention our sport gets is good," Felix said.

Before the news broke of Tarmoh reconsidering her decision to race, Felix issued a caution of her own.

"If anything feels off whatsoever, I'm just going to speak up and have to pull out of it," she said. "We're both not feeling our greatest."

For Tarmoh, there's also an emotional element. She went from the high of thinking she made the team immediately after the 100, to the low of having to claim her spot all over again.

"I went to bed so happy and then I woke up to do something I don't want to do at all," Tarmoh said.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Earleir report from KVAL Sports

EUGENE, Ore. -- TrackTown12 events are extended another day after a runoff was decided as the tiebreaker for Allyson Felix and Jeneba Tarmoh's 3rd place finish in the 100m last week.

The race will decide who recieves the third U.S. Olympic Team spot for the Women's 100m event. The coach of both athletes said they wanted to wait to make a decision until after Saturday night's 200 meters so they could focus on that race.

Track officials had no policy in place to resolve it but devised a tiebreaker that included the options of a runoff or a coin flip.

The race is free to the public will take place at 4 p.m. Monday on Hayward Field. There will not be a shuttle service or fan festival at the field on Monday.

Press conference video from KVAL Sports of the USATF announcing a 5:00 pm Monday night runoff between Allyson Felix and Jeneba Tarmoh to decide the third and final spot on the 100-meter U.S. Olympic Team in London.