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Offline Socapro

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USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
May 13, 2015 | Updated May 14, 2015 8:16 a.m (The Orange County Register)


USC sprinter Andre De Grasse competes in the 200-meter dash at the NCAA Division I Indoor Championships in Fayetteville, Ark., earlier this spring. RICHEY MILLER, ZUMAPRESS.COM

LOS ANGELES – USC sprinter Andre De Grasse is favored to win the 100- and 200-meter dashes at this weekend’s Pac-12 Championships, the latest big meet in a season and future seemingly full of them for the 20-year-old Canadian.

Yet even at the end of a career with Olympic promise, the most important race of De Grasse’s life will almost certainly be his first one.

As the other competitors settled into the starting blocks for a 100-meter race in a high school meet in suburban Toronto three years ago, De Grasse, wearing baggy basketball shorts, a T-shirt and borrowed spikes, stood upright and sideways, facing the starter like he was a baserunner on first.

“Or playing shortstop,” sprint coach Tony Sharpe recalled, laughing.

It was a moment that both captured the searching of an aimless youth and marked a life’s turning point

As he stared into the infield that afternoon, Andre De Grasse, naïve and troubled and confused, a new path at his feet, was looking for direction.

“Honestly, there was no plan,” De Grasse said when asked where he saw himself headed after high school. “I had been going down the wrong path. I didn’t know what I was going to do with my life.”

From an early age, De Grasse has lived full speed ahead, pedal to the metal, bouncing off life’s walls, both dangerous and promising, never quite certain where he might land. He spent most of high school going nowhere fast, hanging out with a rough crowd, doing drugs, looking for acceptance in all the wrong places.

Then in fewer than 11 seconds the course of his life was changed.

“Track,” De Grasse said, “saved me.”

He was clocked in 10.90 seconds in that first race in May 2012, a highly respectable prep time under any circumstances. That it was done in hoop shorts and from a standing start without the aid of starting blocks made it all the more eye-opening. It certainly caught the attention of Sharpe, an Olympic bronze medalist and now one of Canada’s top sprint coaches.

Within days Sharpe had taken De Grasse under his wing, a pairing that launched De Grasse on a meteoric rise to a place among the planet’s fastest sprinters just three years later. More important, Sharpe and the sport gave a sense of direction to a lost soul, a belief in a young man devoid of self-confidence. Track’s white lines provided a structure to a once-meandering life.

As De Grasses sprints ahead, he is unsure of where or how far the sport will carry him yet is certain he is racing in the right direction.

“I have a chance to do something special with my life,” he said.

The Trojans junior enters the Pac-12 meet ranked in this season’s world top 10 in the 100 and 200. De Grasse blew away a pair of world-class fields at last month’s Mt. SAC Relays, becoming the first sprinter in the meet’s 57-year history to sweep the 100 and 200 outright.

His 20.16, Canadian-record equaling 200 victory is 2015’s second fastest time. The current world leading mark of 20.14 by Pitt’s Carvin Nkanata was aided by a barely legal wind of 1.9 meters per second while De Grasse’s clocking had just a 0.3 mps wind behind it. De Grasse won the Mt. SAC 100 in a wind-aided 9.87, the year’s fastest time under any conditions.

De Grasse ran a legal 10.04 in the USC-UCLA dual meet May3 equaling the meet record set by UCLA’s Ato Boldon in 1996, the same year the Bruin went on to win Olympic 100 and 200 bronze medals.

“The goal is to run sub 10 seconds and sub 20 seconds this year,” De Grasse said.

Which puts Boldon’s 19-year-old 10.03 and 20.00 Pac-12 meet records in jeopardy this weekend.

“He’s special,” USC coach Caryl Smith Gilbert said of De Grasse.

How special?

Given that De Grasse has been in the sport barely three years and remains a raw talent, very much a work in progress, Sharpe believes that as fast as his marks have been this season they only hint at the times he eventually will run.

“I’ve been in this sport 40 years, competed in the Olympics, seen a lot of fast guys,” said Sharpe, a member of Canada’s 1984 Olympic bronze medal 4x100 relay team. “In terms of pure talent, I’ve seen nothing like Andre De Grasse. With five, seven years under his belt, he could be magical.”

Even when reminded that he once trained with disgraced Olympic champion and world-record holder Ben Johnson on a daily basis, Sharpe would not budge from his assessment.

“No comparison,” Sharpe said. “Absolutely no comparison. We haven’t seen an Andre De Grasse before. We’ve never witnessed an athlete like this before.”

De Grasse grew up in Markham, a suburb of 208,000 just across Toronto’s northeast city line. His mother, Beverley De Grasse, was a successful high school sprinter in her native Trinidad & Tobago before moving to Canada at the age of 26.

“He was a very active kid growing up,” Beverley De Grasse said. “He was always bouncing, always full of energy, couldn’t keep still.”

When Andre was 4, Beverley signed him up for a soccer team. Before long he was also playing basketball and baseball.

“In basketball all he wanted to do was play, play fast,” Beverley said. “He was always quick. In soccer he’d get the ball and you couldn’t catch him.”

Somehow, however, trouble seemed to find him.

“He had no direction, wasn’t focused,” Beverley said. “He got into high school and something sort of switched. He started hanging out with the wrong crowd. He was always respectful, but he was trying to fit in with the wrong crowd.”

De Grasse, once one of the Greater Toronto Area’s most promising guards, became even more aimless when his high school, Milliken Mills, was unable to field a basketball team his senior year. On a lark, he decided to join some friends in competing at a regional high school track meet.

His stance at the starting line drew chuckles from the crowd.

“I lined up like I was running a suicide (wind sprint in basketball practice),” De Grasse said of the upright, sideways start. “That’s how you got into position.”

No one was laughing 10.9 seconds later, certainly not Sharpe who was at the meet to watch a 400-meter runner but was suddenly transfixed by De Grasse’s raw talent.

“He turns and runs 10.90,” said Sharpe, his initial disbelief still evident in his voice three years later.

“It was a blessing,” De Grasse said recalling the first race. “I wasn’t doing the right thing. I had bad grades, was hanging out with the wrong people.

“There was a lot of violence in the area I grew up at. I did bad things, drugs. Yes, I was doing drugs and a whole bunch of stuff. Track saved me, let me go onto a better future.”

Sharpe introduced himself to De Grasse after the race.

“I said, ‘You can’t go any further unless you learn how to use the blocks,’ and gave him my card and asked him to have his parents give me a call,” Sharpe said.

But Beverley De Grasse, concerned about her floundering son graduating from high school, was initially skeptical. Eventually Andre talked his mother into speaking with Sharpe. Before long, Sharpe was teaching De Grasse and not just about how to use the starting blocks.

“There was a really good kid down there,” Sharpe said recalling his early impression of De Grasse. “But there’s just this matter of good and evil pulling you in different directions. I think he was always a good kid who just needed a little bit of guidance. I told him those guys you’re hanging out with, they’re losers. Guys that don’t know what’s happening tomorrow.”

There was an authenticity in Sharpe that De Grasse connected with.

“These kids relate to someone who’s been there,” Sharpe said. “When you have single parents kids from the projects and all that stuff, a lot times they can’t relate to that guy who was born with a silver spoon.

“I didn’t always do the right things.”

In the wake of Johnson’s drug scandal at the Seoul Olympics, Sharpe, who trained with Johnson under coach Charlie Francis in the Toronto area, testified before the Dubin Inquiry, a national probe into doping in Canadian sports. Although Sharpe, a former Clemson All-American, had never tested positive for banned substances, he admitted using anabolic steroids during his career. He was banned for life from receiving federal funding.

In 2006, he started a company called Need 4 Speed and later opened Speed Academy Athletics Club, a non-profit group designed to mentor young track athletes with a “sport for life” philosophy. In 2012, Sharpe was reinstated, mediator Larry Banack writing in his decision that Sharpe had “demonstrated sincerity, contrition, remorse and a passion for the sport of track and field and the promotion of drug-free sport.”

In a letter recommending Sharpe’s reinstatement, Atlee Mahorn, chief executive of Athletics Canada, track’s national governing body, wrote, “One of the great lessons from sports is redemption. Sports give us the opportunity to overcome challenges. Those of us who were fortunate to compete in Olympic sports know this lesson very well. Tony Sharpe is one such athlete.”

Lessons that Sharpe passed on to De Grasse.

“I warned him about (drug) tests,” Sharpe said. “You can’t do drugs. I warned him about the marijuana.”

Sharpe also lectured De Grasse about his grades. In a few weeks training with Sharpe, De Grasse improved his 100-meter time to 10.50. The numbers for his grades weren’t nearly as gaudy.

“I said, ‘What are your grades like? What are your plans?’” Sharpe said. “He had no clue what he was planning to do.”

Sharpe pulled some strings to get De Grasse into Coffeyville Community College in Kansas, where he won five NJCAA titles in two years and got on track academically. During summers back home in Ontario, evenings with his old crowd, were replaced by nights where De Grasse volunteered at local youth recreational centers mentoring and tutoring kids.

De Grasse was asked what happened to his old gang.

“Some are dead,” he said. “Some are not doing anything good.”

De Grasse was pursued by several Division I sprint powerhouses but chose USC after he, his mother and Sharpe felt a connection to Coach Caryl Smith Gilbert and Trojans assistant Quincy Watts, a former Olympic 400-meter champion.

“With Coach Caryl, I just had the feeling it was the right fit for him,” Beverley said.

With Smith Gilbert and Watts and most notably Sharpe, De Grasse has found something more elusive than success on the track or in the classroom – belief.

“They taught me I could be something special,” De Grasse said. “I never thought that way about myself. I never thought I was good enough, never thought I could do something special in my life. Now I have to take that opportunity.”

De Grasse should be on a short list of favorites in the 100 and 200 at next month’s NCAA Championships in Eugene, Ore. He is a lock to make Canada’s team for the World Championships in Beijing in August. In July he will return to Toronto for the Pan American Games, the local boy made good.

“He’s still learning,” Sharpe said, “but I suspect a sub 20 (in the 200) from him somewhere this season and a legal 9.8.”

In recent months, whenever Sharpe watches a major meet on television or sees sub-10.0 results from meets in Jamaica and the U.S., he has a reoccurring thought.

“I just think, ‘I wonder what Andre would do in those fields,’” Sharpe said.

This summer in Beijing, next year in Rio de Janeiro, in Zurich and Brussels and London and Eugene in the years beyond, Sharpe will get his answer.

The results from the race of Andre De Grasse’s life are already in.

Whenever Beverley De Grasse sees Tony Sharpe, she wraps her arms around him in a grateful mother’s embrace and tells him something she and her son are convinced of to their core.

“You saved his life,” she says to him. “Track saved him.”

Contact the writer: sreid@ocregister.com
« Last Edit: June 14, 2015, 11:40:34 AM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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De Grasse doubles with 9.75 and 19.58 at NCAA
« Reply #1 on: June 14, 2015, 05:22:51 PM »
De Grasse doubles with 9.75 and 19.58 at NCAA
June 13th, 2015 7:57am (TrackAlerts.com)


Andre De Grasse's strong performance led the men's track & field team
to fifth place in the NCAA championships. (USC Photo: John McGillen)


EUGENE – Friday’s 3rd day at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships produced some super sprint times.

The times, however, were aided by strong tail wind.

Canadian Andre De Grasse achieved a historic sprinting double in 9.75 (+2.7) and 19.58 (+2.4) in 45 minutes (and ran a relay before). Trayvon Bromell was second in the 100m in 9.88 and third in the 200m 19.86 (856). Dedric Dukes was also fast with 19.86 (858).

Also sub 10 in the 100m for third place finisher Jarrion Lawson 9.90, fourth Senoy-Jay Givans of Jamaica 9.97 and fifth Kendal Williams 9.98.

USC Track & Field - Andre De Grasse Wins NCAA 100m
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/Xb3O6r6n4x4" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/Xb3O6r6n4x4</a>

USC Track & Field - Andre De Grasse Wins NCAA 200m
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/fMESf18KA_o" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/fMESf18KA_o</a>
« Last Edit: June 15, 2015, 03:09:29 PM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Deeks

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #2 on: June 14, 2015, 05:31:53 PM »
Damn, like it was hurricane Katrina blowing behind them.

Offline Socapro

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Oregon defend NCAA D1 title
« Reply #3 on: June 14, 2015, 05:50:53 PM »
Oregon defend NCAA D1 title
June 13th, 2015 7:38am (TrackAlerts.com)
By Gary Smith, TrackAlerts.Com Contributor



EUGENE, Ore. — Oregon ran away with the men’s team title at the 2015 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships on Friday night to win back-to-back national titles.

The Ducks, who finished on top last season, broke away from the field on the first day and then held on for the national crown after tallying 85 points on the final day of competition on the men’s side.

Oregon celebrated its seventh NCAA outdoor championships title overall.

“Great day for the Ducks,” said UO coach Robert Johnson. “Great day to be a Duck.

“Great day, all Duckies. Unbelievable performance.”

Entering the day with 40 points already on the table, the hosts collected 45 more to finish well clear of pre-championships favourites Florida, who ended with 56 points, while Arkansas was third with 53 points.

The top five were completed by LSU (45) and USC (40.50).

Rounding out the top 10 finishers were Texas A&M (27), Texas (26), Miss State (20), Texas Tech (18), Illinois (17) and Penn State (17).

Oregon, who never really looked like being caught in the late stages of the championships, made sure the men’s team title would stay at home, after tallying 23 points in the men’s 5,000m.

Edward Cheserek completed a 10,000m/5,000m double after he ran 13:48.67 to win the latter – holding off teammate Eric Jenkins, who ran 13:48.92 for second place.

Senior Will Geoghegan just missed his team landing an event sweep when he was pushed back to third in 13:49.35.

The title winners also picked up big team points from Johnathan Cabral in the 110m hurdles and Marcus Chambers in the 400m.

TOP TEN FINISHERS

Place  Men’s Team  Score

 1 Oregon 85.0
 2 Florida 56.0
 3 Arkansas 53.0
 4 LSU 45.0
 5 USC 40.50
 6 Texas A&M 27.0
 7 Texas 26.0
 8 Miss State 20.0
 9 Texas Tech 18.0
 10 Illinois 17.0
 10 Penn State 17.0
« Last Edit: June 14, 2015, 05:55:59 PM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline andre samuel

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #4 on: June 15, 2015, 12:06:02 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?
Andre Samuel, who controls all the rights to the phrase "ah love it!!"

Offline Sando prince

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #5 on: June 15, 2015, 12:31:58 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?

if he has a desire to rep TT he will make the first approach.

Offline Socapro

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #6 on: June 15, 2015, 12:33:39 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?

Why would he want to run for T&T unless he has been back to Trinidad and also culturally identifies with us?

We need to establish those two critical factors first before making any approach. Why don't you give his Trini mother a call to find out more details?

Saying that we could do with another sub-10 sprinter on our men's 4x100m relay team to ensure that we are one of the top 3 medal contenders. Andre can run the 2nd leg for us to help us keep pace with Gatlin!  ;)

This potential T&T 4x100m relay team should definitely be able to press the USA and JA for one of the medals:
1st leg Keston Bledman, 2nd leg Andre De Grasse, 3rd Rondell Sorrillo, 4th leg Richard Thompson.
« Last Edit: June 15, 2015, 03:34:06 PM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Socapro

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De Grasse runs windy 9.75 and 19.58 to win NCAA sprint titles
« Reply #7 on: June 15, 2015, 03:06:23 PM »
13 JUN 2015 Report Eugene, United States
De Grasse runs windy 9.75 and 19.58 to win NCAA sprint titles


Andre De Grasse in action at the NCAA Championships
(Kirby Lee) © Copyright


Canadian sprinter Andre De Grasse, representing the University of Southern California, produced two of the fastest times in history under any conditions to win the 100m and 200m double at the NCAA Championships in Eugene on Friday (12).

Within the space of 50 minutes, he sped to a 9.75 (2.7m/s) clocking in the 100m and a 19.58 (2.4m/s) triumph in the 200m. And he wasn’t even regarded as the pre-race favourite for either event going into the championships.

World junior record-holder Trayvon Bromell had impressed in the semi-finals with a PB of 9.90. Aided by a tailwind over the allowable limit, the 19-year-old went even faster in the final, but was no match for De Grasse, who opened up a winning margin over the second half to stop the clock at 9.75.

Bromell finished second in 9.88, just 0.02 ahead of Jarrion Lawson, who had finished second in the long jump two days prior. Senoj-Jay Givans of Texas and world junior champion Kendal Williams ran 9.97 and 9.98 respectively in fourth and fifth.

Less than an hour later, De Grasse, Bromell and Williams were back on track for the 200m to take on defending NCAA champion Dedric Dukes. Once again, De Grasse was a class apart. The 20-year-old was already in front at half way and extended his lead through to the finish, winning in a wind-assisted 19.58.

Bromell was caught by Dukes on the line. Both clocked 19.86 but Dukes was awarded second place.

Under all conditions, De Grasse’s performances in Eugene have only been bettered by seven men in the 100m and five men in the 200m. It is also the fastest one-day sprint double in history.

Dendy achieves triple double

This season has been deemed by many as the year of the jumps and Marquis Dendy proved that’s the case, winning his third NCAA horizontal jumps double.

Having won the long jump with a wind-assisted 8.43m two days ago, the Florida student opened his campaign in the triple jump with a PB of 17.50m (1.2m/s). The wind picked up in the second half of the competition and he improved to 17.54m (3.6m/s) in round four before ending his series with a wind-assisted 17.71m (2.4m/s).

Dendy’s winning mark, although wind assisted, was significantly beyond the collegiate record of 17.57m that has stood since 1982. Bahamian Latario Collie-Mimms, representing Texas A&M, finished second with 17.01m.

Like De Grasse and Dendy, Jamaica’s Omar McLeod was denied a potential championship record in the 110m hurdles due to a strong tailwind.

The Arkansas student won by two metres in 13.01 (3.9m/s), adding the outdoor NCAA title to the one he won indoors in the 60m hurdles.

Another Oregon 1-2

After taking the top two spots in the 10,000m on the opening day of the championships, Oregon duo Edward Cheserek and Eric Jenkins replicated those positions in the 5000m on Friday.

Once again, Cheserek came out on top, winning his eighth individual NCAA title in 13:48.67 with Jenkins just 0.25 behind. With the points accrued in this event, they effectively secured the overall team title for the University of Oregon in the men’s competition.

Defending champion Deon Lendore pulled up during the 400m final, leaving the way clear for LSU’s Vernon Norwood to cruise to victory in 45.10.

Michael Stigler was another comfortable winner over one lap of the track, winning the 400m hurdles in 48.84.

Jon Mulkeen for the IAAF
« Last Edit: June 22, 2015, 08:55:27 AM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Deeks

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #8 on: June 15, 2015, 03:42:36 PM »
Allyuh think Canada will let this man go!!??. Congrats on the double. I sure would like for him to pick TT. But if he decides to run for birth country, good luck.

Offline Aviator

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #9 on: June 15, 2015, 04:10:44 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?

if he has a desire to rep TT he will make the first approach.

He has already represented and will continue to represent the Maple Leaf. Zero chance of him wearing the red, white and black
Psalm 14:1
The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.

Offline Socapro

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #10 on: June 15, 2015, 04:22:36 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?

if he has a desire to rep TT he will make the first approach.

He has already represented and will continue to represent the Maple Leaf. Zero chance of him wearing the red, white and black

Do you know Andre personally?
Do you know if he has not been back to T&T on holiday or that he is not into our food, music and culture via his Mom?
How can you be so sure that there is zero chance of Andre switching if he can be convinced that running for T&T can bring him more long term love and fortune than running for Canada?
Look how many USA born and breed athetes switched to Nigeria recently.
« Last Edit: June 15, 2015, 04:43:45 PM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Deeks

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #11 on: June 15, 2015, 04:37:17 PM »
Look how many USA born and breed athetes switched to Nigeria recently.

That is true for the US because of their overwhelming talent pool from 100 to 400(men and women). Canada don't have that luxury. Barring injury(God forbid) and keeping motivated with a level head, he can do very well.

Offline Socapro

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #12 on: June 15, 2015, 04:50:51 PM »
Look how many USA born and breed athetes switched to Nigeria recently.

That is true for the US because of their overwhelming talent pool from 100 to 400(men and women). Canada don't have that luxury. Barring injury(God forbid) and keeping motivated with a level head, he can do very well.

If at least 3 of our sprinters can go sub-10 this season then we won't need the likes of Andre to join us to improve our relay team medal chances.

Lets hope Thompson, Bledman and one of the other usual suspects can get themselves into consistent sub-10 form this season so our 4x100m relay team can continue to be one of the top 3 medal contenders.
Based on our athletes current form Great Britain and Canada may give us a close run for one of the relay medals behind the USA and JA.
« Last Edit: June 15, 2015, 04:53:00 PM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Aviator

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #13 on: June 15, 2015, 05:24:30 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?

if he has a desire to rep TT he will make the first approach.

He has already represented and will continue to represent the Maple Leaf. Zero chance of him wearing the red, white and black

Do you know Andre personally?
Do you know if he has not been back to T&T on holiday or that he is not into our food, music and culture via his Mom?
How can you be so sure that there is zero chance of Andre switching if he can be convinced that running for T&T can bring him more long term love and fortune than running for Canada?
Look how many USA born and breed athetes switched to Nigeria recently.

Yes i know the kid and also his Toronto coach who has made it clear to me that he will be a canuck. Added to which in his post race interview at NCAA's he said he wants to put CANADA back on the map.

Your comparison with those US athletes switching to Nigeria is poor. They are a bunch of second rate athletes who stood little chance of individual success running under the American flag. Degrasse is headed to be king of the hill in Canada. Why leave when he can get corporate backing from big business here??
Psalm 14:1
The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.

Offline Socapro

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #14 on: June 15, 2015, 05:30:42 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?

if he has a desire to rep TT he will make the first approach.

He has already represented and will continue to represent the Maple Leaf. Zero chance of him wearing the red, white and black

Do you know Andre personally?
Do you know if he has not been back to T&T on holiday or that he is not into our food, music and culture via his Mom?
How can you be so sure that there is zero chance of Andre switching if he can be convinced that running for T&T can bring him more long term love and fortune than running for Canada?
Look how many USA born and breed athetes switched to Nigeria recently.

Yes i know the kid and also his Toronto coach who has made it clear to me that he will be a canuck. Added to which in his post race interview at NCAA's he said he wants to put CANADA back on the map.

Your comparison with those US athletes switching to Nigeria is poor. They are a bunch of second rate athletes who stood little chance of individual success running under the American flag. Degrasse is headed to be king of the hill in Canada. Why leave when he can get corporate backing from big business here??

Ok cool. Just wanted to know if you had first hand information that Andre wanted to be a Canuck for his full track career. Good luck to him and Canada.
I am sure that Hislop and Adell can both take care of Andre when they get older and mature into professional senior sprinters barring career ending injuries.
« Last Edit: June 15, 2015, 05:32:59 PM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #15 on: June 15, 2015, 07:26:50 PM »
They don't hand out 9.7x and 19.5x every day.
Psalm 14:1
The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.

Offline Socapro

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #16 on: June 15, 2015, 08:09:05 PM »
They don't hand out 9.7x and 19.5x every day.
No one said that.
Also they were wind aided times as well so lets not talk like they were legal times.
Also the times were also done on a track where athletes regularly run faster times than they usually do elsewhere even when the times are wind legal.
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline gawd on pitch

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #17 on: June 15, 2015, 09:25:39 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?

if he has a desire to rep TT he will make the first approach.

He has already represented and will continue to represent the Maple Leaf. Zero chance of him wearing the red, white and black

Do you know Andre personally?
Do you know if he has not been back to T&T on holiday or that he is not into our food, music and culture via his Mom?
How can you be so sure that there is zero chance of Andre switching if he can be convinced that running for T&T can bring him more long term love and fortune than running for Canada?
Look how many USA born and breed athetes switched to Nigeria recently.


His father is Bajan. So he can also run for Bim.

Offline Socapro

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #18 on: June 15, 2015, 09:31:57 PM »
Any approaches made for this youth to run for us?

if he has a desire to rep TT he will make the first approach.

He has already represented and will continue to represent the Maple Leaf. Zero chance of him wearing the red, white and black

Do you know Andre personally?
Do you know if he has not been back to T&T on holiday or that he is not into our food, music and culture via his Mom?
How can you be so sure that there is zero chance of Andre switching if he can be convinced that running for T&T can bring him more long term love and fortune than running for Canada?
Look how many USA born and breed athetes switched to Nigeria recently.


His father is Bajan. So he can also run for Bim.

Based on what Aviator said above, Andre's main interest is running for Canada and putting them back on the sprint map so there is no point in us entertaining the thought of him running for either T&T or Bim at this point.
« Last Edit: June 16, 2015, 08:42:43 AM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Aviator

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #19 on: June 16, 2015, 12:04:33 AM »
They don't hand out 9.7x and 19.5x every day.
No one said that.
Also they were wind aided times as well so lets not talk like they were legal times.
Also the times were also done on a track where athletes regularly run faster times than they usually do elsewhere even when the times are wind legal.

I am well aware of the wind situation and the Eugene track. However fast is fast. Take away the wind and his performances are top 20 all-time in both events. I am just a bit more conservative and would say I hope those 2 youths you mentioned can get to his level, but I also know that the attrition rate is high on the way to sub-10.
Psalm 14:1
The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.

Offline Deeks

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #20 on: June 16, 2015, 06:01:20 AM »
I don't know how TT TF strategy to get foreign born to rep TT. How did  they get Wayne Davis, Jarrin Solomon, Ato Bolden, Steve Brown, Khalifa St.Fort? Did they approach these athletes or did these athletes approach them? I really don't know.
« Last Edit: June 16, 2015, 06:10:57 AM by Deeks »

Offline Socapro

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #21 on: June 16, 2015, 08:02:08 AM »
I don't know how TT TF strategy to get foreign born to rep TT. How did  they get Wayne Davis, Jarrin Solomon, Ato Bolden, Steve Brown, Khalifa St.Fort? Did they approach these athletes or did these athletes approach them? I really don't know.

All the athletes you mentioned either grew up in a strong T&T cultural household, travelled back regularly to T&T while growing up or even had some of their schooling in T&T which is part of the deciding factor for them deciding to rep T&T as athletes. In other words they all regard themselves as culturally Trinidadian despite being born elsewhere which is the main deciding factor.
« Last Edit: June 16, 2015, 08:06:40 AM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Controversial

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #22 on: June 17, 2015, 12:34:38 AM »
They don't hand out 9.7x and 19.5x every day.
No one said that.
Also they were wind aided times as well so lets not talk like they were legal times.
Also the times were also done on a track where athletes regularly run faster times than they usually do elsewhere even when the times are wind legal.

I disagree with aviator, most kids with trini roots identify with tt culture in Canada.. Most, not all so there is a chance, Trinis quicker come back home and rep than Jamaicans ...

But if he knows him then I guess not... Canada will get him sponsors.. More money.. But he has more chnce at medals with TT
« Last Edit: June 17, 2015, 12:38:26 AM by Controversial »

Offline Aviator

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #23 on: June 17, 2015, 08:17:25 AM »
They don't hand out 9.7x and 19.5x every day.
No one said that.
Also they were wind aided times as well so lets not talk like they were legal times.
Also the times were also done on a track where athletes regularly run faster times than they usually do elsewhere even when the times are wind legal.

I disagree with aviator, most kids with trini roots identify with tt culture in Canada.. Most, not all so there is a chance, Trinis quicker come back home and rep than Jamaicans ...

But if he knows him then I guess not... Canada will get him sponsors.. More money.. But he has more chnce at medals with TT

Where did I state he does not own and rep his Trini side??? The question is/was what colour would he be representing on the national stage. Anyways the fact that he already represented Canada on the senior level last year makes a change of allegiance a moot point. IAAF requires a 2 year cooling of period and to take 2 years off in the middle of an Olympic cycle is financial suicide for a guy like him who is destined to big bucks. Its not like he's coming from Nigeria or Afghanistan and switching to Qatar where he will have improved facilities and access to money. So beyond the sentimental value of receiving more "love" in Trinidad and the slightly better 4x1 relay chances he has nothing more to really gain by switching allegiance.
Psalm 14:1
The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.

Offline Socapro

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Canada sprint sensation Andre De Grasse believes he can compete with Usain Bolt, Justin Gatlin
By Nick Zaccardi, Jun 19, 2015, 4:51 PM EDT (Olympic Talk, NBC Sports)


Andre De Grasse celebrates his 100m/200m NCAA sprint double

If anybody can spoil the Usain Bolt–Justin Gatlin showdown at the World Championships in August, it may be a Canadian who was 9 years old when Bolt and Gatlin debuted at the Olympics.

“I feel like I can be competitive with these guys,” Canadian sprinter Andre De Grasse said in a media teleconference Thursday, according to the Canadian Press. “I’ve just got to put my mind to it and feel confident that I can go out there and beat these guys. I can’t be afraid of them just because they are gold medalists. I have to go out there and try to make a name for myself as well.”

De Grasse, 20, completed what NBC Olympics analyst Ato Boldon called the best sprint double in history at the NCAA Championships last Friday.

In Eugene, Ore., the USC junior won the 100m in 9.75 seconds and, 45 minutes later, won the 200m in 19.58 seconds.

“My phone is still blowing up,” De Grasse said six days later of the reaction.

The times do not count for records because De Grasse benefitted from tailwinds of 2.7 and 2.4 meters/second, above the legal maximum 2.0 meters/second.

In the 100m, only Usain Bolt, Tyson Gay, Yohan Blake, Asafa Powell and Justin Gatlin have run faster in legal wind conditions.

In the 200m, only Bolt, Blake, Michael Johnson and Walter Dix have been faster in legal conditions.

De Grasse’s personal bests in legal conditions are 9.97, making him the No. 3 Canadian all time behind 1996 Olympic champion Donovan Bailey and 1995 and 1999 World silver medalist Bruny Surin, and 20.03, a Canadian record.

He’s cut .18 off of his 100m personal best this year and .35 off his 200m personal best. This for a Markham, Ontario, native who reportedly didn’t start sprinting until May 2012.

De Grasse plans to run at the Canadian Championships in Edmonton the first weekend of July, then the 100m and 200m at the Pan American Games in Toronto later next month and the 100m (but not the 200m) at the World Championships in Beijing in late August.

De Grasse hasn’t turned professional yet, leaving open the possibility to return to USC for his senior track season. He’s been offered a seven-figure shoe deal, according to the Canadian Press.

At Worlds, De Grasse may be the biggest threat to Gatlin, the 2004 Olympic champion and fastest man in 2014 (9.77) and 2015 (9.74), and Bolt, whose 2009 world record is 9.58. Gatlin is 13 years older than De Grasse. Bolt is eight years older.

The other fastest men this year — Asafa Powell and Tyson Gay — are 32 years old.
« Last Edit: June 22, 2015, 09:36:15 AM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline maxg

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De Grasse mammy from TT.discoverd by Sharpe and still new
« Reply #25 on: July 23, 2015, 10:26:59 AM »
http://www.macleans.ca/culture/andre-de-grasse-from-beginner-to-winner-in-just-three-years/
""The building blocks were there, though. De Grasse’s mother, Beverley, had run track as a youngster in Trinidad, cheering on her country’s sprint heroes, Ato Boldon and Hasely Crawford, before she came to Canada in 1987. An early-childhood educator, she raised a boy obsessed with soccer, baseball and basketball. When Andre’s basketball dreams fell through—his high school cancelled its program—a pal recommended he take a stab at sprinting. His mom was thrilled. “Track was something I loved,” she says, “but I’d never forced him into it.”


http://www.cbc.ca/sportslongform/entry/andre-de-grasse-what-did-i-just-do

 add: sorry, just realized y'allmay have covered all this already..
« Last Edit: July 23, 2015, 10:37:18 AM by maxg »

Offline Socapro

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #26 on: July 24, 2015, 09:40:30 PM »
Canadian News report on Andre De Grasse's 100m win at Pan Am Games.

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/SLyo8-7h0jE" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/SLyo8-7h0jE</a>

Note he also won the 200m at the Pan Am Games earlier this evening to do the Pan Am Games 100/200m double.

Youth is making a name for himself and building a reputation for winning his races.
T&T  could have done with someone like De Grasse right now to help rebooth our male sprinting.

Farinha and our other youngsters need to step up soon and get themselves into the sub-10 club as RT, Bledman, Burns and the older guys can't hold on forever.

Andre De Grasse wins Men's 200m Final - Pan Am Games Toronto 2015
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/rjIqmOlTgxM" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/rjIqmOlTgxM</a>
« Last Edit: July 25, 2015, 04:43:34 PM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

Offline Sando prince

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #27 on: July 25, 2015, 10:04:35 PM »
CANADIAN sprinter De Grasse seems like he will be an asset to his country CANADA. I am glad we have a thread in honor of him
« Last Edit: July 25, 2015, 11:30:49 PM by Sando prince »

Offline Deeks

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Re: USC sprinter Andre De Grasse makes huge strides on and off track
« Reply #28 on: July 25, 2015, 10:36:40 PM »
That was a close finish. Congrats, though.

Offline Socapro

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DE GRASSE RELISHING UNDERDOG ROLE IN BEIJING
« Reply #29 on: August 16, 2015, 10:23:12 AM »
13 AUG 2015 FEATURE MARKHAM, CANADA
DE GRASSE RELISHING UNDERDOG ROLE IN BEIJING


Andre De Grasse (centre) wins 100m Final beating main rival Keston Bledman (right) of TTO at the Pan American Games 2015.

As if the world of men’s sprinting didn’t have an extraordinary cast of characters already, along comes Canada's 20-year-old Andre De Grasse.

Outstanding victories at the 2015 NCAA Championships in both the 100m and 200m made headlines on both sides of the border for the young man who has just completed his first year at the University of Southern California.

Super-quick, albeit wind-aided, times of 9.75 and 19.58 in Eugene just added to the excitement.

Soon after his picture adorned posters across Toronto as Canada’s largest city hosted the 2015 Pan American Games and with the guidance of his USC coach Caryl Smith Gilbert, who has carefully nurtured him – bearing in mind his youth – he won both sprint events in Toronto.

Anyone who might have suggested his 9.95 personal best was nothing to shout about would have been duly impressed by his 200m victory in Toronto.

Running a sublime Canadian Record of 19.88 – from lane eight no less – he marked his entry into the elite sprint ranks. Now he has set his sights on running both the 100m and the 4x100m at the IAAF World Championships, Beijing 2015 later this month.

NEW FACES, NEW CHALLENGES

The prospect of facing Usain Bolt, Justin Gatlin, Tyson Gay and Asafa Powell is an opportunity he relishes.

“I have never faced any of those guys. I have lined up against Usain Bolt in the 4x100 relay at the Commonwealth Games last year but that didn’t go very well,” he explained, reflecting on a botched baton pass by Canada.

“I didn't get the baton in time in the exchange zone so I don't really count that as an opportunity. So, this will be the first opportunity to race against these guys.

“I am really excited and looking forward to seeing how I match up against them and see how far I can get. I am really going to take it one race at a time I don't want to get too far ahead of myself or full of myself. And if I make it to the final hopefully just go out there and compete and do myself proud.”

Beijing will be his first global championship, having never represented Canada at the world youth or junior championships, but he denies having the slightest bit of nervousness.

“Oh no, no, (doesn't make me nervous). My coach has told me I am young and the pressure is not really on me. It’s on Usain Bolt, Justin Gatlin, those guys,” he said. “They have been doing it longer than me. She told me: ‘Don’t put too much pressure on yourself. Take this as an experience to learn how to compete in front of 100,000 people.’

“And this is my first World Championships so it’s not for me to try to put expectations on myself. I know a lot of people have. They did that at the Pan Am Games but I think I handled it well and I am going to continue to do what I keep doing.”

After the successful year he’s had, he has been approached to turn professional and give up his scholarship, but he’s not taking the bait.

One day, he hopes to earn his master’s degree in sociology and work with children. No doubt his incredible personal renaissance plays a part in his wish to help others.

SHARPE-SIGHTED

A former Canadian 200m record-holder, Tony Sharpe, deserves credit for launching De Grasse’ career after seeing him run a 100m race in basketball shorts for fun.

Sharpe says he has never seen such raw sprint talent. De Grasse, who for all his sudden success has retained humility, acknowledges his debt to his former coach.

“Before track, I was playing basketball,” De Grasse explains. “I played high school and Ontario Association club basketball. Before I met Tony Sharpe, basketball wasn't really going that well and I wasn't doing positive things, a lot of negative stuff, and then I met Tony Sharpe, and track and field gave me a second chance to do something different.

“I got my school paid for; I am fortunate to have my school paid for and now I am getting to travel the world so it's really a good feeling that track and field can do those kinds of things for you.”

De Grasse admits to running with a rough crowd, dabbling in recreational drugs and seemingly following a self-destructive path.

Within a year of training with Sharpe, though, he was running fast enough to earn a scholarship to Coffeyville Community College in Kansas where he racked up five national track titles in two years.

NOT IN KANSAS ANY MORE

NCAA institutions then came calling but USC was his choice.

At 1.78m tall, the Canadian is small compared to those men he will line up against in Beijing, and he is also distinctive for an unusual arm carriage that sees his right arm awkwardly extend to the outside.

“Yes we are fixing that. I have an imbalance problem with my hips so I think that is why my arm does that,” he explained with a laugh. “Sometimes I have a knot in my right shoulder. I think it was from back in the day, a little injury from basketball.

“It’s not something that I want to continue doing, even though you are saying, ‘If it ain't broke don't fix it.’ But I think if I can fix it, it will help me a lot better with my drive phase and my acceleration, and I would be able to go a lot faster.”

Clearly De Grasse has enormous potential. And when he steps into the blocks against the world’s fastest men, it will be with a positive attitude and astonishing raw ability.

Perhaps that’s a combination that will metamorphose into a medal.

Paul Gains for the IAAF
« Last Edit: August 16, 2015, 10:26:16 AM by Socapro »
De higher a monkey climbs is de less his ass is on de line, if he works for FIFA that is! ;-)

 

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