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Andre de Grasse of Canada waits on the blocks for start of the men's 100m semi-Final at the Olympic Games at Stade de France on August 04, 2024 in Paris, France.Photo by Christian Petersen /Getty Images
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PARIS — Canada shocked the athletics world on Friday, blazing to victory in the Olympic men’s 4×100-metre relay at a packed and rainy Stade de France.
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The veteran team of Aaron Brown, Jerome Blake, Brendon Rodney and Andre De Grasse went round the iconic purple track in 37.50 seconds. South Africa was second for silver in 37.57, Great Britain third for bronze in 37.61. The defending Olympic champs from Italy were fourth, .07 seconds off the podium.
“It feels pretty amazing,” De Grasse told reporters after the race. “To be out with these guys, my brothers, I’ve been with them since the beginning of time, so it’s amazing.
“We talked about this moment for years. It feels good to bring it to fruition. I’m super grateful.”
This is the same Canadian team that competed at the 2020 Tokyo Games, running in 37.70 seconds to initially finish third behind Great Britain and Italy. They were later upgraded to a silver medal after one of Great Britain’s team members tested positive for performance-enhancing substances.
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The team also got together up for the 2022 world championship in Eugene, Ore., winning in a world-leading time of 37.48 seconds.
And this race serves as sweet redemption for Brown, Blake and Rodney, who failed to advance out of the first round at the 2023 world championships. Bolade Ajomale ran the final leg for that team.
Canadian Andre De Grasse celebrates winning the gold medal in the 4x100m relay at the 2024 Paris Olympics.Photo by Hannah Peters /Getty Images
On Friday, the highly favoured American team of Christian Coleman, Kenny Bednarek, Kyree King and Fred Kerley was disqualified for a baton pass out of the zone on the back straightaway.
“We’re all human beings too and we’ve been through ups and downs in life — this is another of those times,” Coleman told reporters. “This is a part of the sport. This is a risk-reward type of thing. We do it on the biggest stage.”
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Brown led off for Canada and it did not start well, as they were lagging back in sixth place as he handed off. Blake moved them into fourth place before passing the baton to Rodney, and he gained another spot on the field before handing off to De Grasse.
Canada’s Andre De Grasse celebrates after winning the men’s 4x100m relay final of the athletics event at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at Stade de France.Photo by KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV /AFP via Getty Images
Though earlier hampered by an inflamed hamstring, De Grasse held off a hard-charging Akani Simbine of South Africa, who posted the fastest final leg time at an impressive 8.78 seconds. De Grasse’s final leg clocked in at 8.89 seconds.
“(Individual events) didn’t go our way, but when we come together we’re a real strong team,” Brown told reporters. “You can never count us out, we feel great.”
The Canadian team finished third in their heat on Thursday, so they ended up in Lane 9 for Friday’s race. This was apparently not all bad.
“Lane 9 was probably the perfect lane,” Rodney said. “We’re all kind of tall, so we didn’t have to worry about anybody in Lane 9. For us, we just focus on ourselves and just get to run.”
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