US stars eye 30-medal Olympic haul

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Track and Field officials and US Olympic coaches are confident of achieving their goal of a 30-medal haul from the London Olympics after watching competitors qualify over the past 10 days. “There’s a real opportunity for that,” US Olympic men’s track coach Andrew Valmon said. “We have a strong team. If we are clicking on all cylinders anything is possible.”
A blend of talented veterans, some hoping for a return to the medal podium, and top newcomers advancing from the US Olympic Track and Field Trials staged at Hayward Field give the Americans a chance to improve on 2008 disappointment.
“That is a reachable goal,” USA Track and Field chief executive Max Siegel said of 30 US athletics medals. “I’m confident we will have a good showing in London. The athletes performed well. We have a strong team.”
Americans claimed 23 medals from athletics at Beijing with seven golds, nine silvers and seven bronzes. But the 2008 US men produced only 14 medals, the second-fewest at any Olympics, and only four golds, the fewest of any Olympics.
And most of the disappointments at the trials came on the men’s side. Walter Dix, second in the 100 and 200 meters at last year’s worlds and third in the same events at the 2008 Olympics, failed to qualify in either after a leg injury.
Beijing Olympic decathlon winner Bryan Clay, former world shot put champion Adam Nelson and 2004 400m winner Jeremy Wariner also missed London. So did 2008 Olympic 110 hurdles medalist David Oliver and 400 hurdles medalist Bershawn Jackson.
But some of the trials stars were on the men’s side as well, including world decathlon record-setter Ashton Eaton, 5,000 and 10,000 doubler Galen Rupp and 110 hurdles stars Jason Richardson and Aries Merritt, each under 13 seconds for the first time in their lives.