93 Zola Budd Mary Decker 1984 Olympics
Number 100 from the channel 4 show
100 Greatest Sporting Moments,In the
1984 Olympics, held in
Los Angeles, California, the media billed the
3000 m race as a duel between
Budd and
American world champion
Mary Decker, few reporting that a third contestant,
Romanian Maricica Puică, had set the fastest time that year.
Decker set a fast pace from the gun with Budd in close pursuit, followed by Puică and
Britain's
Wendy Smith-Sly. When the pace slowed just past the midway
point, Budd took the lead on the straight and ran wide of the pack around the turn.
Setting the pace, she took herself, Decker, Smith-Sly and Puică clear of the pack, an unusual situation for both Budd and Decker, both of whom were used to running in front and well ahead.
At
1700 metres, the first collision occurred. Decker came into contact with one of Budd's legs, knocking Budd slightly off balance. However, both women maintained their close position. Five strides on, at race time of 4' 58", Budd and Decker again made contact, with Budd's left foot brushing Decker's thigh, causing the younger runner to lose her balance and sending Budd into Decker's path. Decker's spiked running shoe came down hard into Budd's ankle, just above the heel, which drew blood. Videotapes later examined by
Olympic officials showed Budd visibly in pain. However, Budd maintained equilibrium and kept stride.
Decker, now very much off balance, fell forward and crashed onto the infield, catching hold of the number on Budd's back, which tore free. Decker was unable to resume the race due to an injury to her hip.
Budd, deeply affected by the occurrence, continued to lead for a while, but faded, finishing seventh amid a resounding chorus of boos. Her finishing time of 8' 48". was well outside her best of 8' 37". Writing in her autobiography years later, Budd stated that she deliberately slowed down to take herself out of contention, because she couldn't face collecting a medal in front of the hostile partisan crowd. Budd tried to apologize to Decker in the tunnel after the race, but Decker was upset, and replied, "
Don’t bother! Puică took gold, with Sly in second, and
Canada's Lynn Williams the bronze.
Although Budd was jeered by the crowd, an
IAAF jury found that she was not responsible for the collision. Decker said many years after the event: "The reason I fell, some people think she tripped me deliberately. I happen to know that wasn’t the case at all. The reason I fell is because I am and was very inexperienced in running in a pack.
In general, it is the trailing athlete's responsibility to avoid contact with the runner ahead; whether or not Budd had sufficient control of the race to have pulled into the curve as she naturally did, was hotly disputed. "This doesn't mean," track journalist
Kenny Moore wrote in the aftermath, "that a leader can swerve in with impunity, but that in the give and take of pack running, athletes learn to make allowances. At first the
US media sided with Decker, while the
British press supported Budd.