NEW YORK (Reuters) – American Tyson Gay ran the third fastest 200 meters ever when he clocked 19.58 seconds at the New York grand prix athletics meeting on Saturday.
Gay, coming back from a hamstring injury that dashed his Beijing Olympic hopes, ran away from the field to post a time bettered only by Usain Bolt’s world record 19.30 set in Beijing, and the 19.32 run by Michael Johnson at the 1996 Olympics.
It was the first 200 meters race of the year for world champion Gay, who had only run two 400 meters events in 2009.
“I was very surprised,” Gay, 26, told reporters. “I’m very happy. Very, very happy.”
“Running a 19.5 had been one of my goals this year. To do that in my first race was very pleasing.”
Fellow-American Wallace Spearmon was second in 19.98 followed by compatriot Xavier Carter in 20.27 with Jeremy Wariner another three-hundredths of a second back.
Gay was running the 200 for the first time on U.S. soil since 2008 Olympic trials, where he injured his hamstring.
The Icahn Stadium track has been to Gay’s liking. In 2007 he won the 100 in a wind-aided 9.76 seconds. Last year he ran 9.85 to finish second behind Bolt, who set his first 100 meters world record with a time of 9.72.
Former 100 meters world record holder Asafa Powell did not fare as well, finishing seventh in the 100 behind American winner Mike Rodgers, who clocked 9.93 seconds.
Jamaica’s Powell ran 10.10. Olympic silver medalist Richard Thompson of Trinidad finished fifth in 10.01.
Jamaican Olympic and world champion Veronica Campbell-Brown was upstaged in the women’s 100 by American Carmelita Jeter, who won in a fast, wind-aided (2.8 m/sec) 10.85 seconds.
American Muna Lee was second in 10.88 followed by Campbell-Brown in 10.91.
The meet produced numerous year-best times as athletes gear up for this summer’s world championships in Berlin.
American Lauryn Williams, a 2005 world champion who finished fifth in Saturday’s 100, came back to win the 200 in a 2009 best 22.34 seconds, ahead of compatriot Shalonda Solomon and Debbie Ferguson of the Bahamas.