Abby Steiner

Joined
Jul 26, 2018
Messages
288



5dd6bfd5b232c2001ede937b.jpg


Kentucky junior sprinter Abby Steiner won the 200-meter dash gold medal in a collegiate-record-tying time at the NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships Saturday in Fayetteville, Arkansas, smashing numerous records in the process.

Running in lane five of the banked oval in the Randal Tyson Center, Steiner got a great start from the blocks. She had to battle University of Alabama’s Tamara Clark the entire way, but — as she has done in all seven races this season — held on to strike gold. Her time of 22.38 seconds:

  • tied the all-time indoor collegiate record and the NCAA Indoor Championship record (also 22.38 by Gabby Thomas of Harvard)
  • tied for second-fastest indoors in United States history (record is 22.33 by Gwen Torrence)
  • tied for fifth-fastest indoors in world history (record of 21.87 by Merlene Ottey of Jamaica)
  • set a personal best (previous best 22.41 at this year’s SEC Indoor Championship preliminaries)
  • broke her own school record of 22.41
  • broke her own SEC record of 22.41
  • broke the facility record (previous record 22.40 by Shaunae Miller-Uibo of the Bahamas and Bianca Knight of the University of Texas)
“Abby had to go get it tonight,” Coach Lonnie Greene said. “Abby is very talented but she got a great challenge from Tamara Clark and had to earn it.

“Abby did exactly what Coach Hall (UK sprints coach Tim Hall) instructed her and executed it. There is a connection that she and Coach Hall have. They work hand-in-hand and she believes in his vison. The best is yet to come for her, I’m excited.”

“Coach Hall told me to be aggressive from the start, never letting off the gas, never getting caught,” Steiner said. “We executed the same way we have all season, and had to because I had amazing competition to pull me along.”

“It’s amazing, it hasn’t sunk in yet,” Steiner said of the win. “Way back in the fall, Coach Hall and I started talking about this title and the record when training began. Tonight we talked about ‘Isn’t it amazing that we are here?’ He believed in me from the beginning and that’s how it played out.”
 

white lightning

Hall of Famer
Joined
Oct 16, 2004
Messages
20,795
  • tied the all-time indoor collegiate record and the NCAA Indoor Championship record (also 22.38 by Gabby Thomas of Harvard)
  • tied for second-fastest indoors in United States history (record is 22.33 by Gwen Torrence)
  • tied for fifth-fastest indoors in world history (record of 21.87 by Merlene Ottey of Jamaica)
  • set a personal best (previous best 22.41 at this year’s SEC Indoor Championship preliminaries)
  • broke her own school record of 22.41
  • broke her own SEC record of 22.41
  • broke the facility record (previous record 22.40 by Shaunae Miller-Uibo of the Bahamas and Bianca Knight of the University of Texas)
All of these records she set in her junior year of college speak for themselves. I hope to see her on the US Olympic Team this year. What a talent Abby Steiner is! :)
 

jacknyc

Hall of Famer
Joined
May 14, 2006
Messages
4,123
We already have a thread about Abby Steiner. Why start another one?
It's confusing and splits the comments between 2 threads about her.
 

mastermulti

Master
Joined
Jan 13, 2006
Messages
2,265
Location
Sydney Australia
We already have a thread about Abby Steiner. Why start another one?
It's confusing and splits the comments between 2 threads about her.


LucasBryant only visits forum to post (on the odd occasion). Not sure he's interested in reading what we've already posted - so it gets reposted unfortunately .
Maybe W/L could have a word or perhaps just put his posts under the appropriate existing topic
 
Joined
Jul 26, 2018
Messages
288
LucasBryant only visits forum to post (on the odd occasion). Not sure he's interested in reading what we've already posted - so it gets reposted unfortunately .
Maybe W/L could have a word or perhaps just put his posts under the appropriate existing topic

Abby Steiner steals the show.

10.71 2cd half of her 200m. Wow!

M,

There literally is not one word of truth in your reply relevant to me but regardless, why should there BE ONLY one thread per athlete ? Silly logic.
 
Last edited:
Top