<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8802110645
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
880924
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, September 24, 1988
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1988, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
JOHNSON WINS: 9.79
THE CONFRONTATION IS A DASH OF NO CONTEST;
CANADIAN SETS WORLD RECORD
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SEOUL, South Korea --  He broke out of the blocks and burst into
immortality. Ben Johnson was gone so fast that nobody, not Carl Lewis, not
Calvin Smith, not all the ghosts of sprinters past could  catch him. Churning,
burning, ripping down the track, the Canadian cannonball was running alone --
Alone? In a 100 meters race? Alone? -- and he sped across the finish line and
the crowd roared and look  at that! A world record! A world record! 9.79
seconds. No questions. No doubts.

  No contest.

  "I didn't even see him until 60 or 70 meters," Lewis said immediately after
the race, in which he  finished second in 9.92 seconds. "He must have had an
unbelievable start. He must have caught a flier."
  A flier? He could have caught an airplane. His start was faster than wind,
his middle was power-packed,  and  before he crossed the line, Johnson had
enough time to look over at Lewis, his arch-rival, and raise his right hand
triumphantly. 
  The fastest man in the world.
  No contest.
  This was  more than a race; this was a moment that redefined the outer
limits. How fast can we go? Rather, how fast can Ben Johnson go? He was the
first man under 9.9 seconds. Now the first under 9.8 (he broke  his previous
record of 9.83 Friday night). Quiet, strong, he is so  mysteriously effective
that he is both alluring and frightening at the same time. 
  On Friday, under a cloudy Korean sky, he was  just blazing. He dragged
three other men across the finish in under 10 seconds (Britain's Linford
Christie, the bronze medalist, and  Smith, fourth), the first time in history
that has ever happened.
  And it wasn't even close.
What drama had gone into this event! What a buildup! The stadium was packed.
Security workers crammed the aisles and stood on each other's shoulders in the
tunnels. There  had not been a race like this in the Olympic 100 meters since
-- who knows when? Borzov. Hines. Hayes. They were all shoo-ins. But here, in
Lewis and Johnson, just three lanes apart, we had the best  vs. the best. Not
only the fastest men alive. The fastest men ever.
  They had refused to acknowledge each other in the weeding-out process. When
Lewis ran his semifinal, Johnson kept his head down.  When Johnson ran his
semifinal, Lewis observed on TV from the privacy of the athletes' lounge.
  They had kept the moment pure. This Olympic confrontation would not be
their first (they met in 1984,  with Lewis winning gold, Johnson bronze), but
it would be their only, at least in the eyes of the sprint world. It was the
perfect moment; they were at their peaks.
  To say nothing of the drama. Even  the qualifying rounds made you shiver.
In the semifinal, just 90 minutes before the big race, Lewis was left in the
blocks. He might have been the last man to take a step. But nobody accelerates
like  King Carl from 50 meters on (actually, it's all the other runners
decelerating while he stays steady), and he cruised across first in 9.97
seconds. He was in.
  Not to be outdone, Johnson played his  own version of thrills and chills.
Easily ahead in Thursday's  second heat, he had slowed down so much that he
finished third. Only the top two finishers were guaranteed to advance.
Johnson's time was  good enough to get him in, but taking it easy almost cost
him a shot at history. Then, in Friday's  semifinal, he false-started, a
questionable call, and he settled for a 10.03 finish, still never showing  his
best form. As he trudged off the track, his face was the picture of anger and
intensity. Who knew what lay behind that facial curtain?
As it turns out, Johnson was just an explosion waiting to happen.  Unfazed by
his semifinal mishap, he came out of the blocks as if late for God. Nobody has
ever seen a start like that. You can watch it on TV replay over and over and
still say to yourself: "How did  he do it?"
  Who knows? Johnson had not shown up to speak with the press an hour after
the race. Lewis had come and gone. Christie had come and gone. But that is
typical of Johnson, a once-poor Jamaican  kid who used to run barefoot and who
developed a speech impediment and still prefers silence to conversation. Or to
Lewis, who wouldn't be the first person Ben would invite over for dinner.
  Quite  frankly, this would have been a good matchup even if Lewis and
Johnson were roommates and went to the movies together. The fact that deep
down, they honestly don't like one another, only added to the  confrontation.
Hold Carl Lewis up to a mirror and he sees stardom, wealth, glory. Hold Ben
Johnson to a mirror and he sees Ben Johnson. What could they really have to
say to each other?
  As it turns  out, words were not necessary. Lewis will see Johnson in his
sleep now, in his dreams, everywhere. The American had never lost an Olympic
event before, and, ironically, he spoke most like an Olympian  in defeat. "I
don't think athletes are all disappointed in finishing second. These are the
Olympic Games. They're about doing your best. I did my best."
  When the race had ended, Lewis found Johnson  near the stands, touched his
shoulder and shook his hand. It was a brief union of two men destined to be
apart. "I have other events to run," said Lewis, who'll compete in the 200,
long jump and 4-by- 100  relay. "My focus has just turned to them."
  The truth is, he had no choice. Ten seconds of glory. A lifetime to
remember it. Ben Johnson. The fastest man in the world.
  No contest.
CUTLINE
Ben  Johnson knows he is number one, as he set a world record in winning the
100-meter dash.  Teammate Desai Williams is in the background.
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
OLYMPICS
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
