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Butch Reynolds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American sprinter

Butch Reynolds
Personal information
Full nameHarry Lee Reynolds Jr.
Born (1964-06-08)June 8, 1964 (age 61)
Alma materOhio State University

Harry Lee "Butch" Reynolds Jr. (born June 8, 1964) is an American formertrack and field athlete who competed in the400 meter dash. He held theworld record for the event for 11 years 9 days with his personal best time of 43.29 seconds set in 1988. That year, he was thesilver medalist at the1988 Seoul Olympics (0.06 seconds behindSteve Lewis) and a relay gold medalist.

Reynolds was falsely accused and banned for drug use for two years by theIAAF until theU.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of Reynolds due to an apparent drug testing procedural flaw. Reynolds was awarded $27.3 million dollars due to the false accusation damages but he never received the money.

On his competitive return, he became the 1993 World Indoor Champion and won two successive 400 meter silver medals at theWorld Championships. He also enjoyed success with the4 × 400 meter relay team, winning the world title three times in his career with the United States (1987, 1993 and 1995). His team's time of 2:54.29 minutes at the1993 World Championships in Athletics is the current world record. Reynolds remains the third fastest of all-time in the 400 m afterMichael Johnson andWayde van Niekerk, the current world and Olympic record holder.

In 2016, he was elected into theNational Track and Field Hall of Fame.[1]

Career

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Reynolds was born inAkron, Ohio, and attendedArchbishop Hoban High School. His brotherJeff Reynolds was also a professional sprinter.[2]

On 17 August 1988, aged 24 years and 70 days, he set a 400-meterworld record with 43.29 seconds, smashingLee Evans's nearly 20-year-old 1968world record by 0.57 seconds. Reynolds's record had negative splits, meaning that the second half of the race was completed more quickly than the first half, and was the first time anyone had set a world record for the men's 400 meters withnegative splits. His splits were 21.9 seconds for the opening 200 meters and 21.4 seconds for the closing 200 meters, giving a differential of -0.5 seconds. This record stood for 11 years, 9 days and was broken byMichael Johnson (43.18) in August 1999;Wayde van Niekerk broke Michael Johnson's record in 2016 in a time of 43.03. As of September 2025[update], over 37 years after running 43.29, in addition to holding the third fastest time ever, he is one of only 8 athletes to run a sub-43.50 race.[3]

He won a silver medal in the1988 Summer Olympics in the 400 meters and a gold medal in the4 × 400 m relay. In theIAAF World Championships in Athletics he won a bronze medal in1987, and silver medals in1993 and1995. He also won gold medals on the 4 × 400 meter relays in1987,1993 and1995. The 1993 World Championship team withAndrew Valmon, Watts and Johnson still holds the world record for the relay.

In the 1996 AmericanOlympic trials he finished second behindMichael Johnson, clocking 43.91, the fastest non-winning 400 meters performance until 26 August 2015. However, in the1996 Summer Olympics semi-final, he suffered a hamstring injury, failed to qualify for the final, and also had to withdraw from the relay team.

He retired after the 1999 season. Reynolds has since established the Butch Reynolds Care for Kids Foundation and was the speed coach for theOhio State University football team up until his resignation in April 2008. Butch resumed coaching when he was hired as the sprint coach forOhio Dominican University in Columbus in 2014.[4] His first season as coach led to an improvement of 20 points at theGLIAC Outdoor Meet and the emergence of one of the best young sprinters in the GLIAC.[5] Butch left Ohio Dominican after the 2018 outdoor season.

Drug suspension

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Butch Reynolds was suspended for two years by theIAAF for alleged illegal drug use in 1990. This was the start of a long legal fight, after which theUnited States Supreme Court ordered theUnited States Olympic Committee to allow him to participate in the 1992 U.S. Olympic trials, after finding the IAAF testing procedures in 1990 were flawed in multiple ways.[6] In addition to evidentiary and scientific deficiencies in the overall testing system, it was proven that the test specimen was specifically not Reynolds'; testers had marked specimen "H6" – belonging to a femaleEast German competitor in a different event – as testing positive, and confirmed that Reynolds' blood specimen was "H5".[6] However, laboratory director Jean-Pierre LaFarge claimed in court that, in spite of the documentation in the laboratory's own records, the technician had told him months later that specimen "H5" was the positive one.[6] Yet "H6" was circled on two separate documents by the technician.[7]

IAAF and IOC controversy

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This injunction brought American law and equity into conflict with the rules ofInternational Olympic Committee (IOC) andInternational Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), which prohibited suspended athletes from competing. In fact, the IAAF threatened to suspend any athlete that competed against Butch Reynolds. The American Olympic trial 400 meters heats were postponed for four days, but the IAAF finally backed down. Reynolds finished fifth in the trials, and qualified for a place as a substitute on the American 4 × 400 meters relay team. However, the IAAF (which had administered the flawed test) then banned him from competing in the 1992 Olympics.

That same year Reynolds also won a libel suit against the IAAF, and was awarded $27.3 million in damages. The IAAF stated that the ruling, made in Ohio, had no bearing upon the organization and was invalid.[8] A federal appeals panel later overturned the verdict on jurisdictional grounds.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Butch Reynolds".legacy.usatf.org. USA Track and Field.Archived from the original on December 22, 2019. RetrievedDecember 22, 2019.
  2. ^"Olympic sprinter Butch Reynolds still stands tall: Bill Livingston". July 31, 2010.
  3. ^"400 Metres Men All Time Top Lists | 1899-12-31 to 2024-12-17 | Best by Athlete".World Athletics.Archived from the original on December 18, 2024. RetrievedDecember 18, 2024.
  4. ^"Butch Reynolds".OhioDominicanPanthers.com.Archived from the original on February 24, 2019. RetrievedJuly 10, 2014.
  5. ^"Panthers Finish Season With a Strong Showing at GLIAC Championship".OhioDominicanPanthers.com. April 11, 2014.Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. RetrievedJuly 10, 2014.
  6. ^abcAl-Amin, Ismail; Aromando, Philip (June 11, 2024). "False Positive".30 for 30. Season Volume IV. Episode 23.ESPN Films,Words + Pictures. 57 minutes in.ESPN.
  7. ^Noden, Merrell (June 8, 1992)."Out Of The Running".Sports Illustrated. Archived fromthe original on July 17, 2012. RetrievedDecember 18, 2024.
  8. ^"SPORTS PEOPLE: TRACK AND FIELD; Butch Reynolds Says He's Back in the Race".The New York Times. December 6, 1992. Archived fromthe original on July 7, 2017. RetrievedMarch 30, 2009.

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