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A 1980s record still stands. Barely. Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone wins women's 400

A 1980s record still stands. Barely. Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone wins women's 400

Until Thursday, in the women’s 400, only two women had gone under 48 seconds, both from the 1980s — Marita Koch of East Germany and Jarmila Kratochvilová of what was then Czechoslovakia. Koch went 47.60 in 1985. Two years earlier, at the 1983 worlds in Helsinki, Kratochvilová went 47.99.

Until Thursday, that was the championship record.

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone crossed in 47.78.

Marileidy Paulino of the Dominican Republic, the Paris 2024 Olympic and 2023 worlds champion, finished in 47.98 — one-hundredth faster than Kratochvilová. But good enough only for second.

Appreciating genuine greatness when it -- she -- is right in front of us

Appreciating genuine greatness when it -- she -- is right in front of us

LONDON — It can be difficult sometimes, living as we do in the here and now, to appreciate the gift of genuine greatness when it — more accurately, she — is right in front of us.

There are so many demands on our attention, so many cries that so-and-so or such-and-such is the next big thing, the coming huge star. We whipsaw from this to that and back to this again, mesmerized, tantalized, titillated by the paparazzi-hounded, TMZ-stylized comings and goings of the larger-than-life, the outlandish, the can-you-top-this, the freak show at the club at 3 in the morning or maybe was it 4, dude, I forget.

When we say we want our kids to grow up and be someone like Allyson Felix.