
Roger Black and British relay icons finally receive gold medals… 28 YEARS after controversial race tinged with tragedy
Roger Black, Iwan Thomas, Jamie Baulch, Mark Richardson and reserve Mark Hylton finished second in the men's 4x400 metres relay final behind the United States at the 1997 Worlds in Athens.
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Britain's relay runners have finally been given their gold medals 28 years after the World Championship race took place
Credit: PA:Empics Sport
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Great Britain's men's 4x400m relay team (left to right) Mark Richardson, Jamie Baulch, Roger Black, Iwan Thomas and Mark Hylton got the medals during a special ceremony
Credit: PA
The quartet ran a time of 2:56.65 while American sprinters Jerome Young, Antonio Pettigrew, Chris Jones and Tyree
Washington
came home first in 2:56.47 in the Greek capital.
Yet a retrospective anti-doping violation by Pettigrew – in 2008 he was banned for two years after admitting he used prohibited substances – meant the Yanks were belatedly booted out of the event.
This resulted in the Brits being upgraded to the gold medal position but it has taken almost three decades before they got their hands on the gongs.
A special medal ceremony led by World
Athletics
President
London
Stadium on Saturday at 1.30pm on a wet afternoon in Stratford.
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And the British national anthem was also played in front of the sell-out crowd.
UK Athletics say the presentation 'offers a long-awaited opportunity to celebrate a landmark moment in British
athletics
and to honour a team who exemplified fairness, resilience and excellence on the global stage'.
Pettigrew, who was born in
Georgia
, was caught up in the BALCO doping scandal and admitted during the trial of former coach Trevor Graham that he had doped.
As a result, the US Anti-Doping Agency annulled all of Pettigrew's competitive results after January 1997.
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The American quartet (left to right) Tyree Washington, Chris Jones, Jerome Young and Antonio Pettigrew were stripped of their gold medal a few years ago
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He also voluntarily surrendered his 2000
Sydney
Olympics 4x400 metres relay gold medal and his 1997 and 1999 world
championship
relay golds.
In August 2010, Pettigrew was found dead in the backseat of his locked car in North Carolina. He was 42 years old.
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An autopsy report said the cause of death was diphenhydramine toxicity – it was ruled that he had committed suicide by overdosing on a drug common to sleeping pills.
One of the reasons it has taken so long to happen is that the five guys had not managed to coordinate diaries for an event taking place in the UK after it was all confirmed in 2021.
Yet there is a bittersweet feeling among the contingent given that Pettigrew felt compelled to take his own life when his
drugs
shame went public.
Welsh star Baulch, 52, said: 'I've said this to a few people now. If there was an option of giving this gold medal to him, I'd rather him have the gold medal than him taking his life.
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'His life is far more important to me than me having this gold medal.'
Former European 400 metres champion Thomas, 51, said: 'On the one hand it's a real shame it's taken this long.
'On a personal level, it's really beautiful today. My son Teddy, who is six, is here today. I didn't have any children back then.
'My mum and dad are pretty elderly now. They're up in the box. For them to be able to see the moment I should have had with the boys 28 years ago, but in front of a British crowd, it felt really special.'
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EVERY 90 minutes in the UK a life is lost to suicide
It doesn't discriminate, touching the lives of people in every corner of society – from the homeless and unemployed to builders and doctors, reality stars and footballers.
It's the biggest killer of people under the age of 35, more deadly than cancer and car crashes.
And men are three times more likely to take their own life than women.
Yet it's rarely spoken of, a taboo that threatens to continue its deadly rampage unless we all stop and take notice, now.
That is why The Sun launched the You're Not Alone campaign.
The aim is that by sharing practical advice, raising awareness and breaking down the barriers people face when talking about their mental health, we can all do our bit to help save lives.
Let's all vow to ask for help when we need it, and listen out for others…
If you, or anyone you know, needs help dealing with mental health problems, the following organisations provide support:
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