- Michael Frater
-
Michael Frater
Frater at the 2010 Janusz Kusocinski MemorialPersonal information Nationality Jamaican Born October 6, 1982
Manchester, JamaicaHeight 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in) Weight 67 kg (150 lb; 10.6 st) Sport Sport Running Event(s) 100 metres, 200 metres College/university team TCU Horned Frogs Club MVP Track & Field Club Medal recordCompetitor for Jamaica Men's Athletics Olympic Games Gold 2008 Beijing 4x100 m relay World Championships Gold 2011 Daegu 4×100 m relay Gold 2009 Berlin 4x100 m relay Silver 2005 Helsinki 100 metres Commonwealth Games Gold 2006 Melbourne 4x100 m relay Silver 2002 Manchester 4x100 m relay Pan American Games Gold 2003 Santo Domingo 100 metres Bronze 2003 Santo Domingo 4x100 m relay World Youth Championships Gold 1999 Bydgoszcz 4x100 m relay Pan American Junior Games Silver 1999 Tampa 4x100 m relay CARIFTA Games (Under 17s) Bronze 1998 Port of Spain 100 m Silver 1998 Port of Spain 4x100 m relay Gold 1997 Bridgetown 100 m World Athletics Final Bronze 2008 Stuttgart 100 m Bronze 2007 Stuttgart 100 m Michael Frater O.D (born October 6, 1982 in Manchester, Jamaica) is a sprinter who specialises in the 100 metres event. He won a silver medal at the 2005 World Championships and a gold medal at the 2003 Pan American Games for the event.
He has also been successful as part of the Jamaican 4 × 100 metres relay team, setting the world record and Olympic record at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. He also won gold in the relay at the 2006 Commonwealth Games and took silver in the 2002 edition.
Contents
Career
Born on October 6, 1982, in Manchester, Jamaica, Michael Frater is the younger of two sons of Lyndell Frater, member of Jamaican Parliament, and Monica Frater. He attended the Ulster Spring primary school with brothers Lindel and Ricardo. His elder brother Lindel, was a sprinter who represented Jamaica at the 2000 Olympic Games. Frater stated that his brother was a major influence on his decision to become a track athlete.[1]
Frater attended Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas.[2] He is a member of the MVP (Maximising Velocity and Power) Track & Field Club based at the University of Technology (U-Tech), Kingston, and is coached by Stephen Francis.
1997
Representing Wolmer's Boys School, Frater set two records at the Inter-Secondary School Sports Association National Boys & Girls Athletic Championship held at the National Stadium, Kingston. On March 22, he won the Class 3 100 metres in 11.10 and the Class 3 200 metres in 22.73.[3]
Frater won gold at the CARIFTA Games, winning the Under-17 100 m in 11.07.[4]
1998
Frater won a bronze medal at the CARIFTA Games. Competing in the Under-17 100 m he recorded 10.85 into a −0.7 m/s headwind. He also won a silver medal in the 4x100 m relay event.[4]
1999
On July 9 Frater won a silver medal in the 4 x 100 metres relay at the Pan American Junior Championships. He ran the second leg for Jamaica, who finished in 40.27 behind the United States team.[5]
Eight days later Frater won a gold medal at the World Youth Championships.[6] He ran the second leg on the 4 × 100 m relay, the team's winning time 40.03 setting a new World Youth (under 18) record.[7]
2000
Frater finished second in the 100 m with 10.50 at the Jamaica National Junior Championships on June 30.[8]
Running for Boyd Anderson High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, he won the Florida state championship in the 100 m, and was selected as the Gatorade Outstanding High School Track Athlete for the state.[9]
In October, Frater finished fifth in the 100 m at the IAAF World Junior Championships in a personal best 10.46[10] and again fifth when running the first leg of the 4 × 100 m relay in 40.07.[11]
2002
Frater won the 100 m at the Conference USA Outdoor Championships in 10.07.[12] Although wind aided +2.1 m/s the time is credited as a meet record, with the "(w-a)" notation for wind assistance.[13] In the preliminaries of the 200 m Frater ran a personal best 20.63 (wind +0.6 m/s).[14] He won the 200 m at the same event, in 20.45[15] Again wind assisted (+3.0 m/s), the time is credited as a meet record, with the "(w-a)" notation for wind assistance.[13] Frater collected his third win of the meet when TCU won the 4x100 m relay in 39.17,[16] setting another meet record.[13]
On June 1 Frater finished fourth in the 100 m at the NCAA Division I Outdoor Championships, running 10.40 in a −2.7 headwind.[17]
In July at the Commonwealth Games in Manchester Frater finished seventh in semi-final 1 of the 100 m event. He then ran the first leg of the Jamaican 4×100 m relay team that won a silver medal, the Jamaican team finishing with the same time as England, in 38.62 s.[18]
2003
In February Frater ran 6.66 at the Conference USA Indoor Championships, bettering the previous meet record while finishing second in the 60 m. He also finished second in the 200 m.[19]
Frater finished third in the 100 m at the NCAA Division I Outdoor Track & Field Championships, earning all-American honors.[20]
In early August at the Pan American Games, Frater finished second in the 100 m in 10.21[21] He ran the first leg of the 4 × 100 m relay; the Jamaican team finished fourth recording 39.08. Frater was awarded the gold medal for the 100 m and the bronze for the 4 × 100 m relay a week later[22] when American Mickey Grimes tested positive for the stimulant ephedrine,[23] resulting in the disqualification of Grimes and the US relay team.
Three weeks later at the World Championships in Paris, Frater was eliminated, running in the quarter finals of the 100 m heat immediately following Jon Drummond's on-track protest for disqualification, finishing sixth posting 10.25.[24] He helped the 4 × 100 m relay team qualify second quickest[25] for the final, running the third leg in the semi-final. In the final the baton exchange was not executed cleanly between Dwight Thomas and Frater, resulting in a DNF for the team.[26]
2004
In May Frater won the 100 m at the Conference USA Outdoor Championships in 10.20. TCU won the 4x100 m relay, giving Frater his second win of the meet.[27]
On June 12 Frater finished second in 10.059 to Tyson Gay 10.051 at the NCAA Division 1 Outdoor Track & Field Championships at the University of Texas.[28][29] As a member of the TCU relay team he finished fourth in the 4x100 m event.[30]
Frater was knocked out in the first semi-final of the 100 m sprint at the 2004 Athens Olympics, finishing sixth in 10.29 into a −1.6 m/s headwind.[31] He ran the anchor leg on the 4x100 m relay in the heats, but did not get the chance to run for a medal as the Jamaican team failed to qualify for the final, with a season best 38.71 fourth place finish in their heat.[32]
2005
On July 16 Frater won the Meeting de Madrid IAAF Grand Prix event, recording 10.22 into a −0.7 m/s headwind.[33]
In the 2005 World Championships, he won the silver medal in the 100 m with 10.05, finishing second to American Justin Gatlin,[34] who was subsequently banned from competition in 2006 for four years after testing positive for testosterone or its precursor.[35] The Jamaican 4 × 100 m relay team, anchored by Frater, failed to gain a medal in the final, finishing fourth by .001 to the Great Britain and Northern Ireland team.[36]
Although he qualified for the 100 m at the 2005 World Athletics Final in Monaco, Frater did not start the race.[37]
2006
Frater was disqualified in the semi-finals of the 100 m sprint because of a false start at the Commonwealth Games in March.[38] Patrick Johnson was charged with the first false start, which put the entire field under caution. Frater was removed from the field after the second false start, although he had a slower reaction, officially 0.146,[38] to the gun than Jacey Harper in Lane 7. After a third false start Mark Lewis-Francis was also disqualified from the semi-final. Frater ran the first leg of the 4 × 100 m relay, earning a gold medal with Jamaica's winning time of 38.36.[39]
Frater withdrew from competing in the Jamaica International Invitational on May 6, his coach citing financial issues and "disrespect"[40]
In June, Frater won the 100 m in 10.18 at the JAAA National Championships, succeeding Asafa Powell as Jamaica National Champion.[41] He and his brother Lindel are the only brothers to win the 100 m event at the national championships.[42]
2007
Frater, 10.13, finished second to Darrel Brown, 10.02, of Trinidad at the Jamaica International Invitational on May 5.[43]
In June at the National Championships on a day highlighted by Veronica Campbell-Brown's emphatic victory in the female 100 m in a world-leading time of 10.89, Frater failed to qualify for the Osaka World Championships when he clocked a less than impressive 10.46. His only chance was left up to the final semi-final of the day but the exploits of talented schoolboy Yohan Blake (10.19) pushed Nesta Carter to run a blistering 10.17 thus making the third heat the fastest heat of the day. This meant that the World Championships silver medalist was out of the finals and as a result did not make the Jamaican team to Osaka.
On July 28 Frater clocked 9.95 at the 4th Gran Premio Internacional de Atletismo Gobierno de Aragon held in Zaragoza, Spain. The wind for the race was an illegal 3.7 m/s.[44]
Frater finished third in the 100 m at the 2007 World Athletics Final, Stuttgart, in 10.11[45]
2008
On June 28, 2008, Frater finished third in the Jamaica National Championships (behind Usain Bolt 9.85, Asafa Powell 9.97) in 10.04, and qualified for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing.
He finished sixth in the Olympic 100 m final setting a personal best of 9.97 seconds.
Frater won a gold medal in Beijing, running the second leg of the Men's 4x100 m relay. The relay team of Carter, Frater, Bolt and Powell set a new world record of 37.10, with Frater recording a split time of 9.01 seconds for his leg. (USATF High Performance Registered Split Analysis).
In a Jamaican sweep of the medal positions led by Asafa Powell and Nesta Carter, Frater again finished third in the 100 m at the World Athletics Final, Stuttgart, in 10.10[46]
One week later Frater won the 100 m at the Shanghai Golden Grand Prix on September 20, the first official event of the IAAF 2009 Grand Prix series.[47]
Frater was honoured in a homecoming celebration in Jamaica and received an Order of Distinction (Officer Rank) in recognition of his achievements at the Olympics.[48]
2009
Frater ran the second leg for his MVP 4 × 100 m relay team at the Milo Western Relays held at the GC Foster College on February 14. The team recorded a new meet record and world leading time of 38.72 s for the relay event.[49]
On March 7, Frater was inducted into the Boyd Anderson Ring of Honor.[50]
On April 16 Frater was nominated for the Laureus World Team of the Year award, as a member of the 2008 Jamaica Olympic Sprint Team.[51][52] Two days later Frater ran a leg of the 4 x 100 m at the UTech Track and Field Classic at the National Stadium in Kingston, Jamaica. The teams winning 38.46 clocking was a new meet record.[53][54] Frater also ran the 200 m at the event, finishing fourth in 20.96[55]
Frater next competed at the Penn Relays on April 25. He ran the second leg of the 4x100 m relay. Asafa Powell on the fourth leg pulled up and finished ninth in 41.24[56] A report in the Jamaica Observer on the morning of the event indicated that Powell had injured his ankle in training and was not expected to run.[57]
At the Guadeloupe International Invitational On May 1, Frater placed third in the 100 m in 10.39[58] On May 8 he finished second in 10.15 at the Qatar Athletic Super Grand Prix.[59] He finished eighth at the Reebok Grand Prix held in New York at Icahn Stadium on May 30.[60] At the Prefontaine Classic eight days later he finished sixth.[61]
Frater showed a spectacular return to form at the Jamaica National Trials, finishing third in the 100 m in 10.02 (−0.2 m/s wind), qualifying for the World Championships in Berlin.[62]
2010
In a surprise upset at the National Championships, Frater was beaten into second place in the 100 m final.
Following the National Championships Frater did not compete in the IAAF Diamond League events.
2011
A Gleaner newspaper report revealed that Frater had suffered a ruptured knee ligament in 2010.[63]
Accomplishments and major competition results
Personal bests
Event Time (seconds) Venue Date 60 metres 6.64[64] Ames, Iowa, United States March 1, 2002 100 metres 9.88[65] Lausanne, Switzerland June 30, 2011 200 metres 20.63[66] Louisville, United States May 9, 2002 Competition record
100 metres
Event Result (Pos) City Date 1997 CARIFTA Games 1st Final Bridgetown , 1997 1998 CARIFTA Games 3rd Final Port of Spain , 1998 2000 IAAF World Junior Championships 5th Final Santiago de Chile October 18, 2000 2003 Pan American Games 1st Final Santo Domingo August 6, 2003 2004 Olympic Games 6th Semi-Final Athens August 22, 2004 2005 IAAF World Championships 2nd Final Helsinki August 7, 2005 2005 IAAF World Athletics Final D.N.S. Final Monaco September 10, 2005 2006 Commonwealth Games DQ Semi-Final Melbourne March 25, 2006 2007 IAAF World Athletics Final 3rd Final Stuttgart September 22, 2007 2008 Olympic Games 6th Final Beijing August 16, 2008 2008 IAAF World Athletics Final 3rd Final Stuttgart September 13, 2008 2009 World Championships 5th Semi-Final Berlin August 16, 2009 2009 IAAF World Athletics Final 2nd Final Thesaloniki September 12, 2009 4×100 metres relay
Event Result City Date 1998 CARIFTA Games 2nd Final Port of Spain , 1998 1999 Pan American Junior Games 2nd Final Tampa July 11, 1999 1999 World Youth Championships 1st Final Bydgoszcz July 17, 1999 2002 Commonwealth Games 2nd Final Manchester July 31, 2002 2003 Pan American Games 3rd Final Santo Domingo August 6, 2003 2003 World Championships DQ Final Paris August 31, 2003 2004 Olympic Games 4th Semi-Final Athens August 22, 2004 2005 World Championships 4th Final Helsinki August 13, 2005 2006 Commonwealth Games 1st Final Melbourne March 25, 2006 2008 Olympic Games 1st Final Beijing August 22, 2008 2009 World Championships 1st Final Berlin August 22, 2009 Time progression in the 100 m
Year Time Windspeed City Date 2000 10.46 0.10 Santiago de Chile October 18 2001 10.26 1.60 Arlington May 5 2002 10.21 0.50 Louisville May 9 2003 10.13 1.10 Lincoln May 30 2004 10.06 1.70 Austin June 1 2005 10.03 1.60 Athens June 14 2006 10.06 1.50 Gateshead June 11 2007 10.03 0.00 Rieti September 9 2008 9.97 0.00 Beijing August 16 2009 10.02 −0.20 Kingston June 27 2010 9.98 0.90 Rieti August 28 2011 9.88 1.00 Lausanne June 30 References
- ^ Frater, little but tallawah. Sports Jamaica (2005-08-17). Retrieved on 2009-03-17.
- ^ Frogs in the Olympics. Texas Christian University (2008-08-04). Retrieved on 2009-03-17.
- ^ 1999 ISSA Champs results
- ^ a b CARIFTA Games Under 17 list
- ^ 1999 Pan American Junior Championship results
- ^ 4x100 m relay 99 World Youth Championships
- ^ World Youth (Under 18 Best Performance
- ^ 2000 Jamaica National Junior Championships
- ^ Michael Frater – Training for greatness
- ^ 100 m final IAAF WJC 2000
- ^ 4x100 m final IAAF WJC 2000
- ^ 100 m 2002 Conference USA Outdoor Championships
- ^ a b c 2003 Conference USA Outdoor Track & Field Championships start list
- ^ 2002 Conference USA Outdoor Championships
- ^ 200 m 2002 Conference USA Outdoor Championships
- ^ 4x100 m 2002 Conference USA Outdoor Championships
- ^ 2002 NCAA Division I Outdoor Championships Saturday results
- ^ 2002 Commonwealth Games results
- ^ 2003 Conference USA Indoor Championships
- ^ TCU's Frater and Edwards Earn All-America Honors
- ^ Day 2 results, 2003 Pan American Games
- ^ PAN AMERICAN GAMES; Sprinter Tests Positive, Costing U.S. Two Golds
- ^ Grimes fails doping test
- ^ 100 m quarter final results 2003 World Championships
- ^ 4x100 m semi final 2003 World Championships
- ^ 4x100 m relay final 2003 World Championships
- ^ 100 m 2004 Conference USA Outdoor Championships
- ^ TCU's Frater Misses Gold By .008 Seconds
- ^ NCAA Division I outdoor Championships
- ^ 4x100 m relay 2003 NCAA Division 1 Championships
- ^ Athens 100 m semi-final results
- ^ 4x100 m heat results Athens Olympics
- ^ 100 m result Meeting de Madrid 2005
- ^ 100 m final 2005 World Championships
- ^ Gatlin Loses Fight, Receives 4-Year Doping Ban
- ^ 4x100 m relay final 2005 World Championships
- ^ 100 m result 2005 World Athletics Final
- ^ a b 100 m semifinal 2 2000 Commonwealth Games
- ^ 4x100 m relay result 2006 Commonwealth Games
- ^ Frater pulls out of meet
- ^ 2006 JAAA National Championships
- ^ National Champions 100 m
- ^ 100 m results Jamaica International Invitational 2007
- ^ Six men below 10-seconds in windy Zaragoza
- ^ 100 m result 2007 World Athletics Final
- ^ 100 m result 2008 World Athletics Final
- ^ 2008 Shanghai Golden Grand Prix 100 m result
- ^ Welcoming home our Olympians
- ^ World-leading 38.72 for MVP at Western Relays
- ^ Boyd Anderson to induct Frater into ring of honor
- ^ 2009 Laurens nominees
- ^ Nominee 2009 – Laureus World Team of the Year
- ^ MVP shine in 4x100m
- ^ UTECH Track & Field Classic Men 4x100 Meter Relay College&Inv result
- ^ UTECH Track & Field Classic Men 200 Meter Dash College&Inv
- ^ 2009 Penn Relays Results Men 4x100
- ^ Asafa drops out! 'Injured' sprinter shuns relay, could run 100m at Penns today
- ^ 2009 Results Guadeloupe International Invitational
- ^ 100 m result Qatar Athletic Super Grand Prix
- ^ 100 m results 2009 Reebok Grand Prix
- ^ 2009 Prefontaine Classic results
- ^ Foster, Anthony (2009-06-28). Bolt 9.86 and Fraser 10.88; Walker and Phillips excel over hurdles – JAM Champs , Day 2. IAAF. Retrieved on 2009-06-28.
- ^ Staying healthy key for stronger 'Frater' this year
- ^ Jamaica indoor list , 2002
- ^ http://www.iaaf.org/competitions/dlm/eventcode=4735/sex=M/discCode=100/result.html#M100
- ^ Jamaica outdoor 200 m list, 2002
External links
- IAAF profile for Michael Frater
Olympic Champions in Men's 4×100 m Relay - 1912
- 1920
- 1924
- 1928
- 1932
- 1936
- 1948
- 1952
- 1956
- 1960
- 1964
- 1968
- 1972
- 1976
- 1980
- 1984
- 1988
- 1992
- 1996
- 2000
- 2004
- 2008
World Champions in Men's 4×100 m Relay 1983: United States • 1987: United States • 1991: United States • 1993: United States • 1995: Canada • 1997: Canada • 1999: United States • 2001: South Africa • 2003: United States • 2005: France • 2007: United States • 2009: Jamaica • 2011: Jamaica
2009 Jamaica (Steve Mullings, Michael Frater, Usain Bolt, Asafa Powell, Dwight Thomas & Lerone Clarke)
2011 Jamaica (Nesta Carter, Michael Frater, Yohan Blake, Usain Bolt & Dexter Lee)Pan American Champions in Men's 100 m 1951: Rafael Fortún (CUB) · 1955: Rod Richard (USA) · 1959: Ray Norton (USA) · 1963: Enrique Figuerola (CUB) · 1967: Harry Jerome (CAN) · 1971: Don Quarrie (JAM) · 1975–1979: Silvio Leonard (CUB) · 1983: Leandro Peñalver (CUB) · 1987: Lee McRae (USA) · 1991: Robson da Silva (BRA) · 1995: Glenroy Gilbert (CAN) · 1999: Bernard Williams (USA) · 2003: Michael Frater (JAM) · 2007: Churandy Martina (AHO) · 2011: Lerone Clarke (JAM)
Categories:- 1982 births
- Living people
- Jamaican sprinters
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2004 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2008 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 2006 Commonwealth Games
- Olympic athletes of Jamaica
- Olympic gold medalists for Jamaica
- Texas Christian University alumni
- People from Manchester Parish
- Olympic medalists in athletics (track and field)
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