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Nickel Ashmeade

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Nationality
  
Jamaican

Name
  
Nickel Ashmeade

Weight
  
169 lb (77 kg)

Height
  
1.8 m

Sport
  
Event(s)
  
100 metres, 200 metres


Nickel Ashmeade Athlete profile for Nickel Ashmeade iaaforg

Born
  
7 April 1990 (age 33) (
1990-04-07
)

Personal best(s)
  
100 m: 9.90 (Moscow 2013)200 m: 19.85 (Zurich 2012)

Residence
  
Clermont, Florida, United States

Similar People
  
Nesta Carter, Usain Bolt, Kemar Bailey‑Cole, Asafa Powell, Warren Weir

Nickel ashmeade sprinting montage


Nickel Ashmeade (born 7 April 1990) is a Jamaican sprinter who specialises in the 100 and 200 meters. Nickel Ashmeade placed 2nd in the Jamaica National Trials in the 200m behind Warren Weir. He came 3rd in the 100m behind Kemar Bailey-Cole and Usain Bolt.

Contents

Nickel Ashmeade Nickel Ashmeade LiveJamaicaUpdates

Nickel Ashmeade ran the third leg for Jamaicas 4x100m team at the World Championships in Moscow which won the gold medal. Nickel Ashmeade finished 5th in the 2013 World Championships 100m in Moscow and 4th in the 200m.

Nickel Ashmeade Nickel ASHMEADE 2013 4th place mens 200m final at World

Workout wednesday olympians marvin bracy nickel ashmeade


Career

Nickel Ashmeade Nickel Ashmeade Twitter QampA TrackTown USA

A St. Jago High School teammate of Yohan Blake, Ashmeade first enjoyed success in the sprints as a junior athlete: at the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships he beat compatriot Dexter Lee to the 100 m title, was runner-up to Ramone McKenzie over 200 m, and teamed up with the pair to bring Jamaica the 4×100 meter relay title. Another medal haul came for the young Jamaican at the 2007 World Youth Championships in Athletics, where he was second to Lee in the 100 m, ran a 200 m best of 20.76 seconds for the bronze medal, and helped the national team to another bronze in the sprint medley relay. He competed at the Penn Relays in 2008 and represented his school, St. Jago High School – an institution renowned for producing track and field athletes.

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Ashmeade focused on the 200 m at the 2008 World Junior Championships in Athletics and he took the silver medal, narrowly finishing behind France's Christophe Lemaitre. A second silver came in the 4×100 m relay and he departed from his usual oeuvre to help Jamaica to fourth place in the 4×400 m relay. The regional CARIFTA Games provided him the opportunity for further junior medals: he won the 200 m title and two relay gold medals at the 2008 edition and almost repeated the feat in 2009, with the sole difference being a 4×400 m relay silver. His final international outing as a junior athlete came at the 2009 Pan American Junior Athletics Championships in Port of Spain and he won the 200 m gold in a personal best of 20.40 seconds before going on to take a relay bronze medal.

Nickel Ashmeade Nickel Ashmeade Pictures 20th Commonwealth Games

He made the transition to the senior ranks at the 2009 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics, where he won the 200 m race ahead of Rondel Sorrillo. After a quiet 2010, he made significant improvements at the start of the 2011 outdoor season. In May 2011, he completed his first 200 m in under 20 seconds in Kingston, running 19.96 seconds to surprise the more established Wallace Spearmon and improve upon his previous best by almost half a second. Ashmeade made similar progress in the 100 m at the Ponce Grand Prix later that month, setting a meet record to beat Justin Gatlin, 2004 Olympic and 2005 World champion, with a time of 10.05 seconds (an improvement of 0.24 seconds). Ashmeade competed in the 100M, 200M and 4X100M Relay in the 2013 World Championships. After finishing 5th in the 100M and 4th in the 200M, Ashmeade was part of the Jamaican 4X100M Relay team which won gold.

Nickel Ashmeade Nickel Ashmeade Pictures 20th Commonwealth Games

Ashmeade represented Jamaica in the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. During his first Olympic Games, he finished fifth place in the semifinal rounds of the men's 100m with a time of 10.05s and fourth in the 200m semifinals with 20.31s. He earned his first Olympic medal as the third leg of the 4x100m relay team, anchored by Usain Bolt, with a time of 37.27s.


Nickel Ashmeade Profile of Nickel ASHMEADE AllAthleticscom

References

Nickel Ashmeade Wikipedia