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Gabby Thomas claims stunning Olympic 200m gold

Gabby Thomas surged to victory of the women’s 200m final on Tuesday night in Paris, winning wire-to-wire in 21.83 seconds. In the process, she has claimed her Olympic gold medal. Thomas led from the gun and finished with daylight between her and silver medalist, Julien Alfred, of Saint Lucia, who won 100m gold on Saturday.

“I’m really in disbelief be­cause having an Olympic gold medal is something in my wild­est dreams,” Thomas said. “But at the same time I know how hard I’ve fought for it. This has been six years in the making, head down, working hard.

Thomas is joined on the medal podium by U.S. team­mate, Brittany Brown, who earned bronze for her first Olympic medal. Brown entered Paris with only one world medal (a silver from 2019 Worlds), and her 22.20-second dash around the purple Stade de France track has now added an Olym­pic bronze to her docket.

or the race’s emphatic victor, Thomas, this win comes after a string of falling short of gold in major title races. At the To­kyo Olympics, she took bronze. In her next big-ticket race, 2023 Worlds, it was a silver. Now in Paris, she’s got her gold.

From the moment she landed in the City of Light, Thomas was the clear woman to beat. The withdrawal of Jamaican rival, Shericka Jackson, only ballooned that target.

The Paris Olympic title secures the 14th gold medal for the U.S. in the Olympic women’s 200m, which breaks a 13-13 tie with Jamaica for the most in history (no Jamaican earned a 200m medal this year for the first time since 1976). And Thomas is the first Amer­ican since Allyson Felix in 2012 to strike gold in the women’s event.

The 27-year-old has endeared herself to the American public not just with her command of the track, but also with her extraordinary public health work. She volunteers weekly at a Volunteer Healthcare Clinic (VHC) in Austin, Texas, which provides primary care to chil­dren and adults without access to such care.

With a Harvard degree in neurobiology and global health, plus a master’s in epidemiology from the University of Texas, Thomas is a safe bet to impact public health for decades after she stops running profession­ally.

Thomas’ subsequent dom­inance at Trials, where she posted a world-leading 21.78, sent her to Olympics No. 2. Now, she has made good on the gold goal.

Thomas is a woman of many titles Harvard grad, healthcare worker, maybe even future doc­tor and now, she’s earned the once-evasive designation of Olympic champion.-NBC

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