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Patrick Jarrett (athlete)
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Patrick Jarrett (athlete) : ウィキペディア英語版
Patrick Jarrett (athlete)

Patrick "Pat" Jarrett (born 2 October 1972)〔(Pat Jarrett ). Sports Reference. Retrieved on 2011-06-04.〕 is a Jamaican sprinter who specialised in the 100 metres. He represented Jamaica at the 2000 and 2004 Summer Olympics. He was also the 1999 Jamaican 100 m champion and a quarter-finalist at the 1999 World Championships in Athletics.
He won the 100 m bronze at the 1999 CAC Championships and helped the Jamaican relay team to the bronze at the 1999 Pan American Games. He received a doping ban for two years in 2001, after testing positive for stanozolol at the Jamaican Championships.
==Career==
Jarrett originally started out running for Farmingdale High School in Long Island, New York where he was ranked #1 in the 100 m in New York state from 1990-91. Afterwards, he attended St. John's University and starred on the track team from 1991 until he dropped out in 1993, academically ineligible. After a modest but short career at St. John's, he moved to New York Tech to continue running.〔Dicker, Ron (1999-01-17). (TRACK AND FIELD; Jarrett Upsets N.C.A.A. Sprint Champ ). ''New York Times''. Retrieved on 2011-06-04.〕 He came to prominence in 1999 when he won the bronze medal in the 100 m at the 1999 CAC Championships, finishing behind Obadele Thompson and Kim Collins. He was selected for the 4×100 metres relay team at the 1999 Pan American Games and the squad won the bronze in at time of 38.82 seconds. He won the 100 m at the Jamaican Championships that year, running a time of 10.30 seconds.〔(Jamaican Championships ). GBRAthletics. Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕 He was Jamaica's only representative in the 100 m at the 1999 World Championships in Athletics and he reached the quarter-finals stage but was knocked out as he finished fifth in his race. Regardless, his time of 10.22 seconds was a new personal best.〔(Official Results - 100 METRES - Men - Quarter-Final ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕 Along with Garth Robinson, Christopher Williams and Ray Stewart, he finished fifth (upgraded to fourth after Nigeria was disqualifed) in the heats of the 4×100 metres relay in his second competition of the championships.〔(Official Results - 4 X 100 METRES - Men - Heats ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕〔Andrews, Merrick (2000-09-07). (Thomas eyes medal at Games ). ''Jamaica Gleaner''. Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕
He improved his personal best to 10.14 seconds at the National Championships in 2000, and his third place behind Williams and Lindel Frater finish guaranteed him a place in the Jamaican Olympic team.〔(2000 - men's 100 metres list ). Lista Anno. Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕 He reached the second round of the 100 m, along with his compatriots, at the 2000 Sydney Olympics but he finished last in his race, pulling up before the finish line. He was not selected for the relay at the Olympics and the Jamaican team of Frater, Dwight Thomas, Williams and Llewellyn Bredwood set a national record in the final.〔(Men's 4x100 relay semi finals ). IAAF. Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕
At the 2001 Penn Relays Jarrett helped the Jamaican team including Donovan Powell, Byron Logan and Chris Williams to third place with a time of 38.68 seconds. He also improved his 100 m best to 10.12 seconds, ahead of Mark Lewis-Francis.〔(Penn Relays Results ). Penn Relays (2001-04-23). Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕 He finished second at the Jamaican National Championships that year but his doping test from the competition was positive for the banned steroid stanozolol. He contested the test but the IAAF upheld the decision and he was banned from athletics for a period of two years.〔(Jamaican sprinter faces ban ). BBC Sport (2001-09-19). Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕
He returned from the ban in 2003 and his next major appearance came at the 2004 Athens Olympics. He did not earn an individual spot, but was chosen for the relay and a team comprising Dwight Thomas, Jarrett, Winston Smith and Michael Frater recorded a time of 38.71 seconds for fourth in the heats (which was not enough to make the final). In 2005 he was fifth at both the IAAF Meeting Zagreb and the Tsiklitiria meeting in Athens (where he ran a season's best of 10.15 seconds).〔(Patrick JARRETT Profile ). The-sports.org. Retrieved on 2010-08-30.〕

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