(July 9, 2009) - High School participants to a track and field camp held last week at Claude Moore Recreation Center and Park View High School were treated to a visit by 4-time Olympian Raymond Stewart, one of the greatest sprinters in Jamaican history.
Stewart, who captured a Silver Medal in the 4x100 relay at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics and competed at Seoul in 1988, Barcelona in 1992 and Atlanta in 1996, flew in from Dallas to talk with the Track and Field campers.
Potomac Falls High School track and field coach Courtney Cornwall was one of the coordinators of the camp.
Here is more on Stewart from Wikipiedia:
Raymond ("Ray") Douglas Stewart (born March 18, 1965 in Kingston, Jamaica) is a former Jamaican athlete who specialised in the 100 metres event. As a junior athlete Stewart found much success at the CARIFTA Games, winning five gold medals within a four year period. In 1984 he reached the 100 m Olympic final and won an Olympic silver medal for the 4×100 metres relay. At the 1987 World Championships he took silver in the 100 m and bronze with the Jamaican relay team. A leg injury in the 1988 Olympic final of the 100 m ruined his medal chances in both the individual and relay events.
A new personal best of 9.97 seconds at the NCAA Outdoor Championships made him the number one ranked 100 m athlete in 1989 and the first Jamaican to officially break the 10-second barrier. At the competition he also recorded the third fastest relay time ever. He won his first Commonwealth Games medal the following year, taking bronze in the relay. Stewart recorded a national record of 9.96 seconds at the 1991 World Championships but this was surprisingly only enough for sixth place; two continental records and the world record were broken in the race. Stewart reached his third consecutive Olympic 100 m final in 1992, becoming the first man to do so. He reached the 1993 and 1995 World Championship finals of the 100 m but failed to medal. He attended his last Olympics in 1996.
Stewart had a career that lasted almost twenty years, competing at four successive Olympic Games and six World Championships. He also won the 100 m at the Jamaican national championships seven times. His 100 m personal best of 9.96 seconds makes him the third fastest Jamaican sprinter in the event, after Usain Bolt and Asafa Powell.