Bolt advances, Russian qualifies and an engagement at track

United States athlete Jenny Simpson displays the American flag after winning a bronze medal in the women's 1,500-meter final during Tuesday night's track and field competitions at the Olympic Stadium of the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.
United States athlete Jenny Simpson displays the American flag after winning a bronze medal in the women's 1,500-meter final during Tuesday night's track and field competitions at the Olympic Stadium of the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - The repeat one-two American finish in the triple jump, the Jamaican gold medal in hurdles and Jenny Simpson's unprecedented bronze in the 1,500-meters were only part of the story in Olympic track and field Tuesday - and maybe not the best part.

The midpoint of the nine-day program at Olympic Stadium was a day for diamond rings and making friends, a one-of-a-kind Russian hello and a surprising Brazilian farewell. And, of course, a daily dose of doping news that was more than offset by a speedy cameo from Usain Bolt.

Bolt was on the track early for his 200-meter qualifying heat - a no-fuss 20.28-second ramble around the curve that barely raised his blood pressure.

"I'm not an early-morning person," Bolt proclaimed, shortly after winning his heat, which actually started at the crack of 12:46 p.m. (Rio time).

But morning seemed like the perfect time for American Will Claye to put an exclamation point on one of his greatest moments. Newly minted with his second straight Olympic silver medal in the triple jump - countryman Christian Taylor won gold, also just as in 2012 - Claye clambered above the barrier separating the track from the stands, climbed a few rows to meet his girlfriend, bent down on one knee and popped the question.

Queen Harrison, an Olympic hurdler in 2008, said yes.

"When I woke up this morning, I was like, 'Today's going to be the best day of my life,'" Claye said.

Omar McLeod certainly felt the same. His 13.05-second trip across the 110-meter hurdles course in the evening's final event made it three gold medals on the straightaway for Jamaica so far. He beat Orlando Ortega of Spain by .12 seconds. Dimitri Bascou of France took third, and University of Oregon receiver Devon Allen finished fifth.

In the evening's other big race, Faith Kipyegon finished the women's 1,500-meters in 4 minutes, 8.92 seconds to beat out Genzebe Dibaba, a flip-flop from last year's world championships. Jenny Simpson took bronze to become the first American woman to medal in the event.

Other gold medalists were high jumper Derek Drouin of Canada and discus thrower Sandra Perkovic of Croatia, who twice was a single throw from elimination but came through both times and defended her Olympic title.

Yet, like many of the best moments on this emotion-packed day, there were no medals on the line when long jumper Darya Klishina finally showed up at the Olympics. During warmups, Klishina unzipped her jacket and revealed a red shirt with the word "Russia" emblazoned in bright white lettering. She's the only athlete wearing that uniform at this stadium, due to a doping scandal that led to the ban of Russia's other 67 track and field entrants.

Never introduced by the PA announcer, or cheered by the crowd, Klishina jumped 6.64 meters to make it through qualifying and will have a chance for a medal today.

"Last week, it was a really tough and really hard week for me mentally. I was waiting for the decision and I could not practice, I just did warmup," she said. "I would like to have a big Russian team around me, as usual, but unfortunately I'm here alone and this is a great responsibility."

But there was more bad news for the Russians. Around the time the evening session began, the International Olympic Committee stripped Russia's 2008 women's 4x100-meter relay team of its gold medal, saying one of the sprinters tested positive in one of the many samples being reanalyzed this summer.

Back on the field, the sparse morning crowd saw one shocker: Brazilian Fabiana Murer was expected to contend for a pole vault medal, which would've gone nicely with the surprise gold Thiago Braz da Silva won in the men's competition the night before. But Murer, the silver medalist at world championships last year, couldn't clear 4.55 meters in her first three attempts.

Da Silva's return to the stadium for the medals ceremony reignited an ugly episode from the previous night. The French runner-up, Renaud Lavillenie, was roundly booed when his name was announced for the silver medal, much the way he heard jeers the night before as he prepared for the jump that decided the meet.

The Olympic spirit was alive and well, and no story told it better than this:

Midway through women's 5,000-meter qualifying, American Abbey D'Agostino and New Zealander Nikki Hamblin got tangled and fell hard onto the track.

Hamblin laid there, dazed. D'Agostino popped back up. But instead of forging ahead, she walked over to Hamblin, put a hand on her shoulder and said, "Get up. We have to finish this," then hoisted her to her feet to restart the run.

Turned out, D'Agostino took the worst of it, hobbled because she had hurt her ankle. So, when Hamblin got to the finish, she waited for her new friend, where they exchanged a warm hug before the American got carted off in a wheelchair.

"I'm never going to forget that moment," Hamblin said. Hours later, race officials sent out a simple alert: The Track Referee, after examining the video of the race, was advancing both women into Friday's final. They offered no explanation.