Bahamian sprinter (born 1978)
Dominic Demeritte
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| Born | (1978-02-22) 22 February 1978 (age 47)
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| Sport | Track and field |
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Dominic Demeritte (born 22 February 1978) is a retired track and field sprinter who specialized in the 200 metres.
Demeritte was coached for part of his professional career by Henry Rolle.
He became indoor world champion in 2004,[1] his result 20.66 a new Bahamian record at the time.[2]
He attended University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill where he was a two time NCAA All American.[3]
As of 2022 he is a Track and Field coach at Life University.[4]
| Year |
Competition |
Venue |
Position |
Event |
Notes
|
Representing the Bahamas
|
| 1994
|
Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships (U-17)
|
Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
|
3rd
|
Triple jump
|
13.70 m
|
| 4th
|
Heptathlon
|
2772 pts
|
| 1995
|
CARIFTA Games (U-20)
|
George Town, Cayman Islands
|
7th
|
200 m
|
21.90
|
| 2nd
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:15.69
|
| 1996
|
CARIFTA Games (U-20)
|
Kingston, Jamaica
|
5th (sf)
|
100 m
|
11.01 (0.3 m/s)
|
| 5th
|
200 m
|
22.06 (-3.2 m/s)
|
| Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships (U-20)
|
San Salvador, El Salvador
|
3rd
|
100 m
|
10.73 (1.4 m/s)
|
| 2nd
|
200 m
|
21.23 (1.0 m/s)
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| 3rd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
41.51
|
| World Junior Championships
|
Sydney, Australia
|
18th (qf)
|
100 m
|
10.91 (wind: -2.2 m/s)
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| 25th (qf)
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200 m
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21.79 (wind: -1.1 m/s)
|
| 1999
|
World Championships
|
Seville, Spain
|
7th (h)
|
200 m
|
21.41 (-0.4 m/s)
|
| 2000
|
NACAC Under-25 Championships
|
Monterrey, México
|
2nd
|
200 m
|
20.85 (wind: -3.9 m/s)
|
| Olympic Games
|
Sydney, Australia
|
6th (h)
|
200 m
|
21.47 (-0.1 m/s)
|
| 4th (h)
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.57
|
| 2001
|
World Championships
|
Edmonton, Canada
|
8th (qf)
|
200 m
|
20.86 (1.1 m/s)
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| 6th (2f)
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.20
|
| 2002
|
Commonwealth Games
|
Manchester, England
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4th
|
200 m
|
20.21 (1.4 m/s)
|
| 3rd
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
3:01.35
|
| NACAC U-25 Championships
|
San Antonio, Texas, United States
|
1st
|
200 m
|
20.60 (wind: +0.5 m/s)
|
| 2nd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.81
|
| 2003
|
World Indoor Championships
|
Birmingham, England
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3rd
|
200 m
|
20.92
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| Central American and Caribbean Championships
|
St. George's, Grenada
|
1st
|
200 m
|
20.43
|
| World Championships
|
Paris, France
|
8th (sf)
|
200 m
|
20.71 (0.6 m/s)
|
| 2004
|
World Indoor Championships
|
Budapest, Hungary
|
1st
|
200 m
|
20.66 NR
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| Olympic Games
|
Athens, Greece
|
6th (qf)
|
200 m
|
20.61 (0.5 m/s)
|
| 2005
|
Central American and Caribbean Championships
|
Nassau, Bahamas
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3rd
|
200 m
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20.47
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| 3rd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.08
|
| World Championships
|
Helsinki, Finland
|
7th (qf)
|
200 m
|
21.25 (-1.1 m/s)
|
| 2006
|
Commonwealth Games
|
Melbourne, Australia
|
—
|
200 m
|
DSQ
|
| —
|
4 × 400 m relay
|
DNF
|
| Central American and Caribbean Games
|
Cartagena, Colombia
|
2nd
|
4 × 100 m relay
|
39.44
|
| 2008
|
Central American and Caribbean Championships
|
Cali, Colombia
|
7th (sf)
|
200 m
|
21.37 (1.1 m/s)
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