Olga Bryzgina had been the world's premier 400m runner in 1987 and 1988, winning both the World and Olympic titles. Following her Olympic victory in 1988, Olga temporarily retired from competition, during which time she gave birth to her daughter Lisa. When Bryzgina returned to competition in 1991, she found that her mantle as the world's best one-lap specialist had been assumed by Frenchwoman Marie-Jose Perec. In the 400m final at the World Championships in Tokyo on 27 August, Perec simply outclassed the opposition, while Bryzgina, running her fastest race for three years in a time of 49.82sec, was unlucky to just miss a medal, as she was pipped on the line for third place by Sandra Myers (Spain). It was a different story in the 4 x 400m relay, which the Soviet Union won easily from the USA, thanks to a superb anchor leg of 48.67sec from Bryzgina. By the time of the next Olympic Games, at Barcelona in August of the following year, Bryzgina had returned to close to her form of 1987 and 1988, but she still had to contend with Perec. In the Olympic final on 5 August, Bryzgina, representing Ukraine following the demise of the Soviet Union, made a very fast start and led through the halfway mark in 23.7sec. However, at that point Perec started to close the gap, and although Olga still led at 300m (see photo above), she was quickly passed by Perec, who went on to win the gold medal with Bryzgina claiming the silver. In the 4 x 400m relay final, the newly independent states of the former Soviet Union combined in a unified team to win the gold medal, with Bryzgina running the anchor leg. That was Olga's last major championships and she retired shortly afterwards. (Ron Casey)