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This season for sure and then he will see how he feels. It's just been tough in that sense.''Īt 34, he's not sure how many years he has left in the sprint game. ''You're looking for closure every day and it doesn't come. He returned to training in late November more to ''clear my mind and get out of the house,'' he said. I never felt like she was in my shadow.'' She was happy, loving and wanted to be herself.
''I was so proud of her with that,'' Gay said. She never thought of herself as the daughter of Tyson Gay. She also ran on a 4x200 relay team that finished fourth. Trinity was a sprinter at Lafayette High in Lexington and finished fourth in the 100 and fifth in the 200 at the state Class 3A high school track meet in May 2016. I've learned to think about the good times, try to block that image of her death out of my mind.''įor the next month, it was hard for him to do much of anything, let alone return to track. ''It's been eight months and it still seems unreal. ''The funeral, the wake, the burial, everything was unreal,'' Gay said. I probably never cried that hard in my life.'' ''I cried on the plane the whole way home. ''It was just a group of honor students, going out to have a good time. ''You're upset you couldn't be there to stop it,'' Tyson Gay said. There have been four charged in connection with her death. Trinity was shot outside a Lexington restaurant after witnesses told police that gunfire was exchanged between two vehicles. His sister came downstairs and woke him up. He didn't hear the phone ring in the early morning hours on Oct. ''I think about my daughter every day,'' Gay said as he sat in a hotel lobby after a training session. Or how when he couldn't spell a word, he would turn and ask her. Or how they had the same teacher in high school and the teacher once playfully told Trinity how much better of a student she was than her father. Like how she used to visit him in Florida for spring break or Thanksgiving. ''You try to think about the good times.'' But you try to live with it,'' said Gay, who stumbled at the start and didn't advance out of the first round in the 100 on Thursday night at the U.S. So he keeps sprinting in the memory of his 15-year-old daughter, Trinity, who was shot and killed in October outside a restaurant in Lexington, Kentucky. So painful that when he trains he feels the stress in his back and can't shake it off. It was too painful with his daughter gone. That's why Tyson Gay nearly walked away from racing. She was so fast and would've been a college standout.
(AP) She ran the 100 and 200 meters - just like dad.