Lewis-Francis will take the blame for the baton mistake
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BBC pundit and former 400m champion Michael Johnson said British sprinters had "lost their hunger" after England's latest track failure in Melbourne.
After the 100m relay team crashed out of the heats, Johnson called for a drastic overhaul of the development system saying it "rewarded mediocrity".
"It rewards Britain's best, not world best. These athletes have it before they have done anything at all.
"They have celebrity and sponsorship and things we work hard for in the US."
Johnson's comments came after the quartet of Andrew Turner, Darren Campbell, Marlon Devonish and Mark Lewis-Francis failed to finish because of a baton mix-up.
England had been leading until the final leg when Lewis-Francis failed to take the baton cleanly from Devonish.
Afterwards, an impassioned Campbell admitted criticisms made about the mis-firing sprinters were justified.
Johnson said the mess - which came on the back of 100 & 200m failure - showed British sprinting had finally reached rock bottom.
A frustrated Campbell said: "At the end of the day maybe we all need to 'man up'."
"It's time for us all to step up. Maybe we have ridden a bit on the back of the Olympics, so to be honest this is a reality check for everyone and now there can be no more excuses."
Campbell, who clashed with Johnson at the Olympics after the former 400m champion questioned his performance in Athens, admitted Johnson may be justified in some of his criticisms.
"Maybe Michael Johnson has a point. At the end of the day, this Championship is all messed up. Like he said, would winning this relay have glossed over problems we have got?"
But Campbell also said he felt former gold medallists like Johnson should do more to help young talent.
The mistake between Devonish and Lewis-Francis proved costly
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"It would be nice if Michael Johnson came down to help some of the youngsters develop because I tell you I cannot do this by myself."
Johnson, in the BBC studio again to cover the Commonwealth Games athletics, told viewers: "I'm no coach but I can consult, so I don't have a problem with that.
"I appreciate Darren's statements and you can see the frustration on his face. He's saying there are no more excuses and it's true.
"We keep thinking we have reached the bottom but then we find a new bottom. But I think now we have reached the last bottom possible.
"So when Darren Campbell, the elder statesman of the team who has been criticial of my comments and said I need to be more positive, says 'they're right'...
"What Darren realises is that there are athletes coming up and they have great talent but if they come up through this system it's going to be the same thing."
Johnson said the British athletics system was fundamentally flawed because athletes "lost their hunger" and drastic changes were needed.
Johnson in the BBC studio at the MCG
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"As American athletes we were often envious of the support you get in Britain but at the same time it can hurt you because these athletes have the celebrity status and the sponsorship and all the things we have to work so hard for in America.
"You take these athletes and as much as they've accomplished in the 4x100m relay no-one gets into this sport to be a relay gold medallist.
"They all grew up wanting to be champion and somewhere along the line that was lost. But now they're satisfied with being a relay medallist. So the standard has dropped. Linford Christie never wanted to be a relay gold medallist."