The Phnom Penh Post

Hassan leads round of golden doubles

- Pirate Irwin

SIFAN Hassan made lig ht of the doping ban handed to her coach Alberto Sala zar to complete an historic 1,500/10,000 metres double at the World Athletics Championsh­ips on Saturday as a host of stars celebrated golden repeat performanc­es.

Hassan destroyed the 1,500 metres championsh­ip record – which had stood for 16 years – in what she admitted had been a “tough week” due to Salazar’s four-year ban being announced in midweek.

The 26-year-old Ethiopia-born Dutch athlete ripped off her name plate and took off on a barefoot victory lap, brandishin­g the Netherland­s flag.

“I did not discuss a strategy as I had no one to discuss it with,” said Hassan.

“It was a very tough week and had a lot of things in my head but I have a good manager and he really supported me.

She added: “I show the world I am a clean athlete.”

Both Hellen Obiri of Kenya and Venezuela’s Yulimar Rojas retained their women’s 5,000m and triple jump titles respective­ly.

Rojas said the parlous state of her country had been her motivation.

Venezuela is suffering from a punishing economic crisis and a political standoff between President Nicolas Maduro’s socialist government and the National Assembly led by opposition leader Juan Guaido.

“I think what happens in my countr y is why I want to make it proud and inspire t he whole countr y and t he next generation,” said t he 23-year-old.

Joe Kovacs of the US added a second shot put title – having won in 2015 – winning in a thriller with his last throw of 22.91 metres in front of Ashley his wife, who is also his coach.

All three medallists – Olympic champion Ryan Crouser and 2017 champion Tomas Walsh taking silver and bronze respective­ly – bettered the 32-yearold championsh­ip record of Werner Gunther.

“These guys probably thought I could only throw angry but it is the first time I threw with a smile on my face,” said Kovacs, paying tribute to his wife and the change in his mentality since getting married.

‘Punch something’

By contrast American Justin Gatlin and Jamaican sprint legend ShellyAnn Fraser-Pryce are old hands at the championsh­ips and both celebrated 4x100m relay gold.

Astonishin­gly two-time 100m men’s world champion Gatlin – also 200m world champion in 2005 – has had to wait until he was 37 to secure one.

“Gold means so much to me, probably a lot more than some I have won individual­ly. It has eluded me throughout my career from college onwards,” said Gatlin.

“I ta ke my hat off to my teammates. They broke that curse tonight of the USA dropping the baton and I rea lly appreciate them giv ing me the gif t today.”

Fraser-Pryce added the relay title – her fourth in the event – to the 100m individual gold and her ninth overall in the history of the championsh­ips.

The 32-year-old was full of praise for her trio of less experience­d team-mates.

“It is a pleasure to be amongst the younger athletes and seeing them come out and winning speaks volumes for the team,” said Fraser-Pryce.

The men’s marathon saw Lelisa Desisa triumph and end an 18 year hiatus for Ethiopia – Gezahegne Abera had taken gold in Edmonton in 2001 – in a race that featured none of the carnage the women had experience­d a week ago.

Sunday’s climax to the championsh­ip will be missing several world and Olympic champions after they failed to come through qualifying.

Brianna McNeal did not even make it over the first hurdle as the 2016 Olympic 100 metres hurdler was called for a false start and left the track in tears.

Germany’s javelin Olympic champion Thomas Rohler also departed tearfully having fallen short of the top 12 who qualified for the final.

American long jump great Brittney Reese meanwhile was left kicking herself after failing to qualify for Sunday’s final.

“I just need to go punch something, I’ll be okay,” said the 33-year-old quadruple outdoor world champion.

 ?? JEWEL SAMAD/AFP ?? Netherland­s’ Sifan Hassan wins the women’s 1500m final at the 2019 IAAF Athletics World Championsh­ips at the Khalifa Internatio­nal stadium in Doha on Saturday.
JEWEL SAMAD/AFP Netherland­s’ Sifan Hassan wins the women’s 1500m final at the 2019 IAAF Athletics World Championsh­ips at the Khalifa Internatio­nal stadium in Doha on Saturday.

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