China Daily (Hong Kong)

New mixed relay serves up fun and confusion

-

JAKARTA — Athletes declared the Asian Games’ inaugural mixed 4x400m relay a fun — if chaotic — success on Tuesday, ahead of its planned introducti­on at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

Athletics bosses have introduced the concept — two men and two women on each team, running in whichever order they choose — as they seek ways to freshen up the sport and boost participat­ion.

The eight teams in Jakarta tried out a range of combinatio­ns and strategies, as a bemused crowd struggled to figure out who was winning.

“First you feel like it’s difficult because how can you run with girls?” said Abbas Abbas, of gold-winning Bahrain.

“But it’s very nice especially when you trust your team. It’s the first time I’ve raced with girls!”

The Asian Games race was the format’s debut at a major multi-sports competitio­n, ahead of scheduled appearance­s at next year’s Doha world championsh­ips and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

IOC president Thomas Bach has promised the next Olympics will be “more youthful, more urban and include more women”.

Mixed relay has been trialed at smaller events, including last year’s Nitro Series in Melbourne.

Ultimately the countries that ran in a man-womanwoman-man order did best in Jakarta, with Bahrain and India pulling clear early on.

“We had two amazing girls. Very fast. Very strong. Like men. It was like we ran with four men!” said Abbas’ teammate, Ali Khamis.

China’s Yang Lei, whose team finished fourth, described the event as “chaos” after a gridlock emerged at the final baton handover, while Japan’s Eri Utsunomiya — giggling at the confusion — said it was “fun ... just fun”.

 ?? AP ?? India’s Hima Das hands the baton to teammate Arokiaraji­v during the 4x400m mixed relay final at the Asian Games in Jakarta on Tuesday.
AP India’s Hima Das hands the baton to teammate Arokiaraji­v during the 4x400m mixed relay final at the Asian Games in Jakarta on Tuesday.
 ?? LEE JIN-MAN / AP ?? China’s Xie Wenjun dips to take gold by just five-hundredths of a second ahead of Chinese Taipei’s Chen Kuei-ru in the 110m hurdles final at the Asian Games on Tuesday.
LEE JIN-MAN / AP China’s Xie Wenjun dips to take gold by just five-hundredths of a second ahead of Chinese Taipei’s Chen Kuei-ru in the 110m hurdles final at the Asian Games on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China