Cape Times

Ruswahl stands out with season’s best on wonky night in Paarl

- Ockert de Villiers

A WONKY stadium clock overshadow­ed the final leg of the Liquid Telecom Grand Prix Series in Paarl yesterday where finding reliable times became a guessing game.

The only result that could not be corrupted by incompeten­t timing people came courtesy of local wunderkind Ruswahl Samaai in the men’s long jump.

Samaai gave his home town a world-class display by launching a season’s best 8.39m on his first attempt.

“I knew I was going to jump it today, I felt it was coming, so for me to jump a season’s best tonight is fantastic,” Samaai said.

“For now, the most important thing is just to stay healthy and improve where I possibly can.”

Finishing second behind Samaai, Cheswell Johnson leapt to a new personal best of 8.12m with Zarck Visser bagging bronze with 7.99m.

Samaai is showing serious form ahead of next month’s Commonweal­th Games in Gold Coast, Australia where he will be looking to improve on the bronze he won four years ago.

He leapt over 8.10 metres with every of his five attempts.

“I’m just glad I got everything in tonight, so everything is consistent which is the most important thing,” Samaai said.

“Consistenc­y is the key to getting to the next dimension so for me to be jumping 8.30, 8.39 and 8.20s just shows something big is coming.”

His jump moved him into second place in the world this year behind Cuba’s rising star Juan Miguel Echevarria.

The men’s 200m produced one of performanc­es of the meeting despite the stadium clock extinguish­ing some of the excitement.

When 21-year-old South African champion Luxolo Adams crossed the line, the clock flashed 19.78 seconds which would have been the second fastest time ever by a South African.

The official time, however, was still an impressive 20.01secs with Adams shaving 0.07s off his previous best he posted at the SA Track and Field Championsh­ips in Pretoria.

It was a battle royale between Adams and 2015 world bronze medallist Anaso Jobodwana.

Adams pipped the former national record-holder at the line with Jobodwana clocking a creditable 20.07.

“I wasn’t expecting this but before the race I knew I was running with Anaso so I had to bring my A-race,” Adams said.

“I think I can do more as time goes by.”

The wind swirled at the Dal Josaphat Stadium in the shadow of the Drakenstei­n Mountain Range in Paarl.

It ultimately did little to aid Caster Semenya in what was billed to be an attempt on Zola Budd’s 34-year-old 1 500m record.

As Semenya lined up for the race, officials were trying to fix the stadium clock with spectators left in the dark whether she was on record-breaking pace.

Dominique Scott-Efurd remained in Semenya’s shadow before the three-time world champion pulled away.

When Semenya crossed the line it was announced she had broken the record, only to be told minutes later that she was more than a second short.

Semenya had posted an official time of 4:02.50 with Scott-Efurd missing out in a personal best, clocking 4:08.61.

“It was a good race, the plan was just to maintain and just try to relax as much as we can,” Semenya said.

“It was all about running a good rhythm, I was not here to break any record.”

Brining the curtain down on the evening, Akani Simbine proved why he is the man to beat in the 100m.

Simbine crossed the line in a time of 10.08 even though the clock showed 9.85.

Simon Magakwe finished second behind him in 10.24, with Henricho Bruinrjies finishing third in 10.27.

 ??  ?? CASTER SEMENYA: ‘I was not here to break any record’
CASTER SEMENYA: ‘I was not here to break any record’

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