Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Simbine isn’t feeling any pressure to light up Paris

- ASHFAK MOHAMED

AKANI SIMBINE produced the run of his life to finish fifth in the 100m final at the Rio Olympics, and he is officially ranked fifth in terms of times this year.

But the 22-year-old South African record- holder will hope to pull off a victory in his penultimat­e event of the season when he lines up in the Paris Diamond League meeting at the Stade de France tonight.

Simbine was the quickest out of the blocks and was in the top three after 50 metres in the blue-riband race at Rio’s Joao Havelange Olympic Stadium on August 14, but the closer he got to the line, the more Usain Bolt started to move past Justin Gatlin.

Bolt ( 9.81) won his third consecutiv­e Olympic 100m title and Gatlin (9.89) was the bridesmaid again, but unfortunat­ely for Simbine, Canadian Andre de Grasse finished strongly to claim the bronze in 9.91. Jamaica’s Yohan Blake claimed fourth place in 9.93.

Simbine had to settle for fifth in 9.94, and while a personal best of 9.89 would’ve equalled Gatlin in second, his coach Werner Prinsloo said that they were both satisfied with the end result.

“We are very happy with the result. Everything worked out well,” Prinsloo said yesterday ahead of the Paris Diamond League, where Simbine will be the only South African in action.

Simbine will line up in Lane 4 tonight ( 9.51pm, SA time) and could be considered the favourite as he is the highest- placed finisher from the Olympics in the field.

But the fastest man in the race from the 2016 season is Frenchman Jimmy Vicaut, who clocked a time of 9.86 on June 7, and he will be determined to prove a point after bombing spectacula­rly in the Olympic final – he came home in seventh position in a poor time of 10.04.

Simbine’s other major threats tonight will be Ivorian Ben Youssef Meite, who was just behind the South African in Rio de Janeiro in a time of 9.96, while 40-year-old Kim Collins of St Kitts and Nevis and American Michael Rodgers will be contenders for victory in Paris.

Prinsloo, though, believes Simbine is not really worried about the result: “The next two races (Paris and Zurich on September 1, which will be his final event of the year) are just to finish off the season.

“He won’t put too much pressure on himself. There is no pressure on him to do anything. He is just going out to run well and to finish off the season without any problems.”

But sometimes when the pressure’s off, athletes relax and post quick times, and South Africans who cheered on Simbine minutes after his good friend Wayde van Niekerk broke the 400m world record in Rio will be hoping for a quick time from our new sprint sensation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa