Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Love it: Husband, wife win silvers in stunning night at track

-

DOHA, Qatar — None of them could believe it.

Not the woman who pulled off the biggest upset of the world championsh­ips.

Not the woman she beat. And certainly not that second-place finisher’s husband — decathlete Maicel Uibo, who walked away with a silver medal that was almost as big a surprise as the one his wife is taking home.

On a warm-and-fuzzy kind of night at the track where nothing went quite as expected, Olympic champion Shaunae Miller-Uibo suffered her first loss in the 400 meters in more than 25 months despite shattering her personal-best time by more than half-a-second. The woman who did it was 21-year-old Salwa Eid Naser of Bahrain, whose time of 48.14 seconds was the fastest since 1985 and the third fastest ever.

When Naser crossed the finish line and saw her time, her jaw dropped in a look of utter amazement — a far cry from Miller-Uibo’s stony glare at the scoreboard: How could she run 48.37 and lose?

“I still can’t believe the time,” Naser said. “When I saw the time, I went completely crazy. I was training so hard but I never expected to run this fast.”

But this was a night for expecting the unexpected.

Uibo, the decathlete, certainly didn’t come out of nowhere, but neither was he at the top of the list of medal candidates.

Since winning the NCAA title competing for Georgia in 2015, he had never captured an internatio­nal decathlon competitio­n. At the last worlds, in 2017, he didn’t finish. At the Olympics in 2016, he finished 24th. He was coming off leg and shoulder injuries that had forced him to miss a big chunk of 201819, and that had turned his javelin throw into a crap shoot.

But midway through the second day of the 10-event endurance test, world record holder Kevin Mayer got bounced after failing to record a mark in the pole vault, while another top contender, Lindon Victor, met a similar fate in the discus throw. Meanwhile, Uibo had been slowly climbing up the standings, from sixth, to fifth, to third, to first.

He had a 19-point lead over the eventual winner, Niklas Kaul, when he lined up for the finale, the 1,500-meter race. Uibo needed to hang within 3 seconds of Kaul to win the gold. But Kaul’s personal best was 10 seconds faster than Uibo’s. Kaul, 21 and the youngest world champion decathlete ever, beat him by 15 seconds.

“I tried to stay with him, but he had more in the tank,” Uibo said. “I had to give that up and try for second.”

A few minutes earlier, Britain’s Katarina Johnson-Thompson completed her victory in the heptathlon; the multi-events were held in conjunctio­n as part of organizers’ plan to move all the action to the nighttime and beat the heat.

In the other final, Gong Lijiao won her second straight world shot put title and Jamaica’s Danniel Thomas-Dodd took silver.

That marked the third field medal in these championsh­ips won by athletes from Usain Bolt’s land of sprints. Who’d have seen that coming?

And speaking of unexpected, how about the bronze medal that landed in the lap of Orlando Ortega.

The Spanish hurdler had been knocked off course in the 110 final the night before by a flailing Jamaican and spent most of the day in bed, thinking about what might have been. The phone rang. Track officials had decided to make him the co-bronze medalist. The ceremony was scheduled for that evening.

“I took a taxi,” Ortega said. “I said, ‘Please drive very fast, I have a medal ceremony.’”

He made it on time.

So did Naser, who looked more like a 100-meter sprinter as she moved into the homestretc­h and built a seven-step cushion over Miller-Uibo, who became famous in her homeland, the Bahamas, when she dove across the finish line to beat Allyson Felix in the final of the 2016 Olympics.

There were no such dramatics this time.

“When I saw the distance between us, I said, in my head, ‘I let her get too far away,’” Miller-Uibo said.

 ?? AP/HASSAN AMMAR ?? Katarina Johnson-Thompson of Great Britain celebrates winning the gold medal in the heptathlon at the World Athletics Championsh­ips in Doha, Qatar, on Friday.
AP/HASSAN AMMAR Katarina Johnson-Thompson of Great Britain celebrates winning the gold medal in the heptathlon at the World Athletics Championsh­ips in Doha, Qatar, on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States