The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Food poisoning takes Makwala out at worlds

- By Raf Casert

Several athletes have come down with a stomach bug at the world championsh­ips, including medal favorite Isaac Makwala of Botswana.

LONDON » Several athletes have come down with a stomach bug at the world championsh­ips, including medal favorite Isaac Makwala of Botswana.

Makwala pulled out of his 200-meter heat Monday and later said he had food poisoning.

“There have been a number of cases of gastroente­ritis reported by team members residing within one of the official team hotels,” the local organizing committee said in a statement, putting a dampener on the 10-day event. “Those affected have been supported by both team and LOC medical staff.”

Makwala wrote on his Facebook page that other athletes were also hit by the bug.

Makwala was expected to be the main challenger to Wayde van Niekerk in both the 200 and the 400. The 400 final is on Tuesday.

“Let’s hope they will allow me to run my final,” Makwala wrote.

Van Niekerk certainly wasn’t affected by the bug. He easily qualified for the semifinals of the 200 and is the favorite for gold in Usain Bolt’s absence.

Although Van Niekerk has a strong chance for double gold, South African teammate Semenya missed out on one Monday, finishing with bronze in the 1,500 meters.

Semenya had the speed, but left it too late to challenge for the title. She was in 10th place in the 12-woman final going into the last lap and fought back to medal behind Faith Kipyegon of Kenya and Jenny Simpson of the United States.

“A lot cannot go your way in a final, so to come out with a bronze is amazing,” Semenya said.

Semenya, a two-time Olympic champion over 800 meters, now must concentrat­e on her signature event later this week to win another world title, eight years after she won her first at the 2009 Berlin worlds.

Kipyegon took charge in the final straight when the others faltered to give Kenya its second gold and fifth medal overall in the championsh­ips.

In the most stirring final of the night, 21-yearold Yulimar Rojas edged Olympic champion Caterine Ibarguen by two centimeter­s to give Venezuela its first ever world title.

In a seesaw battle, Rojas finally came out on top of her Colombian rival with a mark of 14.91 meters on her penultimat­e attempt, beating the defending champion’s earlier mark of 14.89.

Anyone looking for a feel-good story would gladly have handed the 110-meter hurdles gold medal to Aries Merritt, who had kidney transplant two years ago and was getting back to the form that won him gold in at the 2012 Olympics in the same stadium.

It was not to be.

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