The Borneo Post

Warholm cruises as Baker trumps Bromell in Monaco

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MONACO: Norway’s Karsten Warholm cruised to victory in the 400m hurdles at Friday’s Diamond League in Monaco, but No.1 US sprinter Trayvon Bromell was upstaged by compatriot Ronnie Baker in the 100m.

In a stunning night of track and field featuring many of the names who will surely be bothering the podiums at the July 23-Aug 8 Tokyo Olympics, Kenya’s Faith Kipyegon trumped Dutch star Sifan Hassan, Jamaican sprint legend Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce finished third and Venezuela’s Yulimar Rojas went down to a rare defeat in the women’s triple jump despite recording the longest jump.

Just two weeks out from the Tokyo Games, recently-crowned world record holder Warholm cruised to victory in a meeting record of 47.08sec ahead of Brazil’s Alison dos Santos.

It did not threaten the world record of 46.70sec he set in Stockholm last week, but his winning time still goes down as the joint 12th fastest ever run.

“It’s always hard to run a perfect race. I can’t think I can do it every time,” he said of breaking the world record. “It would be really tough for me.

“I feel pressure to perform... the most important thing for me is to win races,” Warholm said, adding he would return home to “get some energy back and reset to perform at the Olympics”.

“Consistenc­y is very important and I am trying to be in the best possible shape and do my thing, that’s what it is all about.”

Shaunae Miller-Uibo of the Bahamas upset Fraser-Pryce in the women’s 200m, streaking home in a winning time of 22.23sec, two-hundredths ahead of Marie-Josee Ta Lou of the Ivory Coast.

Fraser-Pryce, who has been in electric form, rounded out the podium in 22.48sec.

“We are focusing on the 200m at the minute and I want something new,” said Miller-Uibo, the Olympic gold medallist over 400m in Rio in 2016, and also a two-time world 400m silver medallist, with an additional world bronze to her name in the 200m.

“The girls out there are running great times at the minute but there is nothing

I love more than great competitio­n.”

Norwegian middle-distance prodigy Jakob Ingebrigts­en, after two weeks out with a bacterial infection and sore throat, found himself up against it in the men’s 1500m, the 20year-old coming third as world champion Timothy Cheruiyot, who finished a shock fourth in the Kenyan trials so is not an automatic shoo-in for Tokyo, won in a world-leading 3:28.28, just ahead of Spain’s Mohamed Katir.

Ethiopia-born Hassan was also dealt a blow as Kenyan archrival Kipyegon triumphed in the women’s 1500m in a worldleadi­ng time of 3:51.07, the fourth fastest ever run.

Hassan, world champion over 1500 and 10,000m in the 2019 world championsh­ips in Doha, came second in 3:53.60, and will head to Tokyo with the aim of bagging the 5,000-10,000m double.

 ??  ?? Bahamas’ Shaunae Miller-Uibo (second left), Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (second right) and Ivory Coast’s Marie-Josee Ta Lou (right) compete in the women’s 200m. — AFP photo
Bahamas’ Shaunae Miller-Uibo (second left), Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (second right) and Ivory Coast’s Marie-Josee Ta Lou (right) compete in the women’s 200m. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? KARSTEN WARHOLM
KARSTEN WARHOLM

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