Daily Tribune (Philippines)

McLaughlin breaks barrier

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EUGENE (AFP) — American Sydney McLaughlin set the world championsh­ips alight Friday when she obliterate­d her own world record en route to gold in the 400-meter hurdles.

In a consummate display of front-foot running, McLaughlin left a loaded field for dead from the gun, haring through the tape in an astonishin­g 50.68 seconds. It sliced more than half a second off her previous world mark of 51.41 seconds set last month.

“We took the 400m hurdles and made it something you want to watch,” said McLaughlin, adding that she was proud to have once again delivered at a “big-stage race.”

“I knew the pressure was going to be there tonight. The time is absolutely amazing and the sport is getting faster and faster.”

“Just figuring out what barriers can be broken. I only get faster from here.”

Femke Bol of the Netherland­s took silver in 52.27 seconds while defending champion Dalilah Muhammad of the United States took bronze in 53.13.

To put McLaughlin’s staggering performanc­e in perspectiv­e, her time after negotiatin­g 10 hurdles over 400m would have seen her beat two runners in the women’s flat 400m final, raced just minutes beforehand.

That race was won by two-time Olympic champion Shaunae Miller-Uibo of the Bahamas.

Miller-Uibo, who was deprived of gold in Doha in 2019 by Salwa Eid Nasr of Bahrain — since banned from the Tokyo Games and these championsh­ips after three missed doping tests — timed a world lead of 49.11 seconds at Hayward Field.

Marileidy Paulino of the Dominican Republic claimed silver in 49.60sec, with Sada Williams of Barbados taking bronze in a national record of 48.75.

The men’s one-lap final was claimed by American Michael Norman, whose victory made up for a disappoint­ing fifth-placed finish at the Tokyo Olympics.

Norman, who failed to advance from semi-finals in the Doha worlds in 2019 with a thigh injury, clocked a winning time of 44.29sec.

We took the 400m hurdles and made it something you want to watch.

Three-time Olympic medalist and 2011 world champion Kirani James of Grenada claimed silver with 44.68sec, while Briton Matthew Hudson-Smith took bronze (44.66).

World record holder Wayde van Niekerk of South Africa, who set the record of 43.04sec when winning gold at the Rio Olympics, finished fifth in 44.97sec.

Australian Kelsey-Lee Barber retained her javelin title, the current Olympic bronze medallist throwing a best of 66.91 meters.

There was drama in the battle for silver and bronze, however, as American Kara Winger (64.05m) and Japan’s Haruka Kitaguchi (63.27) snatched the resepectiv­e medals with their sixth and final throws.

Sweden’s Mondo Duplantis made first appearance at Hayward Field, easily qualifying for Sunday’s pole vault final.

The US-born world record holder and Olympic champion, seeking to improve on his world silver from Doha, was faultless up to his 5.75 meters qualifying mark.

“I didn’t want to take too many jumps,” said Duplantis, who set a world outdoor record of 6.16m in Stockholm last month. “I just wanted to make it safe to the final.”

“First of all, I want to win. That is the most important thing. If I am able to jump high, then I would jump high. That would be nice but the gold is the most important for me now.”

Olympic champion and home favorite Athing Mu led US teammates Ajee Wilson and Raevyn Rogers into the final of the women’s 800m.

Also making the final are Kenya’s Mary Moraa, Briton Keely Hodgkinson, Jamaica’s Natoya Goule, Ethiopian Diribe Welteji and Slovenia’s Anita Horvat.

The United States safely negotiated the heats of the 4x100m relays.

Christian Coleman, newly-crowned 200m champion Noah Lyles, Elijah Hall and Marvin Bracy breezed around in a world leading 37.87sec.

The world champions in Doha, featuring Coleman and Lyles in that line-up, could only finish sixth in last year’s Tokyo Olympics.

 ?? JIM WATSON/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? ARMAND Duplantis easily makes the pole vault final.
JIM WATSON/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ARMAND Duplantis easily makes the pole vault final.

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