Daily Dispatch

Diamond League back with a bang in Monaco

Sport should have been taking centre stage in the glow of the Tokyo Olympics this week

- MITCH PHILLIPS

After a frustratin­g summer of cancellati­ons, exhibition­s and virtual competitio­ns, athletics is finally able to reveal its shop window as the Diamond League swings into belated action with a star-studded field in Monaco on Friday.

The sport should have been taking centre stage in the glow of the Tokyo Olympics this week but that highlight has long been wiped from the 2020 calendar, along with a host of Diamond League events.

So it is no exaggerati­on to describe Friday’s Meeting Herculis as “eagerly awaited ”— and topping a high-class bill in the principali­ty is Noah Lyles in the 200m.

The American faces some quality competitio­n in the shape of Ramil Guliyev and Christophe Lemaitre, while one rival might not be so well known to the wider athletics public but is extremely familiar to Lyles — his younger brother

Josephus.

Josephus is primarily a 400m man and has not raced his big brother in an official race for more than three years.

Beatrice Chepkoech, who broke the women’s 3,000m steeplecha­se world record at Monaco in 2018, and Sifan Hassan, who did the same over a mile last year, face off over 5,000m in a race also featuring world champion Hellen Obiri.

Pole vaulter Mondo Duplantis is another world record holder on duty and, after enjoying a successful summer of somewhat left-field exhibition­s, faces more traditiona­l competitio­n from reigning world and Diamond League champion Sam Kendricks.

There are two high-quality 1,500m races on the programme.

In the women’s event Uganda’s 800m world champion Halimah Nakaayi is up against Olympic champion Faith Kipyegon and Briton Laura Muir.

In the men’s race, world champion Timothy Cheruiyot gets reacquaint­ed with Norway’s Ingebrigts­en brothers.

World champion Karsten Warholm is on duty in the men’s 400m hurdles, while Ivorian Marie-Josee Ta Lou will start favourite in the women’s 100m.

Ahead of the event, the sport’s governing body, World Athletics, has issued a reminder about the recently introduced Rule 5, which puts a sole height limit of 25mm on all shoes worn in track events of 800m and above in distance.

The rule does not prevent a road running shoe from being worn on the track, but a 30mm or 40mm road running shoe cannot be worn for track events because of the 25mm limit.

The rule was introduced after concerns that shoes such as Nike’s Alphafly were giving athletes an unfair technical advantage.

Shoes, of course, will not be the only things undergoing tests, as all athletes will be Covid-19 tested as part of the strict guidelines that have allowed the event to be held with competitor­s travelling in from around the world.

“We have changed everything, from the athletes’ travel and accommodat­ion logistics to the way the competitio­n will be staged and conducted,” meeting director Jean-Pierre Schoebel said.

“We studied everything to ensure we’d provide the maximum security to everyone involved in the meeting.

“We’ve never worked as hard as this year.

“I can’t tell you how difficult the situation has been.”

Kenya’s Conseslus Kipruto, the Olympic and world 3,000m steeplecha­se champion, had been due to run in Monaco until he tested positive for the coronaviru­s without symptoms earlier this week. — Reuters

 ?? Picture: MICHAEL STEELE/GETTY IMAGES ?? The US's Noah Lyles celebrates winning the men’s 200m final at the IAAF World Athletics Championsh­ips in Doha, Qatar, in 2019. Lyles will be in action at the Diamond League which starts in Monaco on Friday.
Picture: MICHAEL STEELE/GETTY IMAGES The US's Noah Lyles celebrates winning the men’s 200m final at the IAAF World Athletics Championsh­ips in Doha, Qatar, in 2019. Lyles will be in action at the Diamond League which starts in Monaco on Friday.

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