The Star Early Edition

Rudisha hotfoots it to glory

Kenyan takes the 800m world title after backing his kick down the final straight

- REUTERS

KENYA’S Olympic champion David Rudisha put three difficult years behind him and trusted his finishing pace to regain the world 800 metre title at the Bird’s Nest yesterday.

Still not back at his best after the knee injury that cost him his chance to defend the world title in 2013, the 26-year-old kicked for home at the end of the back straight and held on to win gold in one minute 45.84 seconds.

The strain of the last 50 metres was clear on his face as he held off Pole Adam Kszczot and there were no huge smiles from the quietly-spoken world record holder after crossing the line, just a single finger raised to the sky in celebratio­n.

“This is really special for me,” he told reporters. “To be back here and to prove to the world that I can win the World Championsh­ips means a lot.”

After being exposed by faster finishers a few times since his return from the injury, Rudisha raced out to the front and tried to control the pace.

“The race today was more tactical, I was not going for anything fast,” he said. “I know for the last month I have been working on my speed and I was very confident coming here and I knew that if the pace is slow I could win the championsh­ips.”

In the absence of defending champion Mohammed Aman of Ethiopia and London Olympic silver medallist Nijel Amos, who both failed to reach the final, Kszczot won silver in 1.46.08 courtesy of his strong finish.

“It is not gold but I can’t be unhappy with this awesome silver,” said the Pole.

“It is hard to fight against the world record holder but I think he was possible to beat.”

Bosnia and Herzegovin­a’s Amel Tuka, who has slashed more than three seconds off his personal best this year, finished third in 1.46.30 to win a first World Championsh­ip medal for his country.

“It is like a big dream come true,” said Tuka. “I am really proud for my people and I know they will be celebratin­g now.”

The 24-year-old had clocked the fastest 800m of the year in 1.42.51 but the list of the best runs of all time is still topped by the astonishin­g 1.40.91 that Rudisha ran to win the gold medal at the 2012 Olympics.

That was before his injury, however, and Rudisha admitted he had thought at times that he would never regain the devastatin­g pace he displayed that evening in London.

“At some point, when I had the keyhole surgery, I thought maybe, if I come back I won’t be at that top level,” said Rudisha.

Kenyan policeman Nicholas Bett charged down the home straight to win the 400 metre hurdles final. Drawn in the outside lane nine, Bett had to run the race blind, unable to see his rivals until the final stages. He was placed fifth coming off the last bend, but he overtook Russia’s Denis Kudryavtse­v over the final flight of barriers and stormed home in 47.79 seconds.

Kudryavtse­v held on for the silver medal in a Russian record 48.05 with Jeffery Gibson of the Bahamas taking bronze in 48.17.

Ethiopia’s Genzebe Dibaba stormed to victory in the 1500 metres to claim her maiden global outdoor title and add to her family’s impressive collection of medals.

Sister of triple Olympic champion Tirunesh and cousin of twice Olympic champion Derartu Tulu, Dibaba added the outdoor title to the indoor world crown she captured in 2012.

Britain’s Greg Rutherford completed a full-house of major long jump titles yesterday when he added world gold to his Olympic, Commonweal­th and European long jump crowns.

Rutherford had such a bad headache a few hours before the final that he feared he would be unable to compete but by the end of the evening, it was Rutherford’s rivals whose heads were spinning.

The 28-year-old Briton dominated the competitio­n and won with a best effort of 8.41 metres in the fourth round

His task was made easier when American Jeff Henderson crashed out after three rounds.

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? V FOR VICTORY: David Rudisha of Kenya celebrates winning the men’s 800 metre final at the 15th IAAF World Championsh­ips at the National Stadium in Beijing yesterday.
PICTURE: REUTERS V FOR VICTORY: David Rudisha of Kenya celebrates winning the men’s 800 metre final at the 15th IAAF World Championsh­ips at the National Stadium in Beijing yesterday.

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