Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Wightman’s sights on a golden treble

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SCOTLAND’S Jake Wightman admits his confidence is sky high as he chases a golden treble.

The 28-year-old, who won shock 1500m gold at the World Championsh­ips in Eugene last month, strolled through his Commonweal­th Games heat yesterday.

Wightman clocked three minutes 48.34 seconds to win at Alexander Stadium and comfortabl­y reach tomorrow’s final.

It is the next step on his quest to add the 1500m Commonweal­th title and 800m crown at next month’s European Championsh­ips to his world gold.

It was also the first time he has been announced – by stadium commentato­r, dad and coach Geoff – as the world champion since July’s victory in Oregon. He said: “It was special, it was a confidence boost if you get announced as that. That’s the most it’s sunk in because that is what I was waiting for, to be announced as world champion, and be like ‘yeah I’ve actually done that’.”

Regarding the race, he said: “I felt I should dictate it at some point and I was surprised we went so slow as a second heat as there are guys who should go through as fastest losers who won’t.

“It’s hard to sometimes get motivated as there is a lot more to lose than gain so it’s good to go out there, feel good and qualify comfortabl­y.”

Team-mate Josh Kerr, who won Olympic bronze last year, qualified in three minutes 37.84 seconds, with Scotland’s Neil Gourley progressin­g and England duo Elliot Giles and

Matthew Stonier also through. Elaine Thompson-Herah, who won the 100m title on Wednesday, reached the 200m semi-final in 22.80 seconds. Scotland’s Beth Dobbin also qualified for today’s semis in 23.10 seconds.

European champion Zharnel Hughes ran 20.30 seconds to win his 200m heat, while Adam Gemili won his heat in 20.92 seconds.

Gemili said: “It was an early start so I wanted to expend as little energy as possible. The noise was ridiculous. This absolutely rivals how I felt at London 2012, it was breathtaki­ng.”

Lawrence Okoye took silver in the discus final with a throw of 64.99m as Australia’s Matthew Denny took victory. England’s Andrew Pozzi claimed bronze as Jamaica’s Rasheed Broadbell won the 110m hurdles in 13.08 seconds last night.

 ?? ?? Scotland’s Jake Wightman on his way to qualifying for the 1500m final at the Commonweal­th Games.
Scotland’s Jake Wightman on his way to qualifying for the 1500m final at the Commonweal­th Games.

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