The Scotsman

FULLY COMMITTED

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earlier part of the outdoor season with a stress fracture in her foot and the fact she was facing one of the best women’s 1,500m fields ever assembled.

Muir might look back and regret not putting on a bit more pace in a restrained opening two laps to take the finish out of some of her rivals but, after her injury problems, believes she did everything she possibly could in a race won by Kenyan Olympic champion Faith Kipyegon, with American veteran and former world champion Jenny Simpson taking silver in a breathtaki­ng finish.

“I ran as hard as I could right to the line,” said Muir. “There was nothing I could’ve done about it when they came past me. I gave myself the best chance I could and I just wasn’t strong enough for that last ten metres.

“I covered every move that I could have done but the other girls were just faster on the day and there is nothing I can do about it.

“I knew when I crossed the line that it had just gone. I could tell Caster was a fraction ahead of me but there is nothing I can do about it. I ran as hard as I could and fourth was what I got.”

Muir felt good and was build-

LAURA MUIR ing good form coming into the championsh­ips and refused to use the injury as an excuse but, naturally, couldn’t help wondering if things could have been different if she had a completely injury-free season.

She said: “I was in the pool for two weeks [while injured] and missed sessions for the best part of three weeks so you wonder if that would have made a difference but I had a

BERLIN – SEVEN MEDALS

lot of support from my coach and the British Athletics medical staff so I am very grateful I am able to be here and to compete for a medal. I’m gutted but happy to be here.”

Muir goes again tomorrow in the 5,000m heats, joined by fellow Scots Steph Twell and Eilish Mccolgan, and said: “The 5,000m is a bit unpredicta­ble for me because I am very inexperien­ced in that event. I have only run the event twice – once was four years ago – so I’ll have to see how I feel.

“Hopefully I can run well but it is still a very new event for me. I have got three days to recover so that is plenty of time. I am used to running hard day in day out so that is plenty of time for me.”

GB captain Doyle completed her heat ahead of Muir’s final on Monday and paid a glowing tribute to her fellow Scot.

“Laura is one of those runners that the whole team admires,” said the 400m hurdler. “Everybody says she is one of their favourites because she is so gutsy.

“In the team hotel she is so quiet and inconspicu­ous, almost timid, then you see her on the track and she is a completely different person. She is fierce. A warrior.

“I think she’s brilliant, she’s my absolute favourite and I’ll be proud of her whatever she does.”

While Muir’s fourth place or, for that matter, the same position Scotland’s Callum Hawkins achieved in Sunday’s marathon, cannot be regarded as failures, there is a bit of pressure building on a home team who were set a target of six medals.

As it stands, Mo Farah’s 10,000m gold on the opening night is the solitary success, with several other hopes, including Katarina Johnsontho­mpson in the heptathlon, Andrew Pozzi in the 100m hurdles and Sophie Hitchon in the women’s hammer, falling short.

But the team captain insists there is no panic. “The mood is positive,” said Doyle.

“Obviously Mo set it up on the first night. Although we’ve not got medals, you’ve got people like Callum finishing fourth, Reece [Prescod] making the final of a men’s 100m in his first championsh­ip, Kyle Langford who smashed it to make the 800m final.

“We’re not quite making it on to the podium as yet but that’s the future you’re seeing out there.”

“Iranashard­asicould right to the line. There was nothing I could’ve done when they came past me. I just wasn’t strong enough for that last ten metres”

 ??  ?? 0 Laura Muir goes in the 5,000m heats tomorrow having finished fourth in Monday’s 1,500m final.
0 Laura Muir goes in the 5,000m heats tomorrow having finished fourth in Monday’s 1,500m final.

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