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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Bolt holds on to win 100 metres, Niekerk breaks 300m record

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OSTRAVA: Usain Bolt overcame a slow start to win the 100 metres at the Ostrava Golden Spike meeting on Wednesday as he gears up for a final world championships in London this summer. In his second 100m outing of his final season, the Jamaican was slow out of the blocks but jumped ahead before the halfway point to finish in a time of 10.06 seconds, just edging Yunier Perez of Cuba, who ran a personal best 10.09 seconds. Bolt, who has eight Olympic golds and 13 world championship medals, will retire after August’s world championships.


The 30-year-old said he was not happy about clocking over 10 seconds for the second straight race, although he remained confident about the remainder of the season.


“I am not happy with the time but I am just getting to my running,” he told the sellout crowd after his ninth and final appearance at the meet in the eastern Czech industrial city.


“I have some training to do... But I will be fine.”


Bolt has become a regular at the Ostrava meet and his fans showed their appreciation at the end of the night, holding up placards to form the Jamaican flag as Tina Turner’s “Simply the Best” played in the stadium.


“The biggest thing is always the crowd... That is why I keep coming back here. You guys are wonderful. Thanks for everything,” Bolt said. He later told reporters his focus was on staying healthy, including taking care of his back as he gets older. ‘‘But I did not get injured, that is key,” he was quoted as saying by Czech news website idnes.cz.


With Bolt moving closer to retirement, a number of athletes could be set to emerge from his shadow.


Among them is South African Wayde van Niekerk, who broke the 300m world record earlier in the evening, rubbing Michael Johnson out of the record books for the second time in less than a year.

The 24-year-old, who beat Johnson’s 400m best at last summer’s Rio Olympics, recorded a time of 30.81 seconds in the rarely-run 300m, bettering the American’s previous mark of 30.85 seconds set in 2000.


Van Niekerk’s time also beat the Ostrava meeting record set by Bolt in 2010.


“I have been improving in each and every one of my events so it is a great step for the year and I am feeling quite confident for the rest of the year,” the sprinter, who is expected to run the 200m and 400m at the world championships, told Czech Television.


“I was ready to dig deep and just get used to the feeling of the longer events. I am pleased with today.”


Britain’s Mo Farah held on to beat Mathew Kimeli of Kenya in the 10,000m with a time of 27 minutes 12.09 seconds.


Britain’s Mo Farah marked his last circuit outing over 10,000m with victory in 27:12.09.


Since winning silver over 10,000 at the 2011 world champs in Daegu, Farah is on an unbroken streak of nine global final wins (the 5000m in 2011, and the double at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics and the 2013 and 2015 worlds).But he will retire from the track to focus on road racing after the world champs on home soil in August.


The 34-year-old held off Kenyan Mathew Kimeli for a smart win just 4sec off Abadi Hadis’ world leading mark.


“It was my last 10km race and I enjoyed it,” said Farah. ‘‘I honestly hoped I could run a bit faster but the wind slowed me down even though we ran quite a fast pace from the beginning.”


There was, however, no joy for David Rudisha, double world and Olympic champion and world record holder in the 800m, as he aimed to break the meet record for the 1000m, another little-run distance.


The Kenyan was beaten into fourth as compatriot Nicholas Kipkoech held off local hopes Jakub Holusa and Filip Sasinek to win in 2:18.51.


Olympic champion Conseslus Kipruto’s bid for victory in the men’s 3000m steeplechase floundered with a fourth place finish behind fellow Kenyan Benjamin Kigen, winner in 8:11.54.


American Christian Taylor claimed victory in the triple jump with a best of 17.57 metres, while Anzhelika Sidorova, the Russian who won European gold in 2014 but is now competing as an independent in the wake of the doping scandal that has rocked the country, romped to victory in the women’s pole vault.


Sidorova managed a best of 4.70m, beating out Alysha Newman of Canada, but bombing three times at what would have been a season best of 4.80. — Reuters


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