BRUSSELS 2011
Friday, 16 September 2011
Blake upstages the world in Brussels - REPORT - Samsung Diamond League, FINAL
Yohan Blake runs to ther second fastest 200m time in history (Gladys Chai van der Laage)
Blake: 19.26! - Samsung Diamond League Final, Brussels
Spectacular conclusion to 2011 Diamond Race in Brussels – Samsung Diamond League, FINAL
Brussels, Belgium – The second of two series finals was played out tonight in spectacular and surprising style at the Belgacom Memorial Van Damme - Samsung Diamond League in Brussels’ King Baudouin stadium.
You would not have bet on Usain Bolt being upstaged by anyone at the final Samsung Diamond League meeting of the season in Brussels, especially after he had succeeded in his ambition of running the fastest 100 metres recorded this year, 9.76, in a race that was outside the night’s Diamond Race events.
But upstaged he was, by the training partner who profited from his 100 metres false start in Daegu to take the World title, Yohan Blake. With Bolt still waving to the crowd and signing autographs on the back straight, Blake won the Van Damme Memorial 200 metres in a startling 19.26sec – the second fastest time ever behind Bolt’s World record of 19.19sec. Faster than Michael Johnson’s landmark 1996 Olympic time of 19.32. Had he produced that performance in the Bird’s Nest Stadium three years ago, he would have been Olympic champion rather than Bolt.
No wonder the senior partner was registering a certain amount of shock as he hugged his smaller compatriot. Blake had spoken on his arrival of wanting to run “the perfect race” here. A lot of athletes say that sort of thing. And it probably wasn’t technically perfect. But it wasn’t far off.
“I knew I could do something crazy,” Blake said. “But to be honest I was surprise when I saw the clock at the finishing line. This was a perfect controlled race. I started slow, and while I’m not a good bend runner I accelerated afterwards.
“Usain stays the best runner, but after tonight I feel I’m capable of breaking the World record over 200 metres. I’m looking forward to competing with Usain next season.”
“Bolt is always motivating me before the race. We call each other ‘the Beast’ – a real big animal that can do anything.”
Despite the final two events on the Diamond League circuit carrying double points, Blake was not in a position to win the Diamond Race Trophy and accompanying $40,000 on offer to 16 athletes on a night when the crowd was also around the 40,000 figure.
A week after the first batch of Trophies had been claimed at the Zürich Samsung Diamond League meeting (8 Sep), the final statistics showed a rapid turnover in that only 11 (7 tonight) of the 32 Diamond Races were won by last season’s victors.
Slowest away!
Interestingly, Blake’s reaction time was 0.269sec, slowest of the field. Had he got away to a sharper start, or perhaps not taken things a little cautiously on the bend, as he said he had afterwards, who knows what time he might have run…
The cash and the Diamond Race trophy for the best season long consistency in the 200m went to Walter Dix of the United States, who also had the satisfaction of producing a personal best of 19.53sec in second place as he pushed Blake to the line. It was be a nice counterpoint to last season, when injury prevented the American from contesting the final when he looked poised to win overall.
Another Jamaican earned a personal best – 21-year-old Nickel Ashmeade, third in 19.91. Jaysuma Saidy Ndure of Norway also got under 20 seconds, recording 19.97 at the end of a classic race.
Pearson succumbs
There was a shock of a less happy kind in the 100m Hurdles, where Sally Pearson appeared on course to add a Diamond Race Trophy to the World gold she so consummately won in Daegu, only to come to grief at the seventh hurdle as she led the field.
By the time the Australian had risen to her feet and walked away with a sad wave to the crowd, the race – and the Diamond Race – had gone to Danielle Carruthers of the United States, who won in 12.65sec ahead of compatriots Yvette Lewis and Kellie Wells, with both clocking the same time of 12.77.
Jeter at the double
Carmelita Jeter emulated Allyson Felix’s achievement of last year as she completed a Diamond Race double, adding the 100m title to the 200m honours she had secured in Zürich the previous week. She had also won the Diamond Race for 100m in 2010.
With an eight point lead and a superior record of victories, Jeter was effectively unassailable in terms of her second-leg effort, but she had to earn it the hard way as she was pushed all the way to the line by the woman she beat to the World 100m title last month, Veronica Campbell-Brown.
Jeter won in 10.78 with the Jamaican recording 10.85. Kelly-Ann Baptiste reprised the Daegu finishing order as she took third place in a season’s best of 10.90, with Shalonda Solomon of the United States also recording a season’s best, 11.08, in fourth place.
Chicherova dominates in Brussels but far too distant for Diamond Trophy
Russia’s World High Jump champion Anna Chicherova had no chance of overtaking Blanka Vlasic in the overall Diamond Race standings, but she finished her season with a winning flourish as the only high jumper to clear 1.99m here, and went on to clear 2.02, then 2.05, before having three decent attempts at a World record of 2.10. It was some end to the season for her.
Chicherova’s fellow Russian Yelena Slesarenko took second place after clearing 1.96, a height that proved too much for Croatia’s former World champion, who finished fifth after clearing 1.93.
This was Vlasic’s second Diamond Race Trophy, she having also won the season long quest in 2010.
Uceny gets back on her feet
The women’s 1500 metres might have had a sub-title – The Fall and Rise of Morgan Uceny. Having seen her World Championship ambitions disappear when she was brought down to the track by the stumbling Kenyan, Helen Obiri, the American had a chance to finish 2011 with a happier memory as she came into this event leading the Diamond Race stakes by a two-point margin from the former World champion Maryam Yusuf Jamal.
Uceny capitalised in style, powering for home from 150 metres out and passing the long-time leader Mariem Alaoui Selsouli of Morocco as she entered the finishing straight before crossing the line in 4:00.06, the fastest time in the world this year.
“Of course this is a sweet revenge for what happened in Daegu,” Uceny said. “I wanted to show I had to be among the best at those worlds. And I did it tonight with a personal best. Next year at the Olympics, one of the medals will be for me!”
Selsouli was second in a personal best of 4:00.77, with Jamal third in 4:01.40.
De Zordo takes Diamond Trophy from under Thorkildsen’s gaze
Andreas Thorkildsen will not look back on 2011 with great satisfaction. Having lost his World title to Matthias De Zordo in Daegu, the Norwegian also saw the German deprive him of the Diamond Race Trophy as he won with a personal best of 88.36m.
The double Olympic champion, who had carried a five points lead into the final competition, did not get into the points as he finished fifth with a best effort of 81.86. Vadims Vasilevskis of Latvia was second with 85.06, and Fatih Avan of Turkey produced a national record of 84.79 to take third place.
“Not even in my wildest dreams did I expect all this at the beginning of the season,” said De Zordo. “I hoped to have a few good battles with Andreas, but he was not in his best shape these last months. I don’t know what’s wrong with Andreas, but still for me he is the best javelin thrower in the world.”