Paris 2009 full report

Friday, 17 July 2009 Bolt beats rain again, 9.79sec into slight head wind in Paris - REPORT - ÅF Golden League

Usain Bolt goes on a victory lap after emphatically winning the men’s 100m in 9.79 (Getty Images)

Paris, France – On a cool, extremely damp night in the Stade de France Usain Bolt defied the rain again to win the 100m in a meeting record of 9.79 sec this evening (17) at the Meeting Areva, the fourth of sixth meetings of the ÅF Golden League 2009.

Bolt braved heavy rain similar to the conditions he faced over 200m in Lausanne on 7 July, to secure a 9.79 win (-0.2m/s) which obliterated Asafa Powell’s meet mark of 9.85sec set here in 2006. Once again this season we found the start of the triple Olympic champion wanting, he was the second slowest away of the nine man field, and while it’s only relative to his unapproachable standards Bolt when he did get into the lead didn’t seem to power away in the same effortless manner we have come to expect.

That impression was partly created by the impressive race put up by Antigua’s Daniel Bailey whose 9.91 in runner’s-up spot was a national record and Yohan Blake, who only 19 years and 203 days, crossed in third in a personal best of 9.93. Only last week in Rome in much more conducive weather conditions for sprinting, the Jamaican teenager had gone under 10sec for the first time (9.96). Impressive!

Back to the pinnacle of the results sheet and whatever the slight reservations we had certainly witnessed another piece of Bolt brilliance, and in tonight’s conditions (18c and driving rain at the time of the 100m) Bolt had every right to “be happy, it was a good race….”

“In these conditions the time is great but it was hard to put everything in place from start to finish.”

“My reaction time is poor and this is something I have to work on in the next weeks before Berlin.”

Four continue confidently towards $1 Million

All four of the athletes in the hunt for the ÅF Golden League Jackpot - Bekele, Stewart, Richards and Isinbayeva - continued their campaigns untroubled this evening, and after next month’s 12th IAAF World Championships in Athletics, Berlin, Germany (15 – 23 Aug) will fight for their fifth win when the ÅF Golden League restarts in Zürich on Friday 28 August.

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Here’s how the four got on this evening…

Bekele dispatches Lagat

Kenenisa Bekele judged his head to head confrontation over 3000m with Bernard Lagat to perfection. The fourth lap of 59.7sec did the damage and destroyed the hopes of his American rival, allowing the Ethiopian to then gradually widen his advantage on the notoriously World 1500m and 5000m champion. With these tactics the Ethiopian, who holds the 5000m and 10,000m Olympic crowns and possesses a mean sprint of his own, never allowed Lagat to position himself for any attack.

With a mist of rain already in the stadium air Bekele hit the bell (6:29) with holding a good 20 metres or more advantage on his principal opponent and brought the race home in 7:28.64. Lagat had given the challenge everything he had, finishing in a personal best of 7:33.15. France’s Mourad Amdouni was third in a European season’s lead of 7:37.50.

Isinbayeva calls it a day at 4.65

The rain that had greeted Bekele’s rebuttal of Lagat produced extremely tricky conditions to curtail the women’s Pole Vault with Yelena Isinbayeva ending her day after just one vault, a clearance at 4.65m which was enough to keep her in the Jackpot hunt. Former World record holder Svetlana Feofanova, who was Isinbayeva’s only surviving opponent at that point with a first time success at the previous height (4.55) abandoned her competition in second place after one failure at 4.65. Anna Rogowska the only other athlete to try 4.65, failing three times, ended third on 4.55.

Richards consolidates

Sanya Richards running a conservative first 200m powered away from the 400m field on the crown of the final bend to take a solid 49.34sec victory. This was a command performance by the Olympic bronze medallist who was running solo for the final straight. It was the 24-year-old’s second fastest outing of the summer behind her 49.23 world lead in Oslo (3 July), who now holds the top five times of this season.

Jamaican Novlene Williams was second (50.39) and Botswana’s African champion Amantle Montsho ran 50.61, her season’s best for third.

Stewart dominant

Kerron Stewart looked majestic in the women’s dash, every inch the double Olympic medallist, and was never really challenged winning in 10.99sec. In current form the Jamaican looks just as likely a gamble for the jackpot as any of the other three challengers for the $1 Million purse.

46,500 fans get what they came for

Aside the presence of Usain Bolt, the crowd of 46,500 had come to the Stade this evening to see home wins for two of France’s World Championship medal hopefuls, Renaud Lavillenie and Mahiedine Mekhissi-Benabbad, and they did not go away disappointed.

New French record holder (6.01m) Lavillenie coped with the rain the best of the male pole vaulters winning with a third time clearance at 5.70m. Only one other of the ten man field, compatriot Damiel Dossevi, managed to even make it over 5.60, such were the increasingly wet, and on the back straight - next to which the pole vault runways ran parallel - windy conditions that prevailed for this and the women’s competition.

Thanks to the same conditions all hope of a European record attempt were put aside in the men’s 3000m Steeplechase, and the intended pursuer of that target France’s Olympic silver medallist Mekhissi-Benabbad was content to bring home the win in 8:13.23, though he was strongly challenged by Kenya’s 2004 Olympic champion Ezekiel Kemboi (8:15.27), and Finland’s European champion Jukka Keskisalo whose 8:15.59 was a PB.

Harper comes from behind; Faulk puts on a show

In the women’s 100m Hurdles, two time World champion Michelle Perry and Olympic champion Dawn Harper, running in lanes 5 and 6 respectively, pulled each other back into contention with early leader Virginia Powell, lane two, who held the edge until around the fourth hurdle. Harper was the strongest of Powell’s pursuers who having sped past, raised her right arm aloft to indicate the win over Perry as they crossed 12.68sec to 12.75, with Powell third, 12.81.

Dexter Faulk might not have made the USA team for the World Championships but he’s still flying on the one-day circuit. The winner in Berlin (14 June) came near his season’s best (13.13, Ostrava 17 June), with a show piece of a hurdles race in which he finished well clear in 13.14 (-0.2m/s).

There were distant PBs from Jamaican Dwight Thomas in second (13.20), who is better known as a flat sprinter, and France’s Garfield Darien (13.39). If his compatriot, the 2005 World champion Ladji Doucouré wants to feature in next month’s World champs in Berlin he’s got to do a lot of work; 13.68 for 8th here.

Vlasic and Thorkildsen surpreme

Croatia’s World champion Blanka Vlasic defeated her fellow reigning global medallists with a 1.99m second time clearance in the women’s High Jump. The joint silver medallists from Osaka, Anna Chicherova of Russia and Italy’s Antonietta Di Martino, were on this occasion separable on count back having cleared 1.97, ending respectively second and third.

In the Javelin Throw, Norway’s Andreas Thorkildsen took his second win in a row over Finland’s Tero Pitkämäki with an 88.03m release that topped two 86m plus efforts from the Finn, the best of which was his opening 86.68m. Well adrift of these two was Latvia’s world season leader Vadims Vasilevskis (82.82m).

Wariner has more to do before Berlin

Jeremy Wariner headed the 400m field but it was hardly the emphatic victory that one would have expected from the reigning World champion who won in 45.28 beating not the strongest of global opposition. Wariner talked yesterday about hitting a little bump in the road in terms of his career last year but the Olympic silver medallist has a lot more road resurfacing to accomplish before he can confidently take on his 2008 nemesis Olympic champion LaShawn Merritt when they meet in Berlin next month.

Wariner’s own words summed it up, “I’m not ready….”

Olympic champion Melaine Walker was always playing catch-up tonight but coming off the final bend of the 400m Hurdles in fourth it looked as if she would power through for the win but Poland’s Anna Jesien running in lane 5, one inside the Jamaican, had her measure and held on to the tape in 54.37 to Walker’s 54.47. It was a season’s best for Walker, as was the 54.72 which took USA’s Tiffany Williams to third.

Olympic silver medallist Ahmed Ismail of the Sudan was the easy winner of the men’s 800m in 1:45.85, while in the women’s event charging down the outside in lane 2 came USA’s Anna Willard whose 1:58.80 PB allowed her to pass Italy’s Elisa Cusma (second in season’s best 1:58.99). The Italian had only moments before got her head in front of Russia’s Oksana Zbrozhek (1:59.13, 3rd) who had led for most of the home straight.

Briton Phillips Idowu wiuth 17.17m (+0.9m/s) won what by comparison to the stature of the start list ended up being an extremely low key men’s Triple Jump.

Chris Turner for the IAAF

If he isn’t ready what about Steffensen? 48.32! From 41-44 sec in to vid it looks like Benjamin stands on the line.

Has Wariner been injured? He ran 44.6x (?) in May at Adidas Classic. Kind of disappeared since then apart from 200m at US champs

Steffensen is in decent shape. In his previous race he clocked 45.65 for 2nd on July 14 in Reims, on July 10 in Rome he clocked 45.28 and before that on June 9 in Thessaloniki 45.94-ish).

So without any knowledge of his circumstance, it may be that he felt some cramping or muscle twinge during warmup and decided to just go out there and try to protect himself by doing some kind of technical tempo effort and hope things might free-up and then he could apply some force. It’s just a guess.

But if you were the Paris meet director, you wouldn’t be thrilled with what you saw. I hope that doesn’t count against him for the future in Paris. On the visual evidence alone, that was just an extended stride-through so I’d be assuming that if it was still cold (and maybe wet) when he was warming up he may have decided discretion was the better part of valour.

Then again, if you were the meet director would you rather have an empty lane. I’m assuming Steffensen would have run it by someone in the Paris organisation; either that or he started to have problems in the actual race and was just trying to survive to fight another day. He seems to be moving forward pretty well with Berlin worlds in mind, so an injury now would be a disaster.

ok, this report was on Athletics Australia website. Steffensen says he had some kind of problem very early in the race…

18.07.2009
Bolt defies the wet and cold conditions as Steffensen misfires
Australian John Steffensen took to the track for his second appearance at the IAAF Golden League this season in the men’s 400m in Paris.

In Rome last week, Steffensen led the field early and perhaps only for lack of racing did he fade in the home stretch to place fourth in 45.28s.

So it was onto Paris, and after a hit-out in Reims on Tuesday (45.65s) expectations were high that Steffensen would finally hit his straps and perhaps get back under 45 seconds for the first time in two years.

The field included American Jeremy Wariner, the two-time World Champion, 2008 Olympic Bronze medallist David Neville, and perennial fourth placer Chris Brown from the Bahamas.

Wariner, as expected, dominated the race but the cold and gusty conditions put to rest any chance of fast times with the American winning in 45.28s, and admitted the “the time is not very good. Maybe because of the conditions, it was chilly and windy.”

Unfortunately for the Australian, some problems in the first few metres effectively ended his race early.

“When I came out of the blocks I stumbled and just didn’t feel right,” reported Steffensen who subsequently reduced his pace and cantered around the lap in 48.32s.

The 2005 World Championship finalist has had his fair share of injuries and mishaps over the last few seasons and did not want a repeat here.

“I am running well and didn’t want to have another hiccup,” said Steffensen who spent much of 2007 and 2008 battling niggling hamstring problems.

Bahamian Chris Brown was second in 45.44s and Frenchman Lesley Djhone third with 45.47s.

It was Jamaican Usain Bolt that everyone had come to see in Paris though. The triple Olympic champion and world record-holder was making his first appearance at the 2009 IAAF Golden League and got a huge reception from the athletics-savvy French crowd.

Flexing his muscles and clearly enjoying a rap-musical intro that relied heavily on his own name, the superstar of the sport was not going to let the weather, now raining, spoil his fun.

Given the less than ideal conditions Bolt exceeded expectations as despite an ordinary start where he gave away one metre to Antiguan Daniel Bailey, by 50m he had swallowed up the field. Running hard through the line he recorded a meet record 9.79s (-0.2m/s wind) and pulled Bailey to a new national record of 9.91s.

“I had a bad start,” said the Jamaican who is looking to claim his first senior world title in Berlin in August.

Staying healthy is Bolt’s priority at this crucial stage of the season and he was pleased to get through the race unscathed.

“I’m just happy I got through it injury free.”

2007 World Champion Sanya Richards continued her dominance of the women’s 400m with her fourth victory in the 2009 Golden League. The win ensures Richard’s hopes of winning the US$1 million jackpot stay alive.

The windy conditions in Paris played havoc with the pole vaulters and 4.65m and 5.70m were enough to win the women’s and men’s competitions respectively.

Russian Yelena Isinbeyeva stayed in the hunt for the golden jackpot with her fourth win. The men’s competition was won by France’s Renaud Lavillenie (5.70m), the man who is threatening the pole vaulting dominance of our Olympic Champion Steve Hooker, inflicting a rare defeat on the Australian at Reims earlier in the week. Australian Paul Burgess cleared 5.30m to place sixth.

Jamaican Kerron Stewart also made it four from four in the women’s 100m (10.99s) as did Kenenisa Bekele in the men’s 3000m/5000m meaning none of the four remaining contenders dropped out of the running for the $1 million dollar prize in Paris. The next Golden League meet will take place on August 28 in Zurich, Switzerland.

The world championships qualifying window for Australian athletes closes on Sunday, July 19 (tomorrow) ahead of the final selector’s meeting on Monday, July 20.

Competing tonight (Saturday) are Madeleine Pape (800m), Brendan Cole (400mH) and Jacinta Boyd (LJ) in Zaragoza, Spain, whilst Scott Martin (SP), Joel Milburn (400m), Ryan Gregson (1500m), Lauren Boden (400mH), Collis Birmingham (5000m), Bridey Delaney (1500m), Shawn Forrest (5000m) and Jana Pittman-Rawlinson (400mH) will line up in Heusden-Zolder, Belgium.

Courtesy of Pat Birgan in Paris