World champion upstaged by Gay

Published September 11, 2005

MONACO, Sept 10: World 200 metres champion Justin Gatlin was relegated to fourth place on the opening day of the two-day world athletics final on Friday after his team-mate Tyson Gay clocked 19.96 seconds into a strong headwind.

Gatlin, the Olympic 100 gold medallist, became only the second man after fellow-American Maurice Greene to win the 100-200 double at last month’s Helsinki world championships.

Gay, who was fourth at the worlds behind team-mates Wallace Spearmon and 2003 world champion John Capel, led Jamaican Christopher Williams and Spearmon across the line on Friday.

There was also an upset in the women’s 5,000 where Ethiopian Tirunesh Dibaba, who is expected to win the women’s athlete of the year award, was beaten into second after a frenzied sprint finish with team mate Meseret Defar, who was second in Helsinki.

Dibaba won the world long and short course cross country titles in France this year before becoming the first woman to win a 5,000-10,000 global double at the world championships.

Olympic 200 champion Veronica Campbell won the women’s 100 by one-hundredth of a second from France’s Christine Arron. Campbell, who took the 100 silver in Helsinki in front of Arron, clocked 10.92. Arron’s time of 10.93 was her season’s best.

Olympic 1,500 silver medallist Bernard Lagat, who was unable to compete in Helsinki while he completes a change of nationality from Kenya to the US, produced a searing final lap to win the men’s 3,000 in seven minutes 38.00 seconds in front of Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge.

Ethiopian-born Maryam Yusuf Jamal, who now competes for Bahrain, started her finishing sprint with 600 metres to go in the women’s 1,500, and held on to win in front of Russia’s world champion Tatyana Tomashova.

Docus Inzikuru, Uganda’s first world champion, raced away from her opponents after one kilometre to win the women’s 3,000 metres steeplechase in 9:21.80. The event was introduced in Helsinki for the first time at a major championship.

The season ended unhappily for American Olympic and world 400 metres champion Jeremy Wariner, who appeared to have his race under control when he slowed in the straight and hobbled across the line in last place clutching his right thigh.

Another American Tyree Washington finished first with Briton Tim Benjamin clocking a personal best of 44.56 to take second place.

Friday’s leading results:

MEN’S:

200 metres: 1. Tyson Gay (US) 19.96; 2. Chris Williams (Jamaica) 20.19; 3. Wallace Spearmon (US) 20.21.

400 metres: 1. Tyree Washington (US) 44.51; 2. Tim Benjamin (Britain) 44.56; 3. Chris Brown (Bahamas) 44.68.

3000 metres: 1. Bernard Lagat (US) 7:38.00; 2. Eliud Kipchoge (Kenya) 7:38.95; 3. Augustine Choge (Kenya) 7:39.99.

3000-metre steeplechase: 1. Paul Koech (Kenya) 8:07.91; 2. Ezekiel Kemboi (Kenya) 8:09.04; 3. Brimin Kipruto (Kenya) 8:09.20.

Pole vault: 1. Brad Walker (US) 5.86 metres; 2. Tim Lobinger (Germany) 5.70; 3 equal. Giuseppe Gibilisco (Italy) 5.60, 3 equal. Igor Pavlov (Russia) 5.60.

Triple jump: 1. Yoandri Betanzos (Cuba) 17.46 metres; 2. Jadel Gregorio (Brazil) 17.32; 3. Walter Davis (US) 17.23.

Discus throw: 1. Virgilijus Alekna (Lithuania) 67.64 metres; 2. Gerd Kanter (Estonia) 66.01; 3. Zoltan Koevago (Hungary) 65.65.

WOMEN’S:

100 metres: 1. Veronica Campbell (Jamaica) 10.92; 2. Christine Arron (France) 10.93; 3. Lauryn Williams (US) 11.04.

1500 metres: 1. Maryam Yusuf Jamal (Bahrain) 3:59.35; 2. Tatyana Tomashova (Russia) 4:00.28; 3. Natalya Yevdokimova (Russia) 4:00.60.

5000 metres: 1. Meseret Defar (Ethiopia) 14:45.87; 2. Tirunesh Dibaba (Ethiopia) 14:46.84; 3. Berhane Adere (Ethiopia) 14:46.91.

400-metre hurdles: 1. Lashinda Demus (US) 53.37; 2. Yuliya Pechonkina (Russia) 53.80; 3. Sandra Glover (US) 54.09.

3000-metre steeplechase: 1. Dorcus Inzikuru (Uganda) 9:21.80; 2. Wioletta Janowska (Poland) 9:25.47; 3. Mardrea Hyman (Jamaica) 9:27.21.

High jump: 1. Kajsa Bergqvist (Sweden) 2.00 metres; 2 equal. Irina Mikhalchenko (Ukraine) 1.93, 2 equal. Vita Palamar (Ukraine) 1.93.

Long jump: 1. Tatyana Kotova (Russia) 6.83 metres; 2. Anju Bobby George (India) 6.75; 3. Grace Upshaw (US) 6.67.

Shot put: 1. Nadezhda Ostapchuk (Belarus) 20.44 metres; 2. Valerie Vili (New Zealand) 19.55; 3. Natalya Khoroneko (Belarus) 18.80.

Javelin throw: 1. Osleidys Menendez (Cuba) 67.24 metres; 2. Steffi Nerius (Germany) 6.35; 3. Sonia Bisset (Cuba) 63.56.—Reuters

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