100m Paralympic track thriller as Streng unseats Peacock

Published August 31, 2021
Germany's Felix Streng (C) celebrates his victory in the men's 100m (T64) athletics final during the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on August 30. — AFP
Germany's Felix Streng (C) celebrates his victory in the men's 100m (T64) athletics final during the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in Tokyo on August 30. — AFP
TOKYO: Athletes compete in the men’s 100m backstroke S7 final of the Paralympic Games at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre on Monday.—AFP
TOKYO: Athletes compete in the men’s 100m backstroke S7 final of the Paralympic Games at the Tokyo Aquatics Centre on Monday.—AFP

TOKYO: German sprinter Felix Streng stormed his way to Paralympic gold in the T64 100m in Tokyo on Monday, dethroning British rival Jonnie Peacock who ended up sharing the bronze after a photo finish.

The track thriller saw Streng finish in 10.76 seconds, short of the Paralympic record he set just a day earlier in heats, but ahead of Costa Rica’s Sherman Isidro Guity Guity, who took silver.

After several tense minutes, the decision came back: a shared bronze, with both Peacock and Germany’s Johannes Flores coming in at precisely 10.78 seconds.

The pair beamed as they received their flags to join the other medallists.

The race was one of the last on the sixth day of competition in Tokyo, with records again tumbling from the track to the pool.

At Tokyo’s Aquatics Centre, 16-year-old Jiang Yuyan won her first Paralympic gold in the S6 50m butterfly final, after smashing her own world record in the heats.

Jiang was nearly killed when she was run over by a truck as a three-year-old, but by 14 she was breaking world records and had earned the nickname “Flying Fish”.

She is the youngest member of China’s Paralympic team, which continues to top the medal table -- as it has at every Games since Athens 2004.

Earlier on Monday, International Paralympic Committee chief Andrew Parsons paid tribute to two Afghan athletes who escaped from Kabul after the country’s fall to the Taliban this month.

Zakia Khudadadi and Hossain Rasouli arrived in Tokyo over the weekend after a complex international effort that saw them evacuated to France where they rested and trained before flying to Japan.

Parsons said Monday that receiving the pair in Tokyo was “a moment I will remember for the rest of my life”.

Sprinter Rasouli will take part in the men’s T47 long jump on Tuesday having arrived too late for his favoured T47 100m.

Khudadadi will compete in the women’s -49kg K44 taekwondo on Thursday.

Monday also saw the medal ceremony for the winners of the women’s swimming 4x100m -- 34 points, which was delayed from Sunday after the US team lodged a protest over their disqualification.

The team thought they had come away with the silver, but the second spot was instead handed to Australia after judges disqualified the US side for an illegal changeover.

Their protest was denied by a referee and an appeal to a jury was also rejected.

Also stepping onto the podium on Monday was Francisca Mardones Sepulveda, who became the first Chilean woman ever to win a Paralympic medal in any sport.

The 43-year-old shot putter won the F54 category and broke her own world record with a throw of 8.33 metres.

The Chilean competed at the London and Rio Games in wheelchair tennis, but later switched to athletics, and is competing in shot put, discus and javelin in Tokyo.In the Paralympic village, organisers said on Monday they would resume operation of a self-driving bus service that was suspended after a vehicle hit a visually impaired Japanese judoka.

Published in Dawn, August 31st, 2021

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