Sports

Hughes, Asher-Smith seal double for Britain

August 08, 2018

BERLIN — Zharnel Hughes and Dina Asher-Smith claimed a historic European sprint double for Britain Tuesday as they won the men and women’s 100 meters at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium.

Hughes, allowed to compete for Britain as he was born in Anguilla, a tiny British Overseas Territory in the Caribbean not recognized by the International Olympic Committee, clocked a championship record of 9.95 seconds to edge compatriot Reece Prescod by one-hundredth.

Eight-time Olympic champion Usain Bolt, whose former coach Glen Mills is now working with Hughes, tweeted: “Congrats to my @racerstrack teammate @zharnel_hughes on winning the 100m @EuroAthletics.”

The victory by Hughes came fast on the heels of that by Asher-Smith, who led from gun to tape for a dominant win in 10.85sec.

Asher-Smith’s victory was the first by a British woman in the European 100m since Dorothy Hyman in Belgrade in 1962. And it was the first time Britain had claimed the two blue riband titles at the same Euro championships.

Hughes, 23, ran 9.91sec this year to establish himself as the joint second-fastest British sprinter (with James Dasaolu) after Linford Christie.

Not only trained in Jamaica, Hughes’ running style is very reminiscent of that of Bolt’s. Accelerating from the blocks, he gradually unfolded his towering 1.92m (6ft 4in) frame, his head coming up and body hitting the famed drive phase almost exactly like Bolt.

With only six of the 24 semifinalists having even gone below the 10-sec barrier, Hughes was handed a free card when in-form Jimmy Vicaut pulled out of the final with a hamstring strain, the Frenchman having set a then-record 9.97sec in winning his semifinal to better Portuguese Francis Obikwelu’s 2006 gold medal-winning time of 9.99.

In the field, Wojciech Nowicki beat three-time world champion Pawel Fajdek for a one-two for Poland in the men’s hammer throw.

Nowicki, thrice a bronze medallist in the last three major championships, managed a best of 80.12m, with Fajdek way off with 78.69 and Hungary’s Bence Halasz taking bronze (77.36).

And the strong Polish team also scored a one-two in the men’s shot put to put paid to home hero David Storl’s chances of a fourth successive European title.

Michal Haratyk went out to a best of 21.72m for gold ahead of teammate Konrad Bukowiecki (21.66), Storl content with bronze (21.41).

The men’s 10,000m was claimed by France’s Mourad Amdouni, winning in 28:11.22 in just his second ever race over the distance.

The race was run at 8:20pm local time with temperatures still above 32 degrees Centigrade (90F), forcing organizers to hurriedly set up some water stations.

Somali-born Belgian Bashir Abdi claimed silver, while Ethiopian-born Italian Yemaneberhan Crippa took bronze. Turkey’s two Kenyan-born runners Polat Kemboi Arikan and Ali Kaya, defending gold and silver medalists, dropped out of the race in the stifling conditions.

Amdouni’s victory at least went some way in making up not only for Vicaut’s injury, but also Kevin Mayer’s long jump disaster in the decathlon.

World champion Mayer, touted to be in the shape capable of breaking Ashton Eaton’s world record, recorded three foul jumps in the second of the 10-discipline event to put an abrupt end to his hopes of getting close to the record or adding the European title to his world one.

The first gold medals of the European champs, which run until Sunday, went to Ukraine’s Maryan Zakalnytskyy and Portuguese veteran Ines Henriques, who claimed victories in the men and women’s 50km race walks respectively. — AFP


August 08, 2018
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