Lyles back on the track as Kerr eyes second world 1,500m title
Noah Lyles (USA), JULY 21, 2022 - Athletics : IAAF World Championships Oregon 2022 Men's 200m Final at Hayward Field, Eugene, Oregon, USA. (Photo by Naoki Nishimura/AFLO SPORT)
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Noah Lyles will
seek to rebound from defeat in the 100 metres by safely negotiating the heats
of the 200m on day five of the world championships on Wednesday, while
Britain's Josh Kerr and Jake Wightman each go for a second 1,500m title.
Katie Moon will
be gunning for a third gold in the women's pole vault in the Tokyo stadium
where she also won Olympic gold in 2021.
Men's 1,500m
A cat was put
among the pigeons in this ultra-competitive event when Norway's 2021 Olympic
champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen failed to make it out of the heats.
Ingebrigtsen
sustained an Achilles injury after sweeping to a world indoor double in March,
and a first outdoor outing in Tokyo proved too much.
Then Olympic
champion Cole Hocker was disqualified in the semi-finals on Monday for
'jostling' as the American barged his way through a gaggle of runners in the
home straight. His appeal was rejected.
The defending
champion is Kerr, who along with British teammate Wightman deprived
Ingebrigtsen of golds at the last two world championships.
"I am
coming here as someone who''s done it before and I am coming to do it
again," said 27-year-old Kerr.
Despite the
high-profile athletes missing, competition will be tough, with a third Scot in
the shape of Neil Gourlay and the likes of in-form Dutchman Niels Laros,
Kenyans Timothy and Reynold Cheruiyot, Spain's Adrien Ben and Portugal's Isaac
Nader all in the mix.
American Katie
Moon, the two-time defending world champion and Olympic gold medallist in Tokyo
in 2021, will be joined by 13 other athletes in the final of the women's pole
vault.
They all cleared
4.60m in qualification and Moon will be accompanied in Wednesday's final by
teammates Sandi Morris and Hana Moll.
"I am here
for revenge because at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 I broke a pole in
qualification and got injured, so I've already started better than last time I
was here," said Morris, a two-time world indoor champion who has won three
world outdoor silvers.
One notable
absentee, however, will be former world indoor champion Molly Caudery after the
Briton sustained an ankle injury in warm-up that forced her to withdraw from
the event.
Reigning Olympic
champion Nina Kennedy of Australia did not travel to Tokyo, having pulled out
with a strained leg muscle following hamstring surgery.
Noah Lyles will
begin his bid for a fourth consecutive world 200m title when he takes to the
track at the National Stadium.
In the 100m, won
by Oblique Seville from Kishane Thompson in a Jamaican 1-2 on Sunday, was
"not the day to get the gold", Lyles said. The Olympic 100m champion
had to settle for bronze.
"The focus
is now on 200 metres, that's my bread and butter," he said.
The women's
Olympic 100m champion Julien Alfred, who had to settle for an unhappy third
place in the women's world 100m, has pulled out of the 200m because of a
hamstring strain.
"The
decision was made to prioritise Julien's health and long-term career," the
Saint Lucia Athletics Association said in a statement.
Alfred was no
match in the short sprint for Melissa Jefferson-Wooden, who scorched to victory
in 10.61sec.
And the in-form
American should be in the mix for a tilt at a sprint double.
"Coming out
with the gold medal and a championship record, it's a great start to my second
world championships," Jefferson-Wooden said after her 100m victory.
"I am
excited about the 200 metres now."


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