World Championships: Kerley fires warning shot to rivals in 100m
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In-form
American Fred Kerley fired out a warning shot to rivals for the men's world
100m crown with a sensational heat-winning 9.79 seconds in round 1 in Eugene,
Oregon, on Friday.
Kerley,
who set a world lead of 9.76sec when winning the US trials on the same Hayward
Field track o go eighth in the all-time fastest list, had a slick start and
cruised through the line without seeming to break sweat.
If
Kerley underlined his status as favourite for the blue riband event, three
other Americans won their heats to raise the prospect of a third-ever
cleansweep at the world championships.
Marvin
Bracey won his heat in 10.05sec before Trayvon Bromell clocked a rapid 9.89sec,
both sprinters basking in the partisan support.
Then
came the turn of defending champion Christian Coleman, who missed the Tokyo
Olympics after missing three doping tests.
Coleman
eased up well before the line, clocking 10.08sec ahead of Olympic 200m champion
Andre de Grasse of Canada, also a two-time Olympic 100m bronze medallist.
De
Grasse pegged Kerley as a good bet in what he dubbed "a good era for track
and field right now", with the Americans, Jamaicans and others running
fast.
"It’s
going to take something fast to win," the Canadian said.
"Kerley
has no pressure. He’s a 400m runner who dropped down to the 100 and 200, he’s
having fun. A lot of us have been doing it for a long time, it’s natural for
him.
"He
has that 400m strength as well, that’s helping him get that top-end
speed."
But
De Grasse insisted: "It’s anybody’s race. Everyone’s competitive, you never
know who’s going to win."
Not at 100%
Reigning
Olympic champion Marcell Jacobs of Italy, a shock winner in Tokyo who has
struggled with injury this season, advanced on the coattails of Seville.
Jacobs admitted he had struggled.
"I
am not at my 100%," the Italian said.
"Running
10.04 at half capacity of what I can run, I can say my physical shape is fine.
I just need to get my legs ready."
Blake
finished behind Botswana teenage sensation Letsile Tebogo, whose heat-winning
time of 9.94sec was a new under-20 world record.
Japan's
Abdul Hakim Sani Brown won the final heat in 9.98sec ahead of Kenya's Ferdinand
Omanyala, who ran 9.77sec last September to go ninth on the all-time list.
It
was a remarkable result for Omanyala, who only just managed to secure a
last-minute visa to travel to the United States and took to the track only
hours after touching down on US soil.
"It
looks like everybody is talking about me, but I hope it is for a good
reason," Omanyala said. "It's a motivating thing that you can attract
so much attention like that.
"I
just want to focus on the race and not the other things around. The main thing
was get to the semifinals. I'm glad I did."
Omanyala
added: "My body feels heavy now. But even if I did not make it from the
heats, the journey would be worth coming here. I really feel I have something
to offer."
De
Grasse sympathised with the Kenyan's late arrival, but added that battling with
jetlag was part and parcel of the elite one-day circuit.
"It's
very tough," he said of Omanyala's last-gasp show.
"I
do it all the time for Diamond League. That’s part of the sport. And for
championships you usually come five, six days before so you’re fresh."
Saturday
sees the semi-finals scheduled for 0100 GMT, with the final to be run at 0250
GMT.


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