Gay mows down Bromell to book World Championships return
Tyson Gay powered past teenaged challenger Trayvon Bromell to win the
US 100m crown in 9.87sec on Friday and book his first trip to the World
Championships since 2009.
Gay, 32 and trying to regain the sport's summit after a one-year
drugs ban, rated the triumph as perhaps the most important of his
career.
"I feel like it was the toughest," he said, noting that rising
talents like Bromell were raising the stakes in US sprinting.
He credited his veteran skills with getting him through the rounds
with enough left to overhaul the 19-year-old Bromell, relegating him to
second in 9.96.
"He got out good, it was just one of those 10-years-of-experience,
dig-down moments -- I had to get him," Gay said. "It felt good though."
Mike Rodgers was third in 9.97 to grab the final berth on offer for
the August 22-30 World Championships in Beijing.
They'll join team-mate Justin Gatlin, who has a bye into the 100m in
Beijing thanks to his 2014 Diamond League title and is focusing this
week on the 200m and a possible double world championships challenge to
Jamaican superstar Usain Bolt.
Gay won 100m, 200m and 4x100m gold at the 2007 World Championships
and took 100m silver behind Bolt at the 2009 Worlds.
He missed the 2011 World Championships after a hip injury forced him
out of trials, and withdrew from the 2013 World Championships in Moscow
as he awaited the verdict in his doping case. "Just being able to come
back from a mistake, show the world that you can make up for the mistake
-- it means a lot," Gay said.
America's women sprinters sent a strong signal in a women's 100m won
by Tori Bowie in 10.81sec. Bowie powered past English Gardner, who
finished second in 10.86 with collegiate standout Jasmine Todd third in
10.92.
The six women under 11 seconds was a first in a US 100m final,
topping the five at the 2013 championships in Des Moines.
"I for sure think we made a statement to the world today," Bowie
said.
Carmelita Jeter, the 2011 world champion and three-time Olympic
medallist, missed out on a Beijing berth, finishing seventh in 11.01.
The final, in a legal wind of 1.2 metres per second, followed a
scintillating semi-final show in which Bowie's wind-aided 10.72sec was
the top qualifying time, ahead of Jeter's 10.76 for second in the same
heat.
Gardner had won her semi-final in 10.79, the fastest time in the
world this year with a legal wind that was matched by Shelly-Ann
Fraser-Pryce at the Jamaican trials in Kingston on Friday.
There was a shocker in the women's 400m semi-finals, as reigning
Olympic champion Sanya Richards-Ross failed to make the final, finishing
fifth in her heat in 50.95sec.
Richards-Ross could still get a 4x400 relay berth for Beijing -- a
chance to add to her tally of five world titles.
But it was a blow for the runner who missed the 2013 Worlds in Moscow
with a foot injury. Francena McCorory led the way into Saturday's final
with a time of 49.85 shaving one-hundredth of a second off her own
world-leading time of 2015. Olympic 200m gold medallist Allyson Felix
made it safely into the final as she attempts to give herself the option
of contesting the 400m in Beijing, where she has a bye into the 200m.
(AFP)
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