20.08.2009
Aussies sweep into finals, Bolt show rolls on
The Australian Flame today swept into three world championship
finals as four athletes featured on a great day of competition at
Berlin Olympic Stadium.
Olympic champion
Steve Hooker, long jumpers
Fabrice Lapierre and
Mitchell
Watt and 5000m runner
Collis Birmingham
all made it through to the deciding rounds on a great day for
Australia.
Usain Bolt, the world’s most recognisable track and field athlete,
again lowered a world mark, this time recording 19.19 for the 200m,
taking 0.11 of a second off his time from the Beijing Olympics last
year.
Watch Usain Bolt's post-race interview here
One jump was all it took for Olympic gold medallist Steve Hooker to
progress to the final of the men's pole vault on Saturday
night.
Suffering an adductor tear last week Hooker, coach Alex Parnov and
the medical team have been working around the clock to get him fit
for competiton but there are no guarantees, despite easily clearing
the bar at 5.65m, that he will line up in the final.
Fifteen men will join Hooker in the final tomorrow night, most
notably the newest inductee to the six-metre club, Renaud
Lavillenie (FRA), Derek Miles (USA), who won the World Athletics
Final last year and former Australian Victor Christiakov, who will
once again represent his native Russia.
Ten vaulters qualified at 5.65m and five at 5.55m, and not one
athlete attempted 5.75m, the automatic qualification mark.
The one-jump qualification suited Hooker’s plans and after his
experience in Osaka, he remained relatively confident that 5.65m
would be enough to get him through.
"I didn't have more than one than one jump in me so I had
to make it a good one," Hooker said.
"I knew straight away that I had to shut it down to give
myself any chance of competing in two days. Hopefully I can, but I
think things have to go well."
He will look to employ a similar strategy for tomorrow night's
final.
"Definitely it's not going to be an option for me to do
any warm-up jumps. I think if I do a warm-up jump and then have to
wait an hour to start competition it's not good for me,"
Hooker said.
So Hooker, as long as he’s fit, is likely to enter the competition
late and hope to make an impact with one or two jumps. It’s going
to be tough but if anyone can do it, it’s the Olympic champ.
Watch Steve Hooker’s post-event interview
here
The men’s pole vault final will be held on Saturday night at 6:15pm
Berlin time (2:15am AEST).
Fabrice Lapierre and Mitchell Watt made the long jump world turn
their attention down under yet again this year, and Australia's
great long jumping tradition is set to continue into Saturday
night’s final.
Both Flame jumpers progressed after landing 8.14m into the pit,
missing the automatic mark by just one centimetre.
Lapierre decided to gamble on the other jumpers not making the
qualifying mark and opted to pass in the second round, but the less
experienced Watt decided he couldn’t take the risk.
Watt hurtled down the runway and recorded a big foul, destroying
the board in the process.
Midway through the final round both boys had donned their Aussie
greens and made their way from the field of play, confident they
had done enough to make the all-important final and they did,
finishing equal fifth.
American Dwight Phillips, who jumped a lazy 8.44m in the opening
round from well back on the board looks impressive for the final,
but Mokoena from South Africa and Panamanian Irving Saladino can
also jump big. With some of the longest jumps in the world this
year, the Australians could also be a threat.
It’s the second time Australia will have two finalists in the
men's long jump, Lapierre and Watt joining
Jai
Taurima and
Shane Hair, who finished
fourth and fifth respectively in Seville in 1999, as dual
finalists.
Gary Honey and
David Culbert are
also former finalists at this level.
Twenty-one year old Watt, who has only recently returned to
athletics after five years out of the sport, was thrilled with the
result.
“I’m pretty happy. I did what I wanted to do, something good in the
first round so I didn’t put too much pressure on myself for the
second and third,” he said.
“It would have been nice to get an auto, but I was pretty confident
that 8.14m would get through going on previous years.”
Deciding he couldn’t risk missing the final by a centimetre Watt
jumped in the second round.
“I was 99 per cent sure it would be enough but there was that one
per cent of me that didn’t want to risk it. If I did happen to get
knocked out and I did pass my last two jumps I would have looked
like a goose,” he said.
Now safely through to the world's top 12, Watt is determined to
go all the way.
“I can do it. I’d say if I do a PB I’d be in the mix for a medal
and that’s definitely the plan,” he said.
Watch Mitchell Watt’s post-event interview
here
Lapierre, the winner of last year’s World Athletics Final and the
Commonwealth Games bronze medallist, was also glad to have gone
through in a single jump.
“I was happy and a little sad,” he said.
“I would have liked to have done the automatic but in the end it
was like an automatic, I didn’t jump again so I’m just ready to go
for the final now.”
Lapierre, who lives and trains in Texas, believes Dwight Phillips
will be the one to beat on Saturday night.
“He looks great but I don’t think 8.44m is going to be enough to
win. You would probably say 8.60m-plus is going to win it,” he
said.
“It’s going to be very close, I think 8.20m is not going to get a
medal. I think you will have to go over 8.30m. For me, I’m just
going to try to get a PB and see where that takes me.”
Lapierre hasn’t jumped for a month and was happy to get one on the
board early, leaving him fresh and confident for the final on
Saturday night.
“I haven’t jumped for a month and I had a little injury in London
but it’s not too bad now, so I’ve got a lot more improvement. My
coach will be happy with that, he knows there is a lot more in my
jump so we’ll just go out to the warm-up track and re-assess what’s
going on but he’s confident I can do something big on
Saturday.”
Watch Fabrice Lapierre’s post event interview
here
The final of the men’s long jump is on Saturday night at 6:05pm
Berlin time (2:05am AEST).
Thanks to some gutsy running and a sleepy second heat, Victorian
Collis Birmingham will line up in the final of the 5000m on Sunday
afternoon. After being unable to finish the 10,000m earlier in the
week, Birmingham was aiming to get on the track and run as hard as
he could to prove he belongs on the world stage.
Sitting in fifth after one lap the Olympic representative knew he
had a big job to be one of the five automatic qualifiers. At 2000m
Birmingham, fresh from a personal best over one mile in London, sat
in ninth and at 4000m was 11th with a split of 10.49.44.
Crossing the line in 10th place in 13.23.48 Birmingham had a
nervous wait for the second heat, all the while hoping the time
would be slow enough for ten qualifiers to come from heat
one.
Like they knew the script the second heat was slow, Kipsiro taking
the honours in 13:02.98 and Birmingham was through by the slightest
of margins - 0.38 of a second - to become the second Australian to
make a world championships 5000m final behind Craig Mottram, who
won bronze behind Limo in 2005.
Birmingham was relieved to make it through.
“I’m really pleased. I came here wanting to do it, so after the
last few days I’ve had I’m very happy to be in the final” he
said.
After pulling out of the 10,000m many questioned his decision to
run both races but Birmingham felt he had proven a lot with
tonight's run.
“I am (happy I ran both), I’m disappointed in not finishing the
10km, pulling out of the first race I’ve ever pulled out of, that’s
the only disappointment I have. I just wish I had have done it
better,” he said.
“I had a bit of extra determination after Monday night’s
performance. (Coach) Nic (Bideau) basically said to me to put
myself in the race and if anyone wants to knock me out of the
final, make them work bloody hard to do it. I think that’s why I’m
so battered and bruised on the legs. I got into a good spot and
didn’t want to let it go. A few guys came around me at the end but
I managed to do the job.”
In Sunday’s final the boy from Ballarat will come up against
distance legend Kenenisa Bekele and Moses Kipsiro in a big
line-up.
“My goal will be to go with the guys for as long as I can, to be
there with Moses and Kenny. When it gets to that point it’s about
digging deep, trying to get every bit out of myself to finish as
high as possible,” Birmingham said.
Watch Collis Birmingham's post-race interview
here
The 5000m final will be held on Sunday afternoon at 4:25pm local
time (00:25 AEST), the final day of competition in Berlin.