Double-amputee sprinter Oscar Pistorius slowed on the final straight on Wednesday in his first able-bodied race in nearly a year, finishing fourth and well outside the Olympic qualifying time.
The South African finished with a time of 47.78 seconds in the 400m B race at the Milan Notturna meet. The time he needs to qualify for the Olympics is 45.55.
“I’m disappointed with my time,” Pistorius said. “I’ve only had a month and a half to train, but I didn’t expect it to be this bad. I let myself down. I’ve got to be realistic. I’m chasing something that may be unattainable. It’s starting to look impossible.”
Pistorius’ lifetime best is 46.36.
Pistorius only resumed training six weeks ago when a sports arbitration court ruled that he was eligible to run in Beijing.
The court overturned a decision by the IAAF that Pistorius’ carbon fiber prosthetic racing blades gave him an unfair advantage and that he should be banned from the Olympics and any other able-bodied race.
Fiorenzo Moscatelli of Italy won the race in 47.26 seconds on a hot and muggy night at Milan’s historic Arena.
Pistorius led at the final turn, but faded in the last 100m. Afterward, he sat down in disappointment for several minutes on the infield.
“I went out too fast and I didn’t have any energy left at the end,” Pistorius said. “I’ve got to go back and take a look at my tactics. Usually I have a slower start.”
Pistorius’ next qualifying attempt will come at the Golden Gala meet in Rome next Friday.
“Rome will be a better race,” he said.
Pistorius also plans to race in Lucerne, Switzerland on July 16 — and will run a 200m race in Lignano, Italy on July 13 “for fun,” to work on his sprinting.
His most realistic shot to compete in the Beijing Games could be as part of South Africa’s four-man relay, for which six team members are chosen. Pistorius’ manager Peet van Zyl said he might be able to qualify for that with a time of 46.1 or 46.2, depending on how the other runners fare.
Pistorius competed in two major able-bodied races last year. He finished with a time of 46.90 at the Golden Gala in Rome, then was disqualified for running outside his lane two days later in Sheffield, England.
“It’s the first time I’ve raced at this level in nearly a year,” said Pistorius, who was born without fibulas.
Tallon Griekspoor on Friday stunned top seed Alexander Zverev 4-6, 7-6 (7/5), 7-6 (7/4) in the second round at Indian Wells, avenging a devastating loss to the German at Roland Garros last year. Zverev, the world No. 2 who is heading the field of the prestigious ATP Masters event with No. 1 Jannik Sinner serving a three-month drugs ban, is the first Indian Wells men’s top seed to lose his opening match since Andy Murray in 2017. It was a cherished win for Griekspoor, who had lost five straight matches — including four last year — to the German. That included a five-setter
Donovan Mitchell on Wednesday scored 26 points as the Cleveland Cavaliers punched their ticket to the NBA playoffs with a hard-fought 112-107 victory over the Miami Heat. A seesaw battle in Cleveland saw the Heat threaten to end the Cavs’ 11-game unbeaten streak after opening up a seven-point lead late in the fourth quarter, but the Cavs clawed back the deficit in the closing minutes to seal their 12th straight victory and a place in the post-season. The Cavaliers improved to 52-10, maintaining their stranglehold on the Eastern Conference with 20 games of the regular season remaining. Mitchell was one of six Cleveland
Five-time champion Novak Djokovic on Saturday tumbled out of the Indian Wells ATP Masters, falling in his first match to lucky loser Botic van de Zandschulp as two-time defending champion Carlos Alcaraz advanced. “No excuses for a poor performance,” 24-time Grand Slam champion Djokovic said after 37 unforced errors in a 6-2, 3-6, 6-1 defeat. “It doesn’t feel great when you play this way on the court,” he said. “But congratulations to my opponent — just a bad day in the office, I guess, for me.” Djokovic is just the latest in Van de Zandschulp’s string of superstar victims. He
Manchester United on Thursday settled for a 1-1 draw with Real Sociedad in the first leg of their Europa League round-of-16 tie. United led on Joshua Zirkzee’s goal in the 58th minute, but the hosts equalized 12 minutes later after Bruno Fernandes’ hand ball and Mikel Oyarzabal sent Andre Onana the wrong way from the penalty spot. The Europa League could be a way for United to finish the season with a trophy after crashing out of the FA Cup on Sunday. A spot in the quarter-finals is to be on the line at Old Trafford in the second leg on Thursday next