Ethiopia’s Hagos Gebrhiwet on Thursday won the men’s 5,000m in the second-fastest time in history with a sizzling final lap in the Oslo Diamond League meet at Bislett Stadium.
The 30-year-old, whose last major global medal on the track was bronze at the 2016 Rio Olympics, passed team mate Yomif Kejelcha with one lap remaining to cross in 12 minutes 36.73 seconds, clocking a blistering 54.99 seconds on his final lap.
“The time I achieved is very nice,” said Gebrhiwet, who narrowly missed Ugandan Joshua Cheptegei’s world record of 12:35.36.
Photo: AP
“The conditions, the crowd was great and it was a very fast race, not easy for me but it was going very well. The race had some very nice guys running — my friend Kejelcha is a very good guy. I train alone and we did our own race but we are the same country so we are both happy,” Gebrhiwet said.
Akani Simbine of South Africa sprinted to victory in the men’s 100m in 9.94 seconds, just off the season’s fastest time of 9.93 set by the US’ Christian Miller and Kendal Williams.
Japan’s Abdul Hakim Sani Brown was second in 9.99 while Cameroon’s Emmanuel Eseme ran 10.01 for third.
Photo: AFP
Olympic champion Lamont Marcell Jacobs was fourth in 10.03, while Britain’s Jeremiah Azu, who cracked the 10-second barrier for the first time in his career five days earlier, had an injury when leading mid-race and limped to the finish line.
The US’ Brittany Brown won the women’s 200m, clocking 22.32 out of lane 8, while world champion Shericka Jackson’s early-season struggles continued.
Jamaica’s Jackson, the second-fastest woman ever over the distance, finished fifth in 22.97, well off the 21.41 she clocked last season and slightly slower than her season-opener two weeks ago.
Britain’s Matthew Hudson-Smith won the men’s 400m in 44.07 — second-fastest in the world this season — to break his own European record.
“The time didn’t matter in a way as I care about victories rather than times and preparing for the Olympics,” he said ahead of the Paris Games starting on July 26.
“At the end of the day times are temporary but medals are forever. I really want to come away from Paris with a medal,” added Hudson-Smith, who ran with his race bib upside down.
“I did not even realize my number was upside down tonight — maybe that will be my lucky charm going forward,” he said.
Georgia Griffith surged into the lead with 100m to go to win the women’s 3,000m, shaving a huge 13 seconds off her previous best time to cross in an Australian record 8:24.20.
“I’m quite new to 3000, I do a lot of 1500s so I usually die in the latter parts but today I kicked really well and finished strong,” Griffith said. “I got lucky today. I really like this race but the 1500 is my main event.”
The qualifying round of the World Baseball Classic (WBC) is to be held at the Taipei Dome between Feb. 21 and 25, Major League Baseball (MLB) announced today. Taiwan’s group also includes Spain, Nicaragua and South Africa, with two of the four teams advancing onto the 2026 WBC. Taiwan, currently ranked second in the world in the World Baseball Softball Confederation rankings, are favorites to come out of the group, the MLB said in an article announcing the matchups. Last year, Taiwan finished in a five-way tie in their group with two wins and two losses, but finished last on tiebreakers after giving
North Korea’s FIFA Under-17 Women’s World Cup-winning team on Saturday received a heroes’ welcome back in the capital, Pyongyang, with hundreds of people on the streets to celebrate their success. They had defeated Spain on penalties after a 1-1 draw in the U17 World Cup final in the Dominican Republic on Nov. 3. It was the second global title in two months for secretive North Korea — largely closed off to the outside world; they also lifted the FIFA U20 Women’s World Cup in September. Officials and players’ families gathered at Pyongyang International Airport to wave flowers and North Korea flags as the
For King Faisal, a 20-year-old winger from Ghana, the invitation to move to Brazil to play soccer “was a dream.” “I believed when I came here, it would help me change the life of my family and many other people,” he said in Sao Paulo. For the past year and a half, he has been playing on the under-20s squad for Sao Paulo FC, one of South America’s most prominent clubs. He and a small number of other Africans are tearing across pitches in a country known as the biggest producer and exporter of soccer stars in the world, from Pele to Neymar. For
Coco Gauff of the US on Friday defeated top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka 7-6 (7/4), 6-3 to set up a showdown with Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen in the final of the WTA Finals, while in the doubles, Taiwan’s Chan Hao-ching was eliminated. Gauff generated six break points to Belarusian Sabalenka’s four and built on early momentum in the opening set’s tiebreak that she carried through to the second set. She is the youngest player at 20 to make the final at the WTA Finals since Denmark’s Caroline Wozniacki in 2010. Zheng earlier defeated Wimbledon champion Barbora Krejcikova of the Czech Republic 6-3, 7-5 to book