
Now that he has got past one hurdle, he feels more comfortable and is set for a much improved showing the medal round. “The qualification is always the hardest part. In the final I will just be at ease because I’ve already accomplished what I wanted to do. “I’ve come in here with nothing to lose, everything to gain.” Walcott will definitely have some work to do over the next two days as he will go up against the likes of Czech Republic Vitezslav, who qualified on top, with a personal best throw of 88.34 followed by Norway’s Andreas Thorkildsen (84.47) and Tero Pitkamaki (83-01). Walcotts best throw this season is 82.83, also his personal best. Sprinter Semoy Hackett placed eighth in the women’s 200m final event. Hackett finished in 22.87 seconds, a slower time compared to her run the previous night when she equalled her own national record time of 22.55. As in the night before, Hackett seemed to be in some discomfort after the race. She will have to bounce back quickly though as the 4x100 heats come off today from 3.20 pm (T&T time).
American Allyson Felix, runner-up in Athens and Beijing to Jamaica's Veronica Campbell-Brown, finally got the gold medal, overcoming a sluggish start to lead, coming off the bend and complete a relatively easy win. The 26-year-old clocked a time of 21.88 to finish 0.21 ahead of 100m champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. USA's Carmelita Jeter - silver medallist over 100m - took bronze, with Campbell-Brown fourth and failing in her bid to become the first woman to win a track event for three Olympics in succession. Wayne Davis bowed out in the semifinal round of the Men’s 110m heat after placing sixth in a time of 13.49. Davis remained upbeat despite not progressing, accepting his first Olympics as a learning experience. “It didn’t go as I would have liked. I hit the first hurdle and from there it killed my momentum. I had to go back to scratch. My start was amazing. I was in front of everybody. “Next time what I need to do, is harness that, cut down a little bit more and once I do, it will keep me in the lead in the race,” said Davis. “So that’s something I will be working on next year.”
Davis added that he enjoyed his debut, noting the it was a great opportunity racing against athletes whom he’d watched on film for a number of years. “It’s an eye-opener and I finally saw myself as one of these top guys. This is the biggest stage I could be on and I was like wow, I’m actually here.” This is the end of his season and the 20-year-old is already making plans for the future, recognising that he has work to do if he is to compete at the next Olympics in Rio de Janiero, Brazil in 2016. “I am going to regroup, go back to basic training and get ready for Rio,” shared Davis. Later, American Aries Merritt took gold in the final, running a personal best of 12.92. The final favourite, Jason Richardson, another US athlete, finished with the silver medal in 13.04, and Jamaican Hansle Parchment bagged the bronze with a new national record of 13.12.
By Rachael Thompson-King
Source: www.guardian.co.tt