Brussels, Belgium - The 30th anniversary of the Memorial Van
Damme takes place this Friday 25 August. Therefore following the most
impressive performance ever by a Belgian team at a European
Championship, the spectators who annually pack to capacity the Stade
Roi Baudouin have more reasons than ever to celebrate at this the
penultimate IAAF Golden League meeting of 2006.Cheers! The toast is 'Shaheen'!
The atmosphere is always electric at the Memorial Van Damme, a
meeting where sport, spectacle and entertainment blend seamlessly.
And celebrations should be even greater should a certain Qatari hit
World record pace. One of the sponsors of Friday's meeting has offered
a free beer to everyone in the stadium should World champion Saif
Saaeed Shaheen manage to improve his own 3000m Steeplechase
World record. The present fastest ever (7:53.63) was set by the Qatari at
this meeting on 3 September 2004. With the last two Olympic champions
Reuben Kosgei and Ezekiel Kemboi in the high quality field we can be
sure of some magic whether this turns out to be a true record bid or it
comes down to a tactical battle.
Shaheen with two 7:56 performances this season, the last occurring in
Zurich a week ago (7:56.54) is in the condition to break the mark if
sensibly paced. But as meeting director Wilfried Meert pointed out early
today there are very few 'rabbits' who have the ability to be of any
assistance after about 3 laps into the race, as the speed required for a
World record is too fast for even those not intending to complete the full
distance, such is the class of Shaheen. Whatever the outcome we are
sure to raise a glass to one of the best steeplechasers in history.
Isinbayeva - seeking World record mode
Another athlete who has tasted World record glory in the Belgian capital
(4.92m - 2004) is Russia's pole vaulting diva Yelena Isinbayeva.
Without attempting a long winded declension of her many illustrious
achievements please take it as read that the Russian, the greatest
women's Pole vaulter in history, albeit a short history, will be wishing to
prove that her new coaching set up is finally going to be beneficial to her
career. A clearance above 5.01m, the World record she set last summer
in Helsinki, is the absolute marker of advance but perhaps we will need
to wait another season before her new approach fits properly with the
2004/2005 World Athlete of the Year's physical development.
Six still in the Jackpot hunt
Away from World record pursuits, the IAAF Golden League Jackpot hunt
is nearing its conclusion. Presently we have six athletes in contention for
a prize of $500,000 - Asafa Powell (JAM - 100m), Jeremy Wariner
(USA - 400m), Sanya Richards (USA - women's 400m), Tirunesh
Dibaba (ETH - women's 5000m), Kenenisa Bekele (ETH - 5000m) and
Irving Saladino (PAN - Long Jump) - a share of which is on offer for
anyone who can achieve five Golden league wins this summer. The first
four names - Powell, Wariner, Richards and Dibaba - also have the
possibility of sharing an ADDITIONAL $500,000 should they complete a
clean sweep of six wins in their events.
Powell capitalising on another 9.77
Powell fluently eased his way to the third 9.77 second run of his 100m
career when equalling his World record in Zurich last Friday, so there is
no doubting his form. The Jamaican's confidence extends to the
financial as well as the competitive. The 23-year-old Commonwealth
Games champion paid 5000euros yesterday, the winning bid in an
auction to secure the original painting upon which this year's Van
Damme Memorial meeting poster is based. Powell whose earnings
have bought him a new house to decorate recently is now buying
original art to furnish it. Who says there isn't money in athletics!
By the way, all monies from the auction and the many other African
focused projects initiated by the Brussels meeting are going to fund
charities on the African continent including the TARA project of King
Immanuel Kauluma Elifas of the Ondonga people in Namibia.
The one lap 'untouchables', and an Ethiopian 'head to head'
Jeremy Wariner and Sanya Richards have been untouchable at the
men's and women's 400m this summer and showed so again in
Switzerland, respectively with 44.20 and 50.18 wins. Both times were
way slower than their best of the year but these two have been racing
and winning week in, week out this summer. 22-year-old Wariner has a
PB this year of 43.62, while the year younger Richards has motored to a
season's best of 49.02.
Tirunesh Dibaba for her part may have been beaten in the African
Championships by Olympic champion Meseret Defar but each time the
two Ethiopians have raced on the one day circuit over 5000m this
summer it has been Dibaba who has produced all the aces in terms of a
final sprint finish. Defar missed Zurich but will race on Friday, and we
are told that both women have promised to make the race fast.
Surprises happen in life but this quartet of Jackpot contenders seem
destined to toe the start line in Berlin at the final IAAF Golden League
meeting of 2006 on Sunday 3 September still in the hunt for a slice of
both $500,000 prizes.
Close call for Saladino
Saladino by contrast had a close call in Zurich in the men's Long
Jump, leaping 8.36m to win by just two centimetres from Saudi Arabia's
Mohamed Salman Al-Khuwalidi. There is no Andrew Howe (competing
in Rieti on Sunday), Italy's European champion, or Dwight Phillips, the
World and Olympic title holder (reported injured butb on the Rieti start
list too?!) on show but the man from Panama will meet Al-Khuwalidi
again, and World Indoor champion Ignisious Gaisah of Ghana
Bekele's determined
Bekele's awesome reputation took a slight hit at the first Golden League
meeting of the summer in Oslo when beaten by Isaac Songok, and
despite the latter's absence from the card here in the Brussels men's
5000m, there are many, Augustine Choge and Eliud Kipchoge
included, who have the ability to press the Ethiopian World record
holder. Bekele also took a shock loss over 5000m to USA's Bernard
Lagat towards the end of last month in London but has since won the
African crown in Mauritius, and held off Songok in Zurich, last week.
With no individual global title at stake this year, Bekele has just one
focus in 2006, a share of the Jackpot, and the World Athlete of the
Year's determination is sure to see him through.
Homecoming heroines
As the introduction noted, the recent European Championships in
Gothenburg, Sweden, were an historic occasion for Belgium. Three
golds were secured thanks to Tia Hellebaut (HJ) and Kim Gevaert
(100m / 200m), and these heroines will be on show on Friday in front of
their home crowd. The roar of the reception they will be given is sure to
match the level of decibels which either the finale band - Chico &
the
Gypsies - or the customary firework display, will muster at the conclusion
of the evening.
Hellebaut has the stiffer competitive test. She faces World champion
Kajsa Bergqvist, who she denied the European crown in front of her own
home faithful in the Ullevi stadium. European silver medallist Venelina
Veneva of Bulgaria is a late addition to the High Jump field.
The entry list shows that Gevaert will not attempt a sprint double on
Friday, preferring the slightly weaker of the two women's sprint fields on
offer. That's not meant as a criticism as if anyone deserves a victorious
home coming it is the Belgian sprint ace. Olympic bronze medallist
Debbie Ferguson should be Gevaert's main opposition in the 200m.
Ferguson is attempting both sprints, and in the 100m she comes across
World champion Lauryn Williams of the USA, and Jamaica's world
season leader Sherone Simpson.
Significant anniversaries
On a night of historic celebrations in which the 100th anniversary of the
formation of the Belgium Olympic Committee will also be marked at the
opening ceremony with 480 Belgian Olympians parading and an
address given by IOC president Jacques Rogge, another piece of
Belgian sporting history will also be acknowledged. On 8 August 1956,
nearly fifty years ago, a Belgian team consisting of Roger Moens, Andre
Ballieux, Alfred Langenus and Emile Leva broke the World record for
the 4x800m. To celebrate the record, there will be another World record
attempt at this event during the 30th Memorial.
The time the Belgians put down half a century ago (7:15.8), was brought
down in 1982 to 7:03.89 by a British team consisting of Peter Elliott,
Gary Cook and the legendary duo Steve Cram and Sebastian Coe. To
beat this mark an average of 1:45 needs to be run by each of the teams'
four runners. A Benelux squad will line-up against an all-stars team, and
foursome's from Kenya, Spain, Qatar, and the United States.
A better paced attempt by Ramzi
One distance up, and the men's individual 1500m promises to be fast,
and World champion Rashid Ramzi of Bahrain after paying the price for
following an excessively fast pace in Rome, has agreed to follow the
hopefully more reliable rhythm of Kenyan Geoffrey Rono. The Bahraini
believes he is capable of the World record. What is certain is that with a
3:29.14 PB set in Rome - though beaten on the night by Daniel
Kipchirchir Komen's winning 3:29.02 - Ramzi possesses the ability to go
faster in a better organized effort but El Guerrouj's 3:26.00 World
record? Now that is a question.
The usually heavily stacked field of talent sets off in the men's
200m...USA's Tyson Gay, Xavier Carter and Wallace Simpson, the
standouts.
A similarly deep line-up of the world's best will go in the women's 800m,
world season leader Janeth Kepkosgei of Kenya, and Cuba's World
champion Zulia Calatayud, fastest of the starting list of 12.
Thorkildsen looking to put the record straight
In the men's Javelin Throw, Norway's Olympic and European champion
Andreas Thorkildsen will hopefully have tried resting a little since Zurich,
when the results of his gold winning efforts and no doubt the post final
celebrations the week before in Gothenburg certainly took their toll. His
defeat last Friday to the man he beat to the European title, Finland's
Tero Pitkamaki, lost him the chance of a share of the Jackpot, and the
Norwegian will want to put the record straight in Brussels.
Another newly crowned European champion also out of sorts last Friday
was Sweden's Susanna Kallur who finished 5th, and so also out of the
Jackpot running, in the women's 100m Hurdles. The World champion
and the winner in Zurich, USA's Michelle Perry will start as favourite.
10k tradition
Beginning the evening is the men's 10,000m. At last year's meeting
Kenenisa Bekele improved his own World record by nearly three
seconds to 26:17.53, the third record at this distance set in the meeting's
history. Without him don't expect such a time on this occasion but with
athletes of the calibre of Boniface Kiprop (26:39.77 last year) and
Sammy Kipketer (26:49.33 - 2002) in the line-up neither is this going to
be a slow tactical affair. High quality 10,000m races are rare on the
circuit these days and most of the 24 man field will be hoping to finish
with a 'PB' next to their time.
SOLD OUT!
The last tickets for this meeting's 47,000 available seats sold on the
morning of 9 August, the day on which Kim Gevaert won the first of her
European golds. The phones have not stopped ringing since..."we
could have sold 10,000 more seats with ease," confirmed Wilfried Meert,
and after Kim and Tia won more gold for Belgium later in the
championships, "the telephones went red hot." Belgium is on an
athletics induced high at the moment, a most appropriate scenario for
the 30th anniversary of the Memorial Van Damme.