Doha, Qatar - Friday may have been the local rest day, but the
athletes at the Qatar Super IAAF Grand Prix certainly weren't taking part.
There were stadium and meet records galore, an African and two Asian
records/bests, a World Junior record, two Olympic champions beaten,
and a 'local' a whisker away from a World best on 13 May.Kipchoge's win, as Choge follows in with a World Junior record
Pick of the bunch has to be the men's 3000 metres. Last year when
2003 World 5000m victor Eliud Kipchoge of Kenya beat three other
World champions, Saif Saaeed Shaheen (2003 Steeplechase), John
Kibowen (98 & 00 World Cross) and Richard Limo (2001 World 5000m),
it looked like a hard act to follow. But Kipchoge managed it. He led all
the way after the pacemakers dropped out, and came home in 7:28.56.
Yet right behind him was 18-year-old compatriot, World Junior Cross
and 5000m track champion, Augustine Kiprono Choge, in a World
Junior record of 7:28.78. Ben Limo crashed his way back to form in third
place, with 7:29.60. All three were well under Kipchoge's meet record of
7:33.37.
One bemused spectator was former Moroccan superstar Said Aouita,
hosting the local TV coverage for Al Jazeira. Just 20 years ago, Aouita
ran a world record (one of five he held consecutively) of 7.29.45 for this
distance, and he was out on his own.
Defar defies Burika's youthful talent
Choge was only just shy of victory, but if his female counterpart as World
Junior Cross champion, Gelete Burika of Ethiopia had had more tactical
awareness, she might have beaten her two illustrious colleagues,
Meseret Defar and Berhane Adere. But when she had them straining to
keep up, she slacked off the pace so much, she let them back in for
victory, for Olympic champion Defar, in 8:39.75, and second for Adere in
8:39.87, with Burika out-leaned in 8:39.90.
Obikwelu upstages the Americans
The men's 100 metres proved you don't need super fast times to have a
great race. Francis Obikwelu has been a nearly man for a long time,
since he won the 1996 World Junior sprint titles. He only entered the
Olympic 100 metres, when his coach decided he should use it as a
warm-up for the longer sprint. He surprised himself by winning 100
metres silver in Athens. Well last night, in his first race of the outdoor
season, he surprised the two men who won those Olympic sprints. The
Nigerian-born Obikwelu, representing Portugal won in 10.05, ahead of
Olympic 200m champion, Shawn Crawford and Olympic 100m gold
medallist Justin Gatlin, both on 10.14.
Gatlin had had a sore hamstring after his opening win, in 10.15, in
Osaka the previous week, but he wasn't blaming that.
"I got a good start, and there was no problem with the hamstring. Well
done to Francis, he beat me and Shawn fair and square, and I'm not
comlaining. It's only my second race of the season".
Gatlin's partner, Olympic 200 metres silver medallist, Allyson Felix
looked as if she might go the same way, lingering behind Christine
Amertil of the Bahamas until the American smoothly changed gear in the
last 50 metres, and ended up the most unstrained winner of the night, in
22.78.
More meet records fall
Reese Hoffa, Aki Parviainen and Tatyana Lebedeva lit up the field.
Hoffa of the USA killed the Shot competition with his first put of 21.29
metres, and underlined that the US putters will again be the men to beat
in Helsinki this summer. But there'll be high, or even long hopes of
Parviainen of Finland bringing a World Javelin Throw title back home,
as Tiina Lillak did in the inaugural World Champs back in 1983.
Parviainen too won on his first attempt, 83.79 metres. India's first World
Championship medallist, Anju Bobby George (third in Paris '03) looked
briefly as if she might repeat her victory of last year in Doha. But
Lebedeva of Russia was only measuring her approach with a first round
foul, and on her second attempt, she leapt out to win the women's Long
Jump, with 6.70 metres. They were all meet records.
Just short of World best
Qatari Shaheen, formerly Stephen Cherono of Kenya, avoided
Kipchoge this year, and had a crack at the World 2000 metres
Steeplechase best of 5:14.43, set by Seoul Olympic champion (3000m
variety), Julius Kariuki of Kenya in 1990. When Shaheen learns to
hurdle, he'll do it, which begs the question as to what he'll do with his
3000m Steeplechase record when he stops stuttering at every barrier.
He clocked 5.14.53 last night, and it was only an Asian best. Former
colleague, Wesley Kiprotich of Kenya stayed close enough to keep
Shaheen off balance, and the young Kenyan ended on 5.16.46, to go
fourth all-time.
But the Gulf states' policy of buying (mostly) Kenyan talent is beginning
to pay off elsewhere. Dahan Bashir of Qatar finished second in the 1500
metres in 3.31.04 (national record), and colleague Jamal Salem finished
fourth in the 3000 metres (Area record). Mohamed Al-Salhi of Saudi
Arabia won a competitive 800 metres in 1.45.64 (national record), while
a visitor from across the Arabian Gulf, Nagemendin-Ali Abubakr of
Sudan won a tight 400 metres race - they both fell over the line -
against Tyree Washington of the USA, in 45.52.
African record
The women's 3000 metres Steeplechase might have been a curious
choice to end the programme, but Docus Inzikuru made it pay, both for
herself and the organisers. The Ugandan ran away from Salome
Chepchumba on the last lap, to break her own African record, and set
another stadium record, as well as make her a long distance favourite
for a medal when the event is contested for the first time in the World
Championships in Helsinki. Her winning time was 9:28.50.
Olijars beats Trammell in 110mH, as Kipchirchir wins 1500 in 3:30
Former hurdler and now coach, Ludmila Olijar spent most of the day on
the computer, and her research (whatever it was) paid off, because her
son, Stanislav Olijars of Latvia had probably the best win of his career,
passing Olympic silver medallist, Terrence Trammell of the USA 10
metres from the line, and clocking 13.11 to win the High Hurdles. In the
women's 100m Hurdles, Jamaica's Delloreen Ennis-London took the
win (12.77), while the Discus Throw was taken by Russia's Natalya
Sadova with 65.10m.
In the men's 1500m, Kenya's Daniel Kipchirchir Komen announced his
intent by getting in the lee of the pacemakers from the start. He took over
when they dropped out, and deserved his front-running victory in an
exciting finish, in 3:30.77. Former Olympic champion, Noah Ngeny could
only finish 12th, and the look on his face summed up the impact of the
meeting on the spectators. Whew!