Young US stars Wallace Spearmon, Xavier Carter and Damu Cherry
were the headliners of the 20th edition of the EAA Spitzenleichtathletik
meeting in Luzern held in cool weather conditions after rain fell during
the afternoon some hours before the start of the meeting. Carter and Spearmon took convincing wins in the men's 100 and the
200 metres respectively with 10.11 and 20.30. Cherry ran an impressive
12.62 in the women's 100m Hurdles.
Joint 200 metres World season leader Wallace Spearmon, the World
silver medallist in Helsinki and US champion in Indianapolis in June
with 19.90, prevailed in the 200 metres in 20.30 over Jamaica's Ainsley
Waugh (20.44) and European Cup winner and European season leader
Christian Malcolm of Great Britain (20.55).
Looking forward to Paris Golden League 400m
The Chicago-born Spearmon missed Rohsaan Griffin's meeting record
by one hundredth of a second in what was his first European outing of
the season.
"It was a good race. I felt strong this evening. Spectators were very
supportive. It was a good race in preparation for the 400 metres at the
Paris Golden League on Saturday. This year I have two goals: running
the 200 metres in 19.7 and the 400 metres in 44.0," said Spearmon.
First professional win for Carter
Twenty-year-old "X-Man" Xavier Carter, four-time NCAA champion in the
100 and 400 metres and 4x100 and 4x400 metres relays, clinched his
first win as a professional athlete in Europe with 10.11, just two
hundredths of a second off his season best set in Sacramento last
month. Ainsley Waugh finished runner-up again in 10.15.
"I felt good. I have no regret for my decision to focus on sprint rather than
American Football. This year I want to get the best of my capabilities. I
will now run the 200 metres in Lausanne and the 400 metres in Rome,"
said Carter.
US sprint hurdles revelation Damu Cherry, US Championships runner-
up in Indianapolis, ran a good 12.62 not far off her 12.58 season best
run in the semi-finals at the US Nationals last month.
US 110 metres hurdler Robbie Hughes, fourth at the Indianapolis US
Nationals, continued his good European tour notching up a narrow win
over compatriot David Oliver (13.36 to 13.38).
A meeting record was broken by Commonwealth Games Pole Vault
champion Kym Howe of Australia who cleared 4.45m in her first attempt.
Dana Ellis of Canada secured second place with
4.35m ahead of World Junior record holder Silke Spiegelburg of
Germany (4.30).
Mutola pulls out of 1500
Maria Mutola was forced to pull out during the 1500 metres race where
she was looking to run a sub-4 minutes time. Ukraine's Natlya Tobias
took advantage by winning in 4:06.07.
Former World junior cross country medallist Dathan Ritzenheim of the
USA was victorious in the men's 5000 metres in 13:25.46. Little-known
Aheza Kiros of Ethiopia edged out USA's Blake Russell and Kim Smith
with 8:51.16 thanks to a kick in the finishing straight. London marathon
winner and Olympic bronze medallist Deena Kastor ran a test finishing
fourth in 8:56.35.
World silver medallist Yoandri Betanzos leapt to a winning 16.99m in
the men's Triple Jump which was enough to defeat Brazilian star Jadel
Gregorio by 3cm. Alexis Copello of Cuba finished third with 16.82m.
Alexander Martinez met the Swiss qualifying standard for the European
Championships in Gothenburg finishing seventh with 16.60m in his
comeback competition after some injury problems.
Tahesia Harrigan of Ghana took a surprising win in the women's 100
metres in 11.25 defeating USA's Brianna Glenn by just three hundredths
of a second.
Andrew Baddeley of Great Britain notched up a convincing win in a
tactical 1500 metres race in 3:40.87 beating Narim Nasser of Qatar
(3:41.35) and Johan Cronje of South Africa (3:41.45).
Other track events winners were South Africa's Paul Gorries in the
men's 400 metres in 45.58, Derrick Williams in the men's 400 metres
Hurdles (48.94), USA's Tiffany Ross in the women's 400 metres Hurdles
in 55.30.
Field events featured wins of Stefan Wenk of Germany in the men's
Javelin Throw (82.37), Martin Scott of Australia in the men's Shot Put
(19.70) and Nicole Forrester of Canada in the women's High Jump
(1.86).