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| Sunette Viljoen © Gallo Images |
South African athletes continued to dominate the 16th African Athletics Championships on another windy day in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Saturday. Three more gold medals by Chris Harmse, Hennie Kotze and
Sunette Viljoen, in the hammer throw, 110m hurdles and javelin
respectively, brought the team's golden haul to nine. South Africa
ended the penultimate day with a tally of 17 medals.
A proud 34-year-old Harmse won his fifth consecutive African title
since 1998 with a new championship record of 77.72 metres and narrowly failed
to achieve the Olympic qualifying distance of 78.50 metres.
"The competition was very special for me. The hammer event got a
special position on the timetable and the encouragement of the
spectators was fantastic. It was also my best of the year," Harmse told
reporters afterwards.
The 110m metres hurdles was only a final and Hennie Kotze (24) did
very well to win his first major gold medal with a time of 13.95 sec.
Two Nigerians athletes occupied second and third places. Samuel Okon
won the silver in 14.08 sec with Nurudeen Salim third in 14.27 while
Janko Kotze finished a close fourth in 14.31 sec.
Sunette Viljoen, former African record holder, won the javelin by
more than three metres after a winning effort measuring 55.17m. She
also won the African gold in 2004. Her teammate and holder of the
African record, Justine Robbeson, did not take part after suffering a
serious ankle injury during a training session on Thursday.
Thuso Mpuang, a 24-year-old Free State University sprinter who
recently surprised by winning the SA Students' 200m title with an
Olympic qualifying mark of 20.57 sec, continued his excellent form on
Saturday when he won both his races and recorded the fastest time in
the semifinals of 20.97 sec. He should stand a very good chance of
winning one of the three medals in Sunday's final. A year ago he was a
virtual unknown in SA athletics.
Similar to conditions at the SA Championships at Stellenbosch in
March, the athletes encountered winds of gale force and genuine fast
times were almost non-existent. In the men's three semifinal races all
the readings measured more than 3.6 m per second from the front against
the athletes.
Obinna Meti of Nigeria, who ran his morning heat in 20.87 sec,
suffered most in the semifinals when he encountered a wind of 5.5m
against him. It restricted him to a time of 21.24 sec. An excellent
final can be anticipated when all the runners will be in the same race.
The other SA sprinters, Corne du Plessis (fourth in his semifinal in
21.24 sec) and Sergio Mullins (22.05 sec in the morning heats) were
eliminated.
Isabel le Roux and Geraldine Pillay, the two women sprinters in the
200 metres, seemed quite comfortable and both advanced to Sunday's final
after becoming automatic qualifiers with second places in their races.
Le Roux, who missed the Olympic entry time by a mere 0.03 sec in March,
will have to do her best in the all important final after she found
conditions almost impossible for a very fast time in her two races. She
had to contend with a wind strength of 2.9m in both races. She
won her heat in the morning round in 23.69 sec and followed it with a
second place in the semi's clocking 23.52 sec. The latter was won by
Damola Osayami (Nigeria) in 23.47 sec.
Pillay, who won the African title in 2004, recorded times of 24.20
(heat) and 23.65 (semi) with the wind-readings just below 2 metres in
both races.
The fastest time of the day was set by Kadiatou Camara of Mali who
set a new national record of 22.87 sec.
The two 1 500m heats were quite pedestrian and the sole South
African, Juan van Deventer, advanced to the final with his time of three minutes
56.56 sec. Johan Cronje, a regular SA representative, did not travel to
Ethiopia because of a stress fracture.
Willem Coertzen, silver medalist in the decathlon, also added a
bronze medal when a clearance of four metres was sufficient to end on the
rostrum.
Triple jumper Tumelo Thagane finished sixth in his event with a jump
of 15.86m.
The SA women's 4 x 400m relay team withdrew from the heats but the
men's team was the fastest qualifier with an impressive 3 min 05.57
sec. The team comprised Pieter Smith, Ofentse Mogawane, Ockert
Cilliers and LJ van Zyl.
The Phalula twins disappointed in the heats of the 800 metres when
both failed to advance to the final. National champion Lebogang
(2:13.03) finished fourth in her heat while Lebo (2:12.14) ran slightly
faster in fifth place. Maria Mutola, Mozambique's superstar, and Agnes
Samaria of Namibia, who does most of her training under coach JP van
der Merwe in Johannesburg, both won their heats.
The Championships end on Sunday when the remaining 15 finals will be
contested.
MEN
110m hurdles
1. Hennie Kotze (RSA) 13.95
2. Samuel Akon (NGR) 14.08
3. Nurudeen Salim (NGR) 14.27
Hammer
1. Chris Harmse (RSA) 77.72m
2. Moustafa Al Gamal (EGY) 69.70
3. Abdel Raouf Ahmed Mohammed (EGY) 68.15
Pole Vault
1. Moucine Chaouri (MAR) 4.80m
2. Larbi Bourada (ALG) 4.50
3. Willem Coertzen (RSA) 4.00
Triple Jump
1. Ndiss Kaba Badji (SEN) 17.07m
2. Hugo Mamba-Schlick (CMR) 16.92
3. Tarik Bouguetaib (MAR) 16.82
WOMEN
10000m
1. Tirunesh Dibaba (ETH) 32:49.08
2. Ejegayehu Dibaba (ETH) 32:50.36
3. Wude Ayalewu (ETH) 32:55.17
Javelin
1. Sunette Viljoen (RSA) 55.17m
2. Lindy Agricole (SEY) 52.92
3. Hanaa Omar (EGY) 52.32
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