MONACO, (Reuters) – American hurdler Aries Merritt and Nigerian sprinter Blessing Okagbare showed that they are in prime form and real threats to the big-name favourites at the London Olympics with impressive victories in the Monaco Diamond League meeting yesterday.
In the final warmup event before the Games, which begin in seven days, Merritt roared to yet another sub-13 second victory in the 110 metres hurdles while Okagbare chalked up a second succcessive sub-11 second run to beat another clutch of Olympic hopeuls in the women’s 100 metres.
Yelena Isanbeyva, hoping for a third successive Olympic pole vault title in London, had a night to forget, however, as she failed three times at her opening height of 4.70 metres.
The 2012 Olympic 110 hurdles has long been viewed as one of the potential highlights of the athletics programme, based on another showdoen between China’s Liu Xiang and Cuban Dayron Robles, but Merritt’s performances in recent weeks have ensured it will be much more than a two-man show.
After Liu pulled out injured from the final at a cold and wet Crystal Palace a week ago, Merritt won in 12.93 and he ran the same world leading time for the third time in three weeks on Friday.
Fellow-American Jason Richardson was second in 13.07, with Russia’s Sergie Shubenkov edging out another American, Beijing bronze medallist David Oliver, for third.
Okagbare is another looking to gatecrash the party at London and she underlined her potential to become Nigeria’s first Olympic 100 metres medalist with another personal best victory.
Having broken 11 seconds for the first time last week en route to taking the scalps of world champion Carmelita Jetter and Olympic champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce in London she improved again in more favourable conditions to post 10.96.
Tianna Madison, who will also run in London, was second in 10.99 with fellow American Jeneba Tarmoh third in 11.09.
There was a Jamaican victory in the 200 metres but it was not by the man the organisers or the crowd had hoped for following the withdrawal of world record holder Usain Bolt due to a hamstring injury.
Nickel Ashmeade, one of many hugely talented athletes to miss out on London via the cut-throat Jamaican trials where he finished fourth, blasted round the bend and held on just enough to win in 20.02 seconds.
Churandy Martina, now running for the Netherlands, was second in 20.07 and Wallace Spearmon, something of a surprise winner of the US trials, continued his timely improvement to take third in 20.09.