Bowie's perfect dip snatches 100m gold from Ta Lou
Send a link to a friend
[August 07, 2017]
By Brian Homewood
LONDON (Reuters) - America's Tori Bowie
delivered a finish line masterclass when she timed her dip perfectly
to win the women's 100 metres world championship gold in spectacular
style on Sunday, leaving Ivory Coast's Marie-Josee Ta Lou with a
consolation silver.
The momentum of 26-year-old Bowie' exemplary dip sent her sprawling
onto the track but by the time she recovered enough to look at the
big screen she saw that she had won by one hundredth of a second and
denied Ta Lou the chance to claim Ivory Coast's first world title in
any event.
Olympic champion and race favourite Elaine Thompson never got going
and finished fifth, as Dutchwoman Dafne Schippers took bronze.
Ta Lou appeared to have the race sewn up but fatally failed to throw
herself at the line and there were moments of suspense before the
result appeared on the stadium scoreboard.
The 26-year-old Bowie, who finished in 10.85 seconds, went one
better than her silver medal at the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro
last year while Ta Lou was left to ponder another desperately
unlucky finish.
"I never give up until I'm over the line," Bowie said. "Ta Lou went
away fast but she always does. It didn't bother me and I just kept
pumping my legs and arms until the finish.
"The dive doesn't feel too good now. But that has saved me at
championships in the past. I've got a couple of days to recover
before the 200 heats so I'll be okay."
Ta Lou was also unlucky not to walk away with a bronze medal in Rio
after being denied a place on the podium by the rarely-resorted to
thousandths measurement.
[to top of second column] |
Tori Bowie of the U.S. in action. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs
"I am just happy to have this medal, it is a dream
come true," she said. "I didn't expect to be in the top three
because all the girls have the power and the talent to make the
podium."
Thompson's shock defeat came after Usain Bolt finished third in the
men's 100 metres on Saturday making it the first time since the 2005
World Championships in Helsinki that Jamaica failed to win either
100 metres race.
It was also the first sprint double for the U.S. since Helsinki when
Gatlin and Lauryn Williams were the champions.
Thompson, who had looked in fine form in the heats and won on the
same track in trainers to protect an injury in a Diamond League
meeting one month ago, was at a loss to explain her defeat.
"I don't know what happened. I just wanted to get a good start but
they race well," she said. "I'll have to watch the video back
because I don't know what went wrong.
"I have to give those three girls a lot of credit, so big
congratulations to them. I didn't execute my race which is a shame
but I'm healthy."
(Additional reporting by Mitch Phillips, editing by Ed Osmond) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten
or redistributed.
|