Successful world championships no
desert mirage in the end
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[October 07, 2019]
By Steve Keating
DOHA (Reuters) - A successful world
athletics championships had looked like a desert mirage but the
event eventually came to life with an oasis of thrills and packed
houses to rescue Qatari organizers and officials before the curtain
came down on Sunday.
Struggling due to a lack of interest from locals, the 10-day
showcase delivered on the final weekend as criticism over an empty
stadium and stifling heat of around 38 degrees Celsius was replaced
by an atmosphere at last worthy of a world event.
The athletes responded with memorable performances in the
air-conditioned Khalifa Stadium, with temperatures kept at 21
degrees, highlighted by local hero Mutaz Barshim on Friday soaring
to victory in the men's high jump for Qatar's only gold.
On the same night American Dalilah Muhammad broke her own world
record to win the women's 400 meters hurdles while the sport's big
men seized the spotlight on Saturday as the shot putters gave a show
hailed as the greatest ever in the event.
The United States again topped the medals table, their 14 golds
almost triple the next best of Kenya on five while Jamaica and China
each had three. No other nation got more than two.
"It is pretty clear to us that on athlete performance this is the
best world championships we have had," said International
Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) chief Sebastian Coe.
The head of the global governing body had spent a good amount of
time during the opening days vigorously defending the decision to
bring the championships to the Middle East.
"It is the athletes themselves who have come here better prepared
for a championship that will be remembered for a long time.... maybe
in a large part to the almost perfect conditions that these guys
have created in the stadium."
Before the last three sessions, a nearby super mall with its shops,
ice rink and amusement park had generated more buzz than the Khalifa
Stadium with its swathes of empty seats.
The warning signs came early when the blue riband 100 meters on the
opening weekend did not attract even a modest audience.
American Christian Coleman's win was greeted with a smattering of
polite applause, while Jamaica's Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce did a
victory lap in a near-empty stadium with her sleepy son nestled in
her arms.
HUGE INTEREST
Qatar has shown huge interest in hosting the world's biggest
sporting parties, including the 2022 soccer World Cup finals, but
has displayed little desire to actually attend them.
The futuristic air-conditioned Khalifa Stadium proved without doubt
the country can build first-class facilities but hosting an event
does not end when construction is completed.
The crowds over the final three days were as manufactured as the
stadium, with organizers giving away thousands of tickets to clubs
and immigrant workers although the excitement was real.
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Men's High Jump Final - Khalifa International Stadium, Doha, Qatar -
October 4, 2019 A fan celebrates after Qatar's Mutaz Essa Barshim
won gold REUTERS/Ibraheem Al Omari
While track and field athletes competing in Khalifa Stadium did so
in air-conditioned comfort, there was plenty of suffering and
complaining on the Doha roads.
Marathoners and race walkers were forced to run at midnight along a
soulless, almost spectatorless route to avoid the worst of the
extreme heat and humidity, with temperatures hovering around 30
Celsius when the marathons and walks started.
Coe had little sympathy for those athletes who were complaining,
saying at the midway mark of the meeting that they would be the ones
leaving without winning titles.
"The athletes talking about externalities are probably not the ones
who are going to be walking home with medals from here," he said.
The rousing end to the championships provided an upbeat note for a
sport that continues to wrestle with complex issues, including a
Russian doping scandal that looks set to linger, with the country's
federation banned from the event.
If that was not enough, the championships were hit with another
unwanted distraction when renowned American coach Alberto Salazar
was banned for four years for doping violations, the news landing in
the middle of the IAAF's biggest event.
Salazar has denied any wrongdoing and said he would appeal.
Track and field's focus now turns to next year's Tokyo Olympics
before the 2021 world championships in Eugene, Oregon, home of the
Nike Oregon Project which has been caught up in the sport's latest
doping scandal.
The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) said Salazar was punished for
"orchestrating and facilitating prohibited doping conduct" as head
coach of the Nike Oregon Project (NOP), a camp designed primarily to
develop U.S. endurance athletes.
Nike has denied any role in administering performance-enhancing
drugs and said in a statement on Tuesday that it does not condone
the use of banned substances.
"Nike is not a part of the organizing committee, it's just not, so
the issue around Eugene is very clear," said Coe, already defending
the choice of Eugene as the next host city.
"There is the organizing committee, and there's the (U.S.)
federation who will be working closely together."
(Editing by Ken Ferris)
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