The 25-year-old, who won in 2019 in Doha and
last year in Eugene, led by the first hurdle and was in a
virtual race of his own by the third, cruising to victory in a
season's best 12.96 seconds.
Holloway held up three fingers after crossing the finish line,
hollering "One-two-three!" to the delighted crowd at the
National Athletics Centre.
"I'm speechless right now," he said. "Nothing feels like the
first one, but this one I'm definitely going to cherish in my
heart."
Hansle Parchment of Jamaica closed well to take the silver in
13.07, while Daniel Roberts of the United States crossed in
13.09 for bronze.
"To come back out here and do it with my brother (Roberts), we
started running in college together, having battles, now we're
able to have these battles on the world stage.
"Consistency is my biggest attribute. The biggest thing is I
come out there and I know what I'm going to run before I'm on
track."
The final was missing the world's fastest man this season,
Rasheed Broadbell of Jamaica (12.94) who crashed out in the
preliminary round.
Holloway, the second-fastest hurdler in history, finished second
at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 and said he was using the sour
taste of silver as motivation to go one better next year in
Paris.
(Reporting by Lori Ewing; Editing by Ken Ferris)
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