Outstanding Rudisha sets new 800m world record
Ryland James
Kenya’s David Lekuta Rudisha set a new world record of one minute
41.09 seconds in the 800 metres on Sunday at Berlin’s Olympic Stadium to
produce the stand-out performance of the day.
His time at the World Challenge meet shaved two hundredths of a
second off the previous best mark set by Denmark’s Kenyan-born Wilson
Kipketer in August 1997 and insisted he can go even faster.
Rudisha on his way to victory |
The 21-year-old African record holder and former world junior
champion in the same distance in 2006, was led through the first 400m by
pacesetter Sammy Tangui in 48.65sec.
Keep up pace
Rudisha then managed to keep up his pace through to the line to break
Kipketer’s long-standing record, something he had recently been
threatening to do.
“This was my first real attempt to break the world record, I knew I
was good, I had trained hard,” said the softly-spoken Kenyan.
“Now that I have run that time, I can say I have the ability to
improve and go faster.
“I am very happy, it feels great to have the world record.”
Having only reached the 800m semi-finals at the World Athletics
Championships here in Berlin last August, Rudisha said he came to the
German capital with something to prove and wanted to make up for last
year’s disappointment.
``Last year, I had a bad time in Berlin,” he said.
Kenya’s David Lekuta Rudisha celebrates after winning the men’s
800m competiting during the ISTAF (Internationales Stadionfest)
IAAF World Challenge on Sunday in Berlin.
He set a new world record. Pictures AFP |
World record
“So I did not want to talk too much about the world record before the
race.
``I knew it was my day, the weather was good.
``I told my pacemaker to run the first lap under 49 seconds. He did a
great job, but in the last 200 metres I had to push really hard. ``But
when I saw the clock at the end, it was amazing, a fantastic feeling.
``I am very happy to be the fastest 800 metres runner in the world.
``Running is like a profession to me, so this means everything.”
Rudisha has been in great form all season while competing in Europe.
Record
In Oslo’s Diamond League meeting in June, he broke Sebastian Coe’s
31-year-old meeting record with a run of 1 min 42.04 sec. Then at a meet
in the Belgian city of Heusden-Zolder in July, Rudisha timed 1:41.51, an
African record and the fastest time in the world since Kipketer set the
previous best 13 years ago. In the days other events, South Africa’s
controversial teenage world champion Caster Semenya won the women’s 800m
in one minute 59.50 seconds, on the same track where she burst onto the
world stage last year, as she continues her comeback after being gender
tested by the sports governing body.
Local heroine and European bronze medallist Ariane Friedrich won the
women’s high jump with a leap of 1.97m, while German world champion
Robert Harting won
the discus with a throw of 68.24m. World and Olympic champion Steven
Hooker of Australia failed to register a height in the men’s pole vault
— for the fourth time this season.
BERLIN, Monday, AFP |