Jamaica’s Powell sparkles in Diamond League opener

DOHA, (Reuters) – Jamaica’s Asafa Powell recovered  from a poor start to take the plaudits in the men’s 100 metres  at the opening Diamond League meet in steamy Qatar yesterday.

The former world record holder, who will face Olympic and  world champion Usain Bolt and American rival Tyson Gay later in  the season on the 14-meet circuit, won in 9.81 seconds.

Powell’s compatriot Nesta Carter was second in 9.88 with  American Travis Padgett finishing third in 9.92 seconds. Powell  had run 9.75 in his semi-final heat, which would have been a  world leading time if it had not been wind-assisted.

Michael Frater, the third member of Jamaica’s triumphant  Olympic 4×100 team, ran 9.94 behind Padgett who won here last  year. Bolt had led the gold medal-winning team in Beijing.   “What happened tonight was pretty exciting, a real fight  with so many guys running under 10 seconds,” said Powell.

The Diamond League has replaced the Golden League as the  governing IAAF’s top non-championship event. A diamond-studded  trophy awaits all 32 season leaders in the various events.

“Carter was very fast. Frater was fast as well. It wasn’t as  easy as people might think,” Powell told reporters. “I am  obviously chasing the diamond. We’ll see in the end.”

Powell and others got a boost from the warm Arabian Gulf  wind at the sprinters’ backs. “Normally the wind doesn’t help me  that much. I don’t really focus on the wind,” he said.

He added that his next race will be in Ostrava, then Rome  and “probably the Jamaican championships”.

The winners of each event earn four points with two points  for second place and one for finishing third.

NOT AMAZING
American Allyson Felix won the women’s 400 metres in 50.15  seconds ahead of Amantle Montsho of Botswana (50.34) with  Britain’s Olympic champion Christine Ohuruogu back in fifth.

“I ran a comfortable first 200 metres, relaxed until 250  metres and kicked home from there. The time was not anything  amazing for my standards,” Felix told reporters.

“Now I just need some speed work. Hopefully, I’ll be ready  to go come New York.”

Felix, a three time world 200 champion, has won the 400 in  Doha three times in the last four years and is considering  adding the longer distance to her world and Olympic schedules.   Jamaican Kerron Stewart, also helped by the wind, won the  women’s 200 in 22.34 seconds ahead of compatriot Sherone Simpson  (22.64). Cydie Mothersill of the Cayman Islands was third.  American Lolo Jones took the women’s 100 hurdles in 12.63  seconds, despite hitting the first two barriers, finishing ahead  of Canadian Priscilla Lopes-Schliep (12.67).

“I had a really bad start,” said Jones. “The wind was  pushing me too close to the hurdles and I was off balance. But I  pulled it off in the end,” she told Reuters.

Olympic bronze medallist Bershawn Jackson gave an impressive  performance in the men’s 400 hurdles, winning in 48.66 seconds  ahead of fellow American Kerron Clement (48.82).

“I had excellent training recently, very consistent,”  Jackson said. “It’s nice to beat the Olympic champion (Angelo  Taylor) and the world champion (Clement) in one race.”

Beijing gold medallist Taylor was fourth in 49.66.

Several leading athletes were absent from the first meet of  a series in which total prize money for the 14 meetings will top  $6.6 million with millions more on offer in promotional fees.

Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele, the world’s dominant distance  runner, and American Sanya Richards-Ross, the 400 metres world  champion, are injured while Russian Olympic pole vault gold  medallist Yelena Isinbayeva is taking a break from sport.