James, 18, ready to put Grenada on the athletics map

LONDON, (Reuters) – Grenada’s 18-year-old multi-junior  champion Kirani James scorched a season-leading 44.61 seconds in  winning the 400 metres at today’s Diamond League meeting in  London in his first senior race as a professional athlete.
James has blazed a trail through the junior ranks, breaking  Usain Bolt’s six-year old CARIFA Games 400m record two years ago  and winning the world junior title last year en route to being  named Grenada’s sportsman of the year at the age of 17.

Kirani James
Kirani James

He continued that form in the 2011 indoor season with a 44.80  run that placed him third on the all-time world list, behind  only Michael Johnson and Kerron Clement.
The islander now looks ready to take on the best of the  seniors outdoors at the world championships later this month  after a hugely impressive showing in the final Diamond League  meeting before Daegu.
Based at the University of Alabama in the United States and  coached by former American Olympic sprint relay gold medallist  Harvey Glance, James is already hugely experienced despite his  tender years.
He broke 47 seconds at the age of 14, set world age records  every year after that and has a bagful of golds over 200m and  400m from world and regional junior championships.
He came into today’s meeting with a best of 44.86 set  earlier this year and ran a perfectly-judged race, forcing  himself clear with a powerful last 40 metres to finish ahead of  Jamaica’s Diamond League leader Jermain Gonzales.
“I’m feeling really good and this shows that I’m on course  for Daegu,” James said. “I need to go out there and run 400  metres races but there are a lot of great guys out there. I  competed against them today and you can’t take anyone for  granted.
“I just went out there and tried to improve on my time and  that’s what I did.”
That time knocked compatriot Rondell Bartholomew off top spot  for the season – he finished seventh on Friday – as the tiny  Caribbean nation with a population of just 110,000 dreams of a  first world outdoor or Olympic title.
If it was going to come anywhere, though, it was always  likely to be over one lap after Alleyne Francique became  something of a national hero when he won two world indoor titles  and a Commonwealth Games silver over the distance in 2004 and  2006.