Wayde's stars line up

27 June 2017 - 06:59 By DAVID ISAACSON
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South Africa's gold medallist Wayde van Niekerk. File photo.
South Africa's gold medallist Wayde van Niekerk. File photo.
Image: AFP PHOTO / FRANCK FIFE

Not even the best sprinters in the US and Jamaica could dislodge Wayde van Niekerk from his perch atop the 200m world rankings at the weekend.

With Usain Bolt abdicating his 200m crown ahead of the world championships in London in August, Van Niekerk remains in pole position to lift that mantle with the 19.84sec mark he posted earlier this month.

Yohan Blake won the Jamaican title in 19.97sec while American Ameer Webb was victorious in 20.09sec, an effort worthy of a sub-20 considering the 2.3m-per-second wind against him.

"One would have expected some faster times than we saw in both the US and Jamaican trials," said former 400m runner Arnaud Malherbe, a relay bronze medallist from the 1999 world championships.

"There are only six men who have run under 20sec this year, two of them are South African - Wayde van Niekerk and Akani Simbine.

"With Noah Lyles and LaShawn Merritt not qualifying for London, it seems Wayde's chances of obtaining a double have improved somewhat."

Mathew Quinn, a past 100m sprinter and a relay gold medallist from the 2001 world championships, believes the stars are aligning for Van Niekerk, the Olympic 400m champion, to score a rare sprint double in London.

Van Niekerk's closest 200m rival on the rankings, American student Christian Coleman, was beaten into second place in both the 200m and the 100m at the US champs.

"I think his tank is empty," said Quinn. "He's been running best times since March. We don't see collegiate athletes feature at world championships. Maybe in the next year or two, but not in the same year."

By the same token, Fred Kerley, the new US 400m champion and owner of the 43.70 world lead from May, would not be a contender in the one-lapper either.

Van Niekerk competes in his first international 400m next week, and all eyes will be on his performance in the 300m in Ostrava tomorrow.

"Wayde's got a hunger for the double and everything's lining up for him," said Quinn.

"I think we're going to see Wayde do the 300m world record [tomorrow]."

Van Niekerk is the third-fastest man in history over this seldom-run distance, his 31.03 slower only than Bolt's 30.97 and Michael Johnson's 30.85.

Van Niekerk smashed Johnson's 17-year-old 43.18 400m world mark in winning Olympic gold in 43.03 last year.

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