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World Athletics Federation ratifies 100m hurdles record set by Nigeria’s Tobi Amusan

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The 100m hurdles world record set by Nigerian athlete, Tobi Amusan, at the World Athletics Championships in Oregon, USA, has been ratified by World Athletics Federation (WAF).

Amusan had set a new world record of 12.12 in the women’s 100m hurdles semi-finals at the championship held in July but the athletics body had yet to ratify and make it official until the final confirmation was done on Tuesday.

The WAF announced the ratification on its official website was disclosed on the athletics body’s official website via a statement on Tuesday.

With the ratification, the time of 12.12 seconds makes it the official world record to beat in the women’s 100m hurdles.

The 25-year-old Amusan who is fondly called ‘star girl’ had run the 12.12 seconds time in the semi-finals to defeat former world record holder, Kendra Harrison, who had set the world record in the 100 metres hurdles with a time of 12.20 seconds in 2016, at the London Müller Anniversary Games.

Amusan saved her best for the final the next day when she ran an unprecedented wind-assisted 12.06 (2.5m/s) to win the gold medal.

Speaking on her feat, the African and Commonwealth Games record holder had said in an interview:

“The goal was to come out and to win this gold, Honestly, I believe in my abilities, but I was not expecting a world record at these championships.”

Amusan has had a remarkable 2022 season, breaking the African record three times in the space of 10 months before smashing the record in Oregon to become Nigeria’s first-ever world athletics champion and world record holder.

At the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, UK, she won the gold medal for Nigeria in another record-breaking effort, making her the first Nigerian athlete to hold the African, Commonwealth and World Champion gold in the 100m hurdles as well as the record holder in the three competitions.

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Zambia’s women national team coach face new sexual assault allegation

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Zambia women national team coach, Bruce Mwape, is facing new allegations of sexual assault and misconduct at the 2023 Women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand, prompting an investigation by world football governing body, FIFA.

Mwape who is currently facing allegations of sexual harassment after some of his players laid accusations against him, has been accused by a female FIFA contractor of inappropriately touching her breast during the tournament.

A report on the Fifa website disclosed that the body received an official complaint accusing the 64-year-old Mwape of touching the breast of a FIFA contractor from New Zealand.

The complainant is quoted to have told Fifa officials that Mwape had inappropriately touched her breasts in a suggestive manner.

“I remember him putting his hand on my shoulder to say ‘Good morning,’ but then he went again and wiped his hand straight down the front, obviously touching my boob,” the contractor reportedly said.

“It happened so quickly. It felt wrong to me but I also questioned whether it had just been a mistake. But after that, his relationship with me was very different. So I think he knew what he had done was not appropriate,” the unnamed contractor added.

The incident, according to the report, allegedly occurred while the team was staying at an Auckland hotel before their match against Spain.

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Botswanan Tebogo hits at Kenyan Omanyala over claims of being African sprint king

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Botswanan sprint sensation,
Letsile Tebogo, has hit back at Kenyan 100m champion, Ferdinand Omanyala, over claims that he is the king of African sprint.

Omanyala, in an Track and Field network in April, had laid claims to being the true king of Africa in sprints having risen to prominence in 2021 when he set the record as the fastest man in the continent when he ran 9.77 at the 3rd edition of the Absa Kip Keino classic.

The following year, Omanyala won the 2022 African title in Mauritius, as well as the 100m gold at the Commonwealth Games, feats he believes bestows on him the title of Africa’s king of the sprint.

Though it has not been all rosy for the 28-year-old Omanyala as he has faltered at some big stages having failed to make the final of the Olympic games in Tokyo in 2021 and finished a disappointing seventh at the World Athletics Championships in Budapest last year, he still believes he is head and shoulders above other African stars.

On the other hand, 20-year-old Tebogo has already scored medals in both the 100 and 200m races at the highest stage, which has given him the right to question Omanyala’s claims

“I do not have anything to say. Everything will reveal itself as time goes on,” Tebogo said in an interview with the same Track and Field network on Tuesday.

“To me, it does not make sense if you are the African champion, but where it mattered the most, he could not step in,” he added.

Tebogo who has proven his mettle in the 200m which he claims is the easiest race to compete in, believes it should also be used as a gauge to test the fastest men in the continent apart from just the 100m.

“The 100 is very tactical. Any day can be your day. I believe we should include both races,” he added.

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