At Beijing, Dafne Schippers
finished like a bullet train to defeat the Jamaican Elaine Thompson in the last
desperate strides of the women’s 200m final at the world championships. She had run 21.63sec, the third fastest time
in history, behind only Florence Griffith Joyner and Marion Jones. She
certainly jolted all.
We have become used to Jamaicans
dominating sprinting, Kenyans, Ethiopians, Nigerians dominating long distance
running. Schippers’ home town of Utrecht is better known for its doorbells. There was difference reaction from many
quarters as some questioned about the acne on Schippers back and face, which
can be a sign of steroid abuse. But the Dutch journalists all said the same
thing: her mom and sister had both had acne, and that it was hereditary.
As a 19-year-old, while still
mostly training for the heptathlon, Dafne ran 11.19sec for the 100m and 22.69 for the
200m. And as a teenager she beat the 2012 Olympic champion Allyson Felix and
missed out on the 200m final at the 2011 world championships in Daegu by
0.04sec. Schippers has given up the heptathlon to focus on sprinting – which
means she doesn’t have waste training and recovery time from jumping, hurling
and hurdling any more. Her starts have vastly improved. And she has been
working with the renowned sprint coach Rana Reider, who used to consult for UK
Athletics and trains a lengthy list of world-class athletes.
It was indeed a great run – Schippers, who is 23 now,
took the world title in 21.63 seconds, setting a new European record in the
process. Silver went to Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson. Schippers’ time is the third
fastest ever run by a woman and she is the first Dutch woman ever to win a
world athletics title. Earlier Schippers took silver in the 100 metres. Two
years ago, she took bronze in the heptathlon but quit that event earlier this
year to focus on sprinting. The simultaneous dip for the line had the crowd gasping.
But it was the times of the medallists that sent jaws crashing to the floor:
Schippers 21.63, Thompson 21.66, Veronica Campbell-Brown 21.97. For only the
second time in history, after the tainted 1988 Seoul Olympics final, three
women had run under 22 seconds in the same 200m race. And within breathing
distance was Britain’s 19-year-old Dina Asher-Smith, who ran the performance of
her career to finish fifth in 22.07. Not
only did it snatch Kathy Cook’s British record, which has been gathering dust
for 31 years, but it made her the fastest teenager over 200m in history.
With regards – S. Sampathkumar
3rd Sept. 2015.
