Business Day

Simbine storms to 100m world lead

- David Isaacson

Akani Simbine stormed to a 9.90sec world lead in winning the men’s 100m at the Atlanta City Games on Saturday.

The SA sprinter downed Kenyan nemesis Ferdinand Omanyala convincing­ly as he produced his first sub-10 sec performanc­e of the season and the 40th legal sub-10 race of his career. This was also his fastest 100m time since the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, but making this performanc­e more impressive was that Simbine had to negotiate a 0.4m-per-second head wind, making this his career best time into the wind.

Simbine had been quicker only twice before, clocking his 9.89 and 9.84 SA records from 2016 and 2021, which were both achieved with tailwinds. Even his 9.90 effort in Japan three years ago was done with a 0.9mps wind assistance.

Omanyala, holder of the 9.77 African mark, was second in 10.00. American Kendal Williams was third in 10.05, Udodi Onwuzurike of Nigeria third in 10.12 and Ronnie Baker, the second American in the fiveman field, last in 10.23.

Simbine’s time puts him No 1 on the world list for the 100m so far this year, ahead of Williams and Christian Miller, another American, on 9.93.

Simbine has been in the top five of the world since the 2016 Rio Olympics, finishing fourth at Tokyo 2020 and at the 2019 world championsh­ips.

The only exception was last year when he was disqualifi­ed for a false start at the world championsh­ips in Budapest.

Thirty-year-old Simbine, who won a Diamond League meet in China last month, is proving he is a contender for the Paris Olympics, where the 100m final is set for August 4. World champion Noah Lyles, Olympic champion Lamont Marcell Jacobs and Botswana star Letsile Tebogo are still early in their 100m campaigns, while Jamaica’s Oblique Seville hasn’t run shorter than 200m so far. But right now Simbine is on track.

SIMBINE’S TIME OF 9.90SEC PUTS HIM

NO 1 ON THE WORLD

LIST FOR THE 100M

SO FAR THIS YEAR

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