Dutee steals the thunder

Her new 100m National record is short of Olympic qualification by a whisker

April 29, 2016 02:15 am | Updated 02:15 am IST - NEW DELHI:

BLISTERING RUN: Dutee Chand (right) on her way to winning the women's 100m sprint. Photo: Sandeep Saxena

BLISTERING RUN: Dutee Chand (right) on her way to winning the women's 100m sprint. Photo: Sandeep Saxena

Dutee Chand stole the show in setting a National record in the women’s 100m with a time of 10.33 seconds, but missed the Olympic qualification mark by one hundredth of a second, in the 20th Federation Cup athletics championships at the Nehru Stadium here on Thursday.

Dutee beat a strong field that included Pinki Pramanik, who was returning to the circuit after years in the wilderness.

The earlier National record of 10.38 had stood in the name of Rachita Mistry, who set the mark in August 2000 in Thiruvananthapuram. Srabani Nanda and H.M. Jyothi pushed Dutee hard, before she flew at the finish. Both Dutee and coach N. Ramesh, mobbed by a very big media contingent, were understandably very happy with the record, and expressed confidence that going under the qualification mark would only be a mere matter of time.

On a worn out track, with glaring craters all around the periphery, the women’s 100m runners had given a fair hint of their prowess in the morning itself, with astonishing qualification timings of 11.48 (Dutee), 11.60 (Jyothi) and 11.68 (Srabani), as they won the three heats.

The women could conserve some energy, as there was no semifinal run, unlike the men who expended energy in the afternoon with another race before the final.

Thus Amiya Kumar Mallick, who set a National record in with a time of 10.26 in the semifinals, finished fourth in the title race, one hundredth of a second behind bronze medallist and National record holder Md. Abdul Qureshi. Amiya Kumar latter claimed that he had a strained hamstring.

Jyotisankar Debnath crossed the line at 10.41s, close to the National record of 10.30, to beat Krishnakumar Sarane by three hundredths of a second in a spectacular finish for the gold.

There was surprise in shot put, as Tajinderpal Singh Toor (19.93 metres) beat Asian champion Inderjeet Singh by more than two feet. Inderjeet, who had qualified for the Olympics in May last year, and had trained for about five months in the US, started very well with a throw of 19.17 but could not go beyond with only one other valid throw at 19.10.

National record holder Omprakash Karhana threw 18.28 metres, for the fourth place. There were only two runners in the women’s 100m hurdles, the first final of the afternoon, as N. Gayathri did not start. It was a comedy of errors as Pinki Rani (15.41) finished much ahead of Priyanka (18.39).

The results: Men: 100m: 1. Jyotisankar Debnath 10.41; 2. Krishnakumar Sarane 10.44; 3. Md. Abdul Qureshi 10.50.

5000m: 1. G. Lakshmanan 13:51.29; 2. Suresh Kumar 13:52.83; 3. Yunus Mohammed 14:11.55.

110m hurdles: 1. Suresh Arumugam 14.33s; 2. Anupendra Kumar 14.70; 3. T. Balamurugan 14.72.

Pole vault: 1. J. Preeth 4.95m; 2. Anuj Singh 4.70; 3. Pradhyuman Narbar and Sonu Saini 4.70.

Shot put: 1. Tajinderpal Singh Toor 19.93m; 2. Inderjeet Singh 19.17; 3. Jaideep Singh 18.36.

Javelin: 1. Vipin Kasana 76.42m; 2. Shivpal Singh 76.38; 3. Davinder Singh 76.26.

Women: 100m: 1. Dutee Chand 11.33s (NR, old 11.38); 2. Srabani Nanda 11.45; 3. H.M. Jyothi 11.46.

5000m: 1. L. Suriya 15:39.59; 2. Swati Haridas Gadhawe 15:44.00; 3. Sanjeevani Jadhav 16:36.92.

Long jump: 1. M.A. Prajusha 6.30m; 2. V. Neena 6.24; 3. Shradda Ghule 6.21.

Hammer throw: 1. Sarita Prakash 61.81m; 2. Gunjan Singh 55.38; 3. Ritu Dhiman 54.90.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.