Australians reach new heights in Olympic track and field
Source: Getty/AAP
Australians have aimed high and achieved their best, but fallen short of placing, in a courageous night of athletics at the Paris Olympics.
Australia charged to third spot in the medal tally behind China and the USA, with 13 gold, 11 silver and three bronze.
Here’s a wrap of overnight.
Pole vaulter Kurtis Marschall looked like he was in contention for a medal as he battled through the pain from the ankle he dislocated earlier this year.
Marschall finished a creditable sixth in the men’s pole vault final at the Paris Olympics.
Marschall’s best moment of Tuesday morning’s competition came with a first-time clearance at 5.85 metres after he had passed his final two attempts at 5.8 metres.
But the 2023 world championships bronze medallist was unable to go any higher, bowing out with two unsuccessful attempts at 5.95 metres.
Pole vaulter Kurtis Marschall cleared 5.85 metres in a huge moment. Photo: Getty
It was still a massive improvement from Marschall’s performance in the Tokyo Olympics final three years ago, when he failed to register a height.
The Australian badly dislocated his left ankle in a fall at the national championships in April. It has continued to trouble him since.
As expected, the gold went to peerless Swedish world record-holder Armand Duplantis, who added a second successive Olympic gold to his two world championships, all achieved before the age of 25.
The 24-year-old was flawless throughout, clinching gold with a first-time effort at 6 metres.
The minor medals went to American Sam Kendricks (5.95 metres) and Emmanouil Karalis from Greece (5.9 metres).
Torrie Lewis crossed the line first in the 200-metre repechage. Photo: Getty
On the track, Australia’s fastest woman Torrie Lewis achieved a huge milestone by reaching the semi-finals of the 200-metre sprint.
The teenager set a new personal best when she initially narrowly missed out on advancing directly to the semis – scoring a spot in the repechage heat.
She won her repechage and secured a spot in the semis.
“Crossed the line first at the Olympics. Pretty cool,” she said of the repechage heat.
“I’m so surprised, I have not been nervous. I thought I’d be nervous, but I’m pretty chill.”
But her impressive campaign came to a close when she was run out in the semis in 22.92 – just three hundredths of a second shy of the PB she set in the opening round.
Lewis will now turn her attention to the 4×100-metre relay, with the heats on Thursday.
The 200-metre women’s sprint final will feature huge names including 100-metre winner Julien Alfred and American superstar Gabby Thomas.
The men’s 200-metre heats and semi-finals were also run on Tuesday morning (AEST).
Australia’s Calab Law was seventh in his men’s 200-metre heat in 20.75 on his Olympic debut.
Calab Law competes for Australia in the 200-metre sprint heat. Photo: Getty
The fastest man on earth, America’s 100-metre Olympic champion Noah Lyles, is looking for another title in his favoured 200-metre distance.
With the Olympics still abuzz over his 0.005-second victory in the 100, Lyles didn’t have much time to rest before moving to his next event.
He is a heavy favourite in the 200 metres. It is his better race, and one he has not lost since the Olympic final in Tokyo three years ago, where he finished third.
He said he got about four hours of sleep after the big race, before returning to Stade de France to win the opening heat in the 200 metres in 20.19 seconds.
Kenya’s Beatrice Chebet (centre) crosses the finish line ahead of Australia’s Rose Davies (left) and Ethiopia’s Medina Eisa in the women’s 5000-metre heat. Photo: Getty
Australia’s 5000-metre hopeful Rose Davies did not finish with a medal but said she was happy with her race.
Kenyan Beatrice Chebet mowed down her superstar teammate Faith Kipyegon with 60 metres to go to win the women’s 5000 metres in 14 minutes 28.56 seconds.
Kipeygon was later disqualified and stripped of silver for earlier shoving a rival as they tussled for position.
Australia’s Davies ran on gamely to claim 11th spot in 14:49.67.
Earlier in the day, Australia’s other pole vault star, reigning women’s world champion Nina Kennedy, eased into Wednesday night’s final in equal first place.
Kennedy was required to vault only once each at 4.4 metres and 4.55 metres to book her spot in the final.
Australia will have two huge medal chances on Wednesday night, with big Matt Denny powering through the discus qualifying round in second place with a throw of 66.83 metres.
Steeplechasers Matthew Clarke and Ben Buckingham failed to qualify for the final of the 3000-metre steeplechase.
Team pursuiters’ hot start
In cycling, the Australian men’s team pursuiters have taken the first step to redemption at the Olympic velodrome.
Unlike the slow Olympic pool, records were smashed repeatedly on day one of the track cycling program at Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines velodrome outside Paris.
The Australian men’s team pursuiters qualified fastest on day one. Photo: Getty
The temperature is deliberately kept warm, which means uncomfortable conditions for spectators that are perfect for the riders.
Australia qualified fastest in the men’s pursuit, lowering the national record by more than a second — a whopping improvement.
Olympic medallists Sam Welsford and Kelland O’Brien combined with debutants Oliver Bleddyn and Conor Leahy to clock four minutes 42.958 seconds.
Matt Wearn will win silver or gold in the men’s dinghy. Photo: Getty
Wearn in box seat for sailing gold
Australian sailor Matt Wearn is guaranteed a gold or silver medal at the Paris Olympics after the cancellation of men’s dinghy races on Monday.
Wearn is in the box seat to claim consecutive Olympic golds in the event and will protect a big lead in Tuesday’s medal race in Marseille.
Racing on Monday was scrapped due to lack of wind, meaning the dinghy competition heads straight to the medal race, which is worth double points, on Tuesday.
Wearn holds a 14-point lead from Cypriot Pavlos Kontides and a 24-point advantage from Peru’s Stefano Peschiera.
That margin ensures Peschiera can’t overtake Wearn.
For Kontides to prevent Wearn from securing successive Olympic gold medals, the Cypriot will need to finish at least seven places better than the Australian in the medal race.
So if Wearn finishes seventh or higher, or Kontides places fourth or worse, the Australian will collect another gold.
Wearn is seeking to become the first back-to-back Olympic champion in the event and continue Australia’s stretch of gold following Tom Slingsby (2012), Tom Burton (2016) and Wearn in Tokyo three years ago.
Robinson will surf for gold
Jack Robinson will go for gold in the Olympic surfing after stunning Brazilian Gabriel Medina in their semi-final.
The Western Australian pulled out a mighty barrel run at Tahiti’s Teahupo’o break to lock up a medal.
In patchy surf, Robinson found the wave he needed, and his reward is a place in the gold-medal match against local hope Kauli Vaast later on Tuesday (AEST).
Regardless of his result, it will be Australia’s best result in Olympic surfing, which was added to the program in Tokyo where Owen Wright won bronze.
Three-time world champion Medina was also the loser in that bronze-medal match, and will now surf to avenge that result against Peru’s Alonso Correa.
Competitors returned to the water after three lay days as the 10-day window allotted for surfing expired.
Needing four full days of surfing to reach the gold-medal matches, competition was interrupted twice during the Games.
A storm that delivered terrifying swell stopped proceedings for two days last week. Organisers then called three lay days due to a lack of decent waves.
Surfline labelled the swell merely “fair” on Monday but with the window closing, the semi-finals were called on in waves under two metres, with surfers needing to make the best of it.
-with AAP