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Slovenian Sprinter, Merlene Ottey, will make an historic eighth appearance in Osaka.
Photo by Picture Alliance
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As soon as she steps onto the
track for the opening round of the 100m on Sunday, August 26, Merlene Ottey
will, yet again be making history.
At 47, the Jamaican-born Slovenian sprinter
will become the oldest female competitor ever at the IAAF World Championships
in Athletics, after being named to the Slovenian squad for Osaka. It will be her eighth appearance at
the global championships.
The record she'll surpass is
currently held by Briton Joyce Smith, who competed in the marathon at the
inaugural world championships in 1983 when 45 years, 285 days old.
But Ottey
will most certainly be the only athlete in Osaka
who also competed at those first world championships in Helsinki
nearly 24 years ago, when she finished second in the 200m and fourth in the
100m for her native Jamaica.
She later went on to capture World titles over the longer sprint in 1993 and
1995; in all she has collected 10 individual and four relay medals in World
championship competitions, five more than the nearest competitor on the list of
multiple medallists, American Jearl Miles Clark, who has won nine.
11 days ago, Ottey clocked a
season's best of 11.69 to take the Slovenian 100m title, but has the requisite
'B' entry standard (11.40) from an 11.34 race in Glasgow in August, 2006. Now over some recent
minor illness, Ottey has promised to run faster in Osaka in order to make her appearance
something more than mere novelty.
While a marginal season's best
will almost guarantee advancement from the opening round, she'll have to be
significantly faster to reach the semi-finals.
Since the 1999 edition of the
championships in Seville,
the slowest to advance from the quarter-finals clocked 11.37. Moving on in Seville was significantly
more difficult, with 11.28 making the cut for the final 16.
Age records are nothing new to
Ottey, who in recent years continues to lower age-group records in the 100m. At
the world championships, she already holds the oldest 100m medallist (35 years
89 days, in 1995), the oldest 100m finalist (37 years, 85 days in 1997), the
oldest 200m champion (35 years, 92 days, in 1995), and the oldest 200m medallist
(37 years, 90 days, in 1997).
In Osaka, she will
also break her own record as the oldest 100m competitor: in Paris in 2003, she was 43 years, 106 days old
when she finished sixth in the semi-finals.
Her eighth appearance at the
meet will not, however, be a record. Eight women have already appeared in eight
editions of the championships. Of those, German discus thrower Franka Dietzsch
and 800m legend Maria Mutola of Mozambique,
will be arriving in Osaka
as strong medal contenders.
With thanks to Track Profile
& Bob Ramsak
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