Controversial US sprinter Christian
Coleman's bid for 100 metres gold took centre stage at the World
Championships on Saturday as endurance athletes prepared for another
battle with Doha's punishing heat and humidity.
Coleman romped to a 9.88sec win in his semi-final to underline his
intention to clinch his first major championship outdoor title, just
weeks after escaping a lengthy anti-doping ban because of a
technicality.
Coleman has received strong public backing from world athletics chief
Sebastian Coe, who has defended the American's right to be regarded as a
clean athlete.
The 23-year-old from Tennessee narrowly avoided a ban after failing to
properly notify drug testers of his whereabouts on three occasions in a
12-month period -- an offence normally punishable by a one-year
suspension.
"We have to be very careful not to play fast and loose with the
reputation of athletes," Coe said on Friday following criticism of
Coleman by US sprinting legend Michael Johnson.
"I am pleased Coleman is here and I want to make sure he is given every
opportunity to be one of the faces of these Championships," the IAAF
president added.
Coleman has angrily denied any suggestion he is guilty of taking performance-enhancing drugs.
Defending champion Justin Gatlin kept his hopes alive of a third world
100m title but only just, scraping through into the showdown later in
the day as one of the two fastest losers.
While Coleman is seeking his first world outdoor title, Jamaican legend
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce got off to a terrific start in her bid to win a
fourth 100m world gold.
The 32-year-old two-time Olympic champion timed an impressive 10.80sec,
the fastest women's 100m heat in world championship history.
Renaud Lavillenie's desperate search for an elusive world gold to add to
his 2012 Olympic pole vault title will have to wait another two years
as the 33-year-old Frenchman failed to qualify for the final.
- 'It's a catastrophe' -
Coe and other IAAF organisers meanwhile will be nervously keeping an eye
on Saturday's two endurance walking finals, the men's and women's
50-kilometre races.
The races get under way at 11:30pm local time in what are expected to be sweltering conditions.
The walks take place 24 hours after the first day's women's marathon in
which Kenya's Ruth Chepngetich took gold after an arduous test of
endurance that saw 28 of 68 starters fail to finish.
The IAAF announced the show would go on, stating no one had suffered
heat stroke in the marathon and the completion rate was comparable to
women's races at Tokyo in 1991 and Moscow in 2013.
However, the distressing spectacle of the marathon -- some competitors
were stretchered off and another placed in a wheelchair -- made a deep
impression on France's decathlon world champion Kevin Mayer.
"Clearly by organising the championship here, they (the IAAF) didn't put
the athletes first, they've mostly put them in jeopardy," said Mayer,
who is also the world record holder.
"Even if people aren't saying it out loud, it's obvious it's a catastrophe."
The marathon havoc will have done nothing to calm the angst of France's
50km walk champion Yohann Diniz, who defends his title on Saturday.
Diniz angrily hit out at organisers on Friday for forcing walkers to
race in the heat while track and field athletes are competing in a
comfortable 25 degrees Celsius in the climate-controlled Khalifa
Stadium.
"I am disgusted by the conditions," the Frenchman said.
"I am extremely upset. If we were in the stadium we would have normal
conditions, between 24-25 degrees, but outside they have placed us in a
furnace, which is just not possible."
Aside from the 100m and the two walks, three other titles will be
decided -- the men's long jump, the women's hammer and the women's
10,000m.
The latter event should ensure a sizeable contingent of Ethiopian and
Kenyan spectators, who proved invaluable in livening up the atmosphere
on the opening day.
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