Friday: Ugandan athletes return to action in London

Aug 11, 2017

Dorcus Ajok and Halima Nakaayi are taking part in the women's 800m semi-final as Ronald Musagala vies for a final spot in the men's 1,500m final.

PIC: Dorcus Ajok will be eyeing a place in the women's 800m final. (AFP)

IAAF WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS 2017


STRATFORD -It's day eight and three Ugandan athletes are returning on the track at the Olympic Stadium on Friday, a day after taking part in qualification events.

Halima Nakaayi and Dorcus Ajok will take part in the women's 800m semi-final starting 9.35pm Ugandan time.

Countrymate Ronald Musagala will also be in the mix, but in a different event. He will take part in the men's 1,500m semi-final, which starts at 10.10pm, also Ugandan time.

CLICK HERE for details on how Ugandans did on Thursday.

As the 10-day competition nears its conclusion, Team Uganda in London is yet to add to the silver medal that Joshua Cheptegei won on the very first day in the men's 10,000m final.

The event ends this Sunday.

 Nakaayi finished third in her heat on Thursday to progress

 

Musagala, in the men's 1,500m heats, finished fourth to qualify


Meanwhile, here are day eight highlights for the IAAF World Championships on Friday:

Women's long jump final

This should be an engrossing spectacle with defending champion and Olympic gold medallist Tianna Bartoletta taking on her fellow American Brittney Reese whilst Russian Darya Klishina is also in with a shout though competing as an Authorised Neutral Athlete. Reese is out to avenge losing her Olympic crown to Bartoletta, who amazingly won the first of her two world titles back in 2005. Klishina is hoping that these championships are a happier experience than the Olympics when she was the only Russian to compete and was branded a traitor by her own people.      

Women's 100 metres hurdles heats and semi-finals

Australia have had a quiet championships but in Sally Pearson they possess their class act and a proven champion. The 2012 Olympic champion returns to the stadium where she experienced her greatest moment albeit after a couple of years of injuries which cost her appearances at the 2016 Olympics and the 2015 worlds. She showed some of her old spark in the Diamond League event in London last month but she will have to up her game to beat America's world record holder Kendra Harrison. The latter won the Diamond League race in London but Pearson's advantage is she knows how to cope with major championships whilst Harrison is unproven and failed to make the Olympic team last year.

Women's 3000 metres steeplechase final

Kenya will be determined to deny one of their own Ruth Jebet the world title to add to her Olympic crown from last year as she was one of many recruited by Bahrain. She was beaten narrowly in her semi-final by Kenyan Beatrice Chepkoech, who also edged her in the Paris Diamond League meeting.

 

Kenya's defending champion Hyvin Jepkemoi looks in fine fettle but the surprise packet may be her 18-year-old Celliphine Chespol, who caught the eye in setting a new world Under-20 record when winning the Diamond League race in Eugene.

Women's 200m final

Dafne Schippers looks odds-on favourite to defend her 200m world title, but she will no doubt face opposition from Shaunae Miller-Uibo of the Bahamas, who shrugged off her extraordinary collapse within sight of winning the 400m world title to coast into the final.

Women's 800m semi-finals

Caster Semenya, South Africa's reigning two-time Olympic champion and twice a world gold medallist, will aim to get through a loaded semi-final in her bid to add to the bronze medal she won in the 1500m. Defending champion Maryna Arzamasova of Belarus bombed out in round one, and Kenya's 2013 champion Eunice Sum was a non-starter, but the field can still boast Olympic silver and bronze medallists, Francine Niyonsaba of Burundi and Kenya's Margaret Wambui.

 

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