David Rudisha became the first athlete to set a new world record on the track at London 2012 as he won 800m gold.
David Rudisha became the
first athlete to set a new world record on the track at London 2012 as he won
800m gold.
The 23-year-old Kenyan
stormed to victory in his debut Olympic final to become the first man inside
one minute 41 seconds, clocking 1:40.91.
Analysis
Denise LewisOlympic heptathlon champion and BBC Sport athletics pundit
"It was just such
an incredible race to witness. To run the way he has done here and in a time
like that is just sensational. What he can go and do now is inspire a whole new
generation of young Rudishas who want to have this opportunity to shine on the
global stage."
Botswana 18-year-old
Nijel Amos took silver, with another teenager, Kenya's Timothy Kitum, in
bronze.
Britain's Andrew Osagie
was in eighth place but still clocked a personal best of 1:43.77.
Reigning world champion
Rudisha led from the off, running an opening lap of 49.28 seconds and storming
further clear down the back straight to beat his own world record.
With the rest of the
field dragged along by his pace, only Abukaker Kaki in seventh failed to record
a personal best.
Rudisha told BBC Sport:
"Wow! I'm very happy. This is the moment I have been waiting for for a
very long time. To come here and to break the world record is something
unbelievable.
Analysis
Tom FordyceChief sports writer, BBC Sport
"Rudisha,
unchanging and unflagging from gun to tape, has the ground-eating stride of
some relentless robot."
"I was
well-prepared and I had no doubt about winning. Today the weather was beautiful
and I decided just to go for it."
But the new world record
holder believes he can go even faster.
He said: "After
running two rounds before the final I got a little bit tired. I told the physio
yesterday that I was feeling sore after the semis, so if I can get fresh then I
can still improve on that."
Earlier on Thursday 2012
chief Lord Coe said Rudisha was "the most impressive track and field
athlete at these Games".
Rudisha said: "Lord
Coe is a very good friend of mine and earlier, in February, he took me round
this stadium. That was good for me. I wanted to come here and make him
proud."
A first for last
·
Andrew
Osagie's time of 1:43.77 is a
world record for the eighth-placed finisher in an Olympic 800m final
·
It would have won him
the gold medal at the last three Olympics
·
Now fourth-fastest
Briton over 800m behind Sebastian Coe, Steve Cram and Peter Elliott
In Amos and Kitum, 17,
the future of the event looks in good hands but whether anyone can get near the
dominant Rudisha before the next Games in Rio looks unlikely.
Amos clocked 1:41.73 -
the 11th fastest 800m of all time - to become the fourth-fastest man ever over
the distance. Only Rudisha, Wilson Kipketer and 2012 Games chief Seb Coe have
run two laps of the track faster.
Rudisha has set the
three fastest 800m times of all time and managed six of the fastest eight 800m
ever.
His pace was consistent
throughout, clocking 23 seconds for the first 200m, 25 for the second, 25 for
the third, and 26.1 for the final quarter.
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