Jamaica's Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce shown after winning the 4x100m relay in Moscow for the 2013 Athletics World Championships. Anja Niedringhaus / AP / August 18, 2013
Jamaica's Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce shown after winning the 4x100m relay in Moscow for the 2013 Athletics World Championships. Anja Niedringhaus / AP / August 18, 2013

Sprint superstar Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce focused on the short race for worlds



For someone with such single-minded focus on the track, Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce has shown a distinct lack of decisiveness when it comes to deciding whether she will defend both of her world sprint titles this month.

Ahead of the Stockholm Diamond League in late July, she said running in the 200 metres as well as the 100 metres at the world championships was still “possible”, before ruling it out in early August.

On Tuesday, however, she was listed in the Jamaican team for Beijing as running in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m – the three events in which she won an unprecedented haul of gold medals at the 2013 world championships in Moscow.

All, though, was apparently not as it seemed.

“No, I’m not contesting the 200m, I’ve said that a long time,” the 28-year-old told Reuters by text from her training camp in Italy on Wednesday.

Fraser-Pryce has only competed over the half-lap on one occasion this season, logging 22.37 seconds at the Jamaica Invitational on May 9 in Kingston.

In the 100 metres, though, she owns three of the five fastest times this year, including the quickest with the 10.74 she ran in Paris in early July.

Gold medals in the blue riband sprint at the Beijing and London Olympics have already established her beyond doubt as one of the greatest ever women sprinters but Fraser-Pryce still has goals.

Although she is giving up the chance to become the first woman to win the world sprint double on two occasions, Fraser-Pryce can now focus solely on her attempt to become the first woman to win three 100m titles at the world championships.

The now disgraced American Marion Jones won back-to-back titles in 1997 and 1999 and in Beijing Fraser-Pryce could better the tally she matched with her gold medals in Berlin in 2009 and Moscow in 2013.

The fourth fastest woman of all time courtesy of the 10.70 she ran in Kingston in 2012, Fraser-Pryce has run below 10.80 seconds 10 times over her career.

She has yet to dip below the 10.70 second mark, however, and join what is currently an exclusively American club comprising Florence Griffith-Joyner, whose world record of 10.49 has stood since 1988, Carmelita Jeter (10.64) and Jones (10.65).

“Training has been going good so far,” she added.

“As it relates to time I will need to just execute and see what happens. My chances are good going into the championship. But the work has to be done to reap those chances.”

Follow us on Twitter @NatSportUAE

MATCH INFO

Rugby World Cup (all times UAE)

Final: England v South Africa, Saturday, 1pm

Company Profile

Name: Direct Debit System
Started: Sept 2017
Based: UAE with a subsidiary in the UK
Industry: FinTech
Funding: Undisclosed
Investors: Elaine Jones
Number of employees: 8

Confirmed bouts (more to be added)

Cory Sandhagen v Umar Nurmagomedov
Nick Diaz v Vicente Luque
Michael Chiesa v Tony Ferguson
Deiveson Figueiredo v Marlon Vera
Mackenzie Dern v Loopy Godinez

Tickets for the August 3 Fight Night, held in partnership with the Department of Culture and Tourism Abu Dhabi, went on sale earlier this month, through www.etihadarena.ae and www.ticketmaster.ae.

MATCH INFO

Euro 2020 qualifier

Norway v Spain, Saturday, 10.45pm, UAE

Brief scores:

Manchester United 4

Young 13', Mata 28', Lukaku 42', Rashford 82'

Fulham 1

Kamara 67' (pen),

Red card: Anguissa (68')

Man of the match: Juan Mata (Man Utd)

Seemar’s top six for the Dubai World Cup Carnival:

1. Reynaldothewizard
2. North America
3. Raven’s Corner
4. Hawkesbury
5. New Maharajah
6. Secret Ambition

THE SPECS

GMC Sierra Denali 1500

Engine: 6.2-litre V8

Transmission: 10-speed automatic

Power: 420hp

Torque: 623Nm

Price: Dh232,500


Abtal

Keep up with all the Middle East and North Africa athletes at the 2024 Paris Olympics

      By signing up, I agree to The National's privacy policy
      Abtal