Paris: Morocco's Soufiane El Bakkali retained his Olympic 3000m steeplechase title on Wednesday to become just the third Arab to win double gold as world record holder Lamecha Girma suffered a worrying fall.
El Bakkali timed 8min 06.05sec for victory with American Kenneth Rooks taking silver in 8:06.41 and Kenya's Abraham Kibiwot claiming bronze (8:06.47).
Ethiopia's Girma was left prone on the track after falling at a hurdle before being eventually stretchered off.
Girma was taken to hospital, according to a source at the Ethiopian athletics federation, but was not undergoing surgery.
El Bakkali became the second man to successfully defend his Olympic steeplechase title after Volmari Iso-Hollo of Finland last achieved the feat at the 1936 Berlin Games, but said the year had "not been easy."
"I was suffering from an injury and I was able to overcome it," said El Bakkali, who was able to break Ethiopian team tactics with the help of his own teammate Mohamed Tindouft.
"The race was not easy. There was an Ethiopian plan, and thank God my compatriot Tindouft helped me. I asked him during the race to do anything to help me, so he pushed himself towards the front and raised the pace to break the Ethiopian block."
El Bakkali admitted that his injury woes had even left him thinking he might not participate in Paris.
"Forgive me, I now understand what I did," he said, in tears after the race.
"I entered history with this second consecutive Olympic title, and I owe it to the Moroccan fans who did not stop supporting me with their messages that I was unable to respond to, and to the current and former champions."
The 28-year-old El Bakkali arrived at the Olympics with a target on his back, having won the last three global championships.
After first triumphing at the Covid-delayed Tokyo Olympics in 2021, when he became the first non-Kenyan runner to win the Olympic steeplechase title since 1980, he confirmed his status with back-to-back victories in world championships in Eugene and Budapest.
His second Olympic gold in the French capital leaves him in rare company among Arab athletes to have doubled up at the Summer Games.
Only his Moroccan compatriot Hicham El Guerrouj, who won 1500m and 5,000m gold in Athens 2004, and Tunisian swimmer Oussama Mellouli (1500m freestyle in Beijing 2008 and 10km marathon in London 2012) have achieved the feat.
While El Bakkali sped away for victory, there was concern for Girma, the world record holder who fell badly on the third-last barrier.
Girma clipped the hurdle with his knee and plunged head first into the track. He was left prone and motionless, before receiving medical treatment.
He eventually left the track on a stretcher with his neck secured by a brace. - AFP
UPDATE 3-Olympics-Athletics-All mine this time, Australian Kennedy soars to pole vault title
(Adds quotes)
By Lori Ewing
PARIS, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Australia's Nina Kennedy soared to the gold medal in the Olympic women's pole vault on Wednesday, a year after she shared top spot on the world championship medal podium with American rival Katie Moon.
The 27-year-old Kennedy, the first Australian woman to win the event, cleared a season's best 4.90 metres, fiercely pumping her fist several times after another epic battle with Moon.
"I wanted that outright gold medal," Kennedy told reporters. "I didn't want to share it this time. I became really confident in talking to the media, it was really scary, really vulnerable, to lay it all out there. I'm just really happy I got the job done."
Moon, the Tokyo gold medallist and two-times world champion, cleared 4.85m to claim silver. Canada's Alysha Newman went over the same height but was awarded bronze due to more missed jumps.
Kennedy and Moon decided to share gold at last year's world championships in Budapest after they both vaulted 4.90m. Moon defended the decision after scathing criticism on social media, saying the danger of vaulting increases as fatigue sets in.
Kennedy made sure there was no sharing on Wednesday at Stade de France, failing on her first attempt at 4.70 before flying over the next three heights with ease.
After Kennedy's successful attempt at 4.90, Moon's only chance to steal victory was by clearing 4.95 but they both failed at that height.
Kennedy said she had a sneaking suspicion victory was in the bag after she cleared 4.90.
"I knew first-attempt clearances at those high bars were going to take the gold. I put all my focus into that exact second, and that's how I won," she said.
Her victory was some redemption for the Tokyo Olympics in which a serious quadriceps injury contributed to her elimination in the preliminary round.
Since winning the 2018 Commonwealth Games title, the 30-year-old Newman had a string of frustrating seasons, punctuated by a serious concussion suffered in 2021.
"It wasn't just my mental health, I had brain problems. I had a brain health issue," said Newman, adding her neurologist was in the crowd on Wednesday.
"I wasn't happy. I didn't like the sport at that time, and it was a struggle for me. I needed to step away. I learned to love track again."
(Reporting by Lori Ewing, editing by Ed Osmond)