MELBOURNE, March 5 – David Rudisha began the Olympic year of 2016 on Saturday just as he started in 2012 with a win in the 800m at the IAAF World Challenge meeting in Melbourne.
Rudisha will be delighted if Rio 2016 emulates London 2012 where his world record run to the gold medal dragged the rest of the field to the fastest in-depth 800m ever run and left not only his rivals but also onlookers, including Steve Ovett and Sebastian Coe breathless.
Like any man, Rudisha can only take one step at a time and he was pleased with his positive start in Melbourne. In his first outing for 2016, he clocked 1:44.78.
“Coming here I was hoping for something like 1:44, 1:45,” Rudisha said after the race. “So I was happy to start with that.”
Almost as delighted was 20-year-old Australian Luke Matthews who chased Rudisha all the way home to smash his personal best by more than a second. Matthews’ 1:45.16 was his first time under the Olympic qualifying standard.
It was Rudisha’s fifth start in Melbourne for five wins, ranging from his meeting record of 1:43.15 in 2010 to his 1:44.94 to start 2015, the year he won his second world title.
New Zealand’s Tom Walsh, another regular in Melbourne both for training and competition, produced the best result on the field, taking the shot put with a distance of 20.87m.
Walsh pushed it fine this time. On Friday, he won the New Zealand title with a distance of 21.11m, before boarding a plane to Melbourne, arriving at lunch-time on the day of the meeting.
Matthew Denny got the IAAF Hammer Throw Challenge under way, taking the event with a distance of 68.63m.
Rudisha the middle-distance stand-out, but Gregson and Hills also impress.
Rudisha and Matthews were the stand-outs of a meeting traditionally strong on middle distance, but there were also impressive performances from Ryan Gregson in winning the 1500m and Madeline Hills (nee Heiner) in the women’s steeplechase.
Gregson pushed strongly at the bell in an effort to better the Olympic qualifying standard (3:36.20).
His best from the bell to the 200m mark opened up a substantial gap on New Zealand’s Eric Speakman, Collis Birmingham and Kenya’s Commonwealth champion James Magut. But Gregson paid a price for his aggression, slowing a little on the final straight into the wind to win in 3:38.06.
The chasing pack did not recover too much ground, however, Magut coming through again to take second in 3:40.03 just ahead of Birmingham and Speakman.
Hills, Genevieve Lacaze and Victoria Mitchell have all represented Australia internationally in recent times and they took on New Zealand’s World Championships representative Rosa Flanagan in a strong steeplechase field.
After a slow opening 1000 metres, Lacaze pushed the pace in the middle stages of the race. Once Heiner made her move over the last two laps, however, there was only ever going to be one winner. She crossed the line in 9:34.44, with Lacaze second in 9:43.93 and Mitchell third in 9:54.54.