Amber Anning makes British history to win 400m gold at World Athletics Indoor Championships
Amber Anning stormed to 400 metres gold to claim her first senior individual international medal on the second day of the World Athletics Indoor Championships in China.
The British record holder, who collected a pair of relay bronzes at last summer's Paris Olympics, crossed the line in 50.60 seconds to pip the United States' Alexis Holmes by three hundredths of a second, while Norway's Henriette Jaeger took bronze.
It was redemption for the 24-year-old, who was disqualified from the same event due to a lane infringement at the European Indoor Championships earlier this month.
"It feels amazing," said Anning, who became the first British woman to win an individual world indoor sprint title.
"I came here wanting the win after the disappointment of the Europeans. I wanted the gold and I'm grateful that I was able to get the job done and bring a medal back to the home city.
"I knew with the calibre of girls in this race it was going to be close, especially to get that break. But I stayed strong, I had faith in myself, and I got to the end and I fought for that line."
Amy Hunt, who claimed 4x100m relay silver in Paris, was delighted by her fifth-place finish in the women's 60m after qualifying for her maiden senior individual world final.
Hunt improved on the morning's semis by running 7.11secs in the final, and said: "I can't believe I'm fifth in the world in an event that nobody thinks I can do apart from me and my coach!
"That was one of the most fun races I have ever done in my life and at the end of the day that's what it is all about. I was smiling at the start line, I was stood next to the world champion and I nearly had them. A few inches off, a couple more metres I would have got them."
There was disappointment for pole vaulter Molly Caudery, who was unable to defend her title from Glasgow 2024 in a competition plagued by technical issues.
Caudery, who has experienced an injury-hampered start to her season, finished fourth.
She said: "It was definitely not what I wanted but I am disappointed to say the least. It was a really, really, tough competition and there were a lot of technical issues, but I don't want to put any excuses out.
"If there is an hour wait in the middle of the competition when it's getting to those medal bars - the really important bars - it shouldn't be happening at a competition like this. The girls did struggle with that - as did I - it ruins the flow and even I know we were all deflated after, but that's championships for you."
More medals are up for grabs on Sunday's final day of competition. Debutant Funminiyi Olajide is in the women's long jump before Scott Lincoln appears in the shot put.
Scotland's Neil Gourley goes for gold in the men's 1500m final and Olympic bronze medallist Georgia Hunter Bell is in the women's final of the same distance.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC Sports
an hour ago
- NBC Sports
Katie Ledecky gives Stanford commencement keynote address, tells 2012 Olympic story
Katie Ledecky returned to Stanford, her alma mater, to give a 21-minute keynote address at the commencement for the university's largest graduating class in history. Ledecky, 28, noted she is no more than seven years older than the graduates: 1,110 earning doctoral degrees, 2,655 master's degrees and 2,140 bachelor's degrees. 'I can tell you everything you need to know about freestyle and flip turns,' she said. 'I cannot tell you everything you need to know about life.' Ledecky graduated from Stanford in 2020 with a major in psychology and a minor in political science. In her speech, she reflected on her first Olympics in London in 2012, when she was the youngest U.S. athlete across all sports at age 15. She remembered then-Prince William and Princess Kate being in the crowd for the 800m freestyle final. She remembered being in a lane next to the defending Olympic gold medalist and home favorite Rebecca Adlington of Great Britain. 'So I know the crowd will be chanting Bec-ky, Bec-ky,' she said. 'I had programmed myself to think they are shouting Le-deck-y, Le-deck-y.' Ledecky mentioned that coaches advised her not to go out too fast. Yet she took the lead from the start. 'About midway through the race, I remember thinking, where is everybody,' she said. 'There's a brief second where I wonder if I'm doing something wrong, like I've gone out too fast. Then I tell myself, just keep going. And I did. I won by over four seconds.' The anecdote was part of Ledecky's theme: how to go the distance in whatever field the graduates choose. 'You don't have to win the race,' said Ledecky, who estimated she has swum 26,000 miles in her life to set up about 5 1/2 miles of Olympic finals. 'You just need to win your race. And winning your race means falling in love with the process. Fall in love with the process, not the podium.' She ended her speech by saying, 'Take your mark, and go out there and make your mark.' Nick Zaccardi,
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Kookaburras down India 3-2 to go fourth in Pro League
The Kookaburras have surged to fourth on the FIH Pro League standings, after a clinical, high-pressure 3-2 defeat of India to remain unbeaten as they continue their FIH Pro League title defence in Europe. Less than 24 hours after their dramatic come-from-behind win over the same foes, the Kookaburras unleashed more firepower in Antwerp, as prolific goalscorer Blake Govers marked his return to international competition for the first time since the 2024 Paris Olympic Games. It took the NSW striker just five minutes to find the back of the net with a trademark rocketing strike to score his 155th goal in 168 appearances. "It's awesome to be back. The boys got around me and to get that first clutch, first goal was pretty nice," Govers said. "I would've liked to have gotten a few more. But it's been a disjointed year and it's just good to be back playing. "Everything's behind me, the body's feeling a hundred percent, and I'm looking forward to the rest of this tournament." 𝐅𝐮𝐥𝐥 𝐓𝐢𝐦𝐞: 𝐈𝐧𝐝𝐢𝐚 𝟐 - 𝟑 𝐀𝐮𝐬𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐚Australia hold on to their first half lead to hand India their sixth consecutive defeat at the FIH Hockey Pro League 2024-25.📱 Stream all the #FIHProLeague matches on #Hockey — International Hockey Federation (@FIH_Hockey) June 15, 2025 Govers' goal came at a pivotal moment for Australia, as they answered to India's early lead with aggressive pace. Reeling from five consecutive FIH Pro League defeats, India opened with fury through Sanjay, who struck early from a penalty corner to claim a 1-0 lead inside three minutes. But the Kookaburras answered immediately, with Tim Brand deftly deflecting a sublime Ky Willott strike before Govers' solo effort flipped the match. After three goals in three minutes, Australia were in full control with a 2-1 lead, applying relentless first-half pressure, and earning repeated penalty corners, which soon led to their third goal. Showing their versatility at the penalty corner, Victoria's Cooper Burns rifled home a strike to score his fourth goal in just 10 international outings, since his debut in February earlier this year. India clawed a goal back in the third quarter through Dilpreet Singh, sparking hopes of a comeback. But despite a late surge and even pulling their goalkeeper in a final desperate push, they couldn't find the equaliser. "We're really pleased with that, it was an intense match, and that's what we expect in a game against India, it's always back and forth, and we've played them a lot over the last few years," Player of the Match Nathan Ephraums told 7plus. The Kookaburras' European campaign has gained serious momentum. They sit in fourth on the FIH Pro League standings with 18 points, just one point behind third-placed Belgium.
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Steph Curry-signed Topps NOW card sells for record $518k
A Steph Curry Topps Now 1/1 autographed card sold for an almost inexplicable $518,500 on Saturday night, breaking the record for the price paid for a Topps Now card. The card came from Curry's famous "Nuit, Nuit" Olympic gold moment when the U.S. men's basketball team defeated host France on Aug. 10, 2024. Industry estimates for the card were in the $100,000 range. Advertisement Topps Now sold Olympic sets in the Summer of 2024 with the 1/1 autographed chase cards randomly sent. The top chase — a card signed by Curry, Kevin Durant and LeBron James — has famously never been found. A Gold 1/1 of the card, unsigned, sold for $53,680 in a Goldin Auction last year. The Curry card was received by a lucky collector and sent to PSA, where it received a 10 for the card and a 10 for the auto. The 2024 card beat out a 2009-10 Curry National Treasures RPA out of 99, which sold Saturday night in Goldin for $317,811. Darren Rovell is the founder of cllct and one of the country's leading reporters on the collectibles market. He previously worked for ESPN, CNBC and The Action Network.