
Letsile Tebogo's plan to win two sprints at the Rabat Diamond League did not end as he hoped
RABAT, MOROCCO: Olympic champion Letsile Tebogo did not succeed in his attempt to win both sprint races at the Diamond League meet in Rabat. He finished last in the 100 meters and dropped out of the 200 meters race.
From Botswana, Tebogo finished the 100-meter race with a final time of 10.43 seconds. However, South Africa's Akani Simbine finished with a time of 9.95 seconds, winning his third Diamond League win this season.
Tebogo won gold in the 200-meter race at the 2024 Paris Olympics, and it was his first time competing in both 100 and 200 meters at a Diamond League event. He also admitted that he was looking forward to it. However, 70 minutes after running the 100 meters, the athlete did not show up for the 200-meter race. With this, American sprinter Courtney Lindsey won the race with a final time of 20.04 seconds, and it was his f irst victory of the season.
In a social media post, Tebogo expressed: 'Today's performance wasn't what I had hoped for, I'm currently dealing with a recurring injury, which hasn't been easy. However, I'm channeling this disappointment and pain into resolve. I'm already focused on recovery and growth, and I know I will come back a stronger man. See y'all soon❤️🩹'
Netizens shared their support in the comments section and said: ' Rallying behind you champ! Get well soon 🎉🎉', 'We know what you're capable of and know you'll be back at your best soon ❤️', 'Wish u speedy recovery our babe .May almighty give you strength always. We love you more and more. Have a good rest and come back strong, we shall miss you but your health is important to us as your fans💎🩵💐💐💐', '🫂🫶Wishing you a peaceful mental, emotional, and physical recovery', 'You will bounce back Champ 👏❤️', and 'Wishing you strength, healing, and a full recovery. Your courage and dedication inspire us all—you will be back stronger!' Other tournament updates
In similar news, Botswana's Tshepiso Masalela celebrated his 26th birthday by winning with a world-leading time of 1:42.70 in the men's 800-meter race. He is ahead of Britain's Max Burgin, who won second place, and Kenya's Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi, who won third place.
Furthermore, in the 400-meter race, American Jacory Patterson beat South Africa's Zakithi Nene, finishing with a final time of 44.37 seconds. Another impressive American performance came from Jonah Koech, who finished the 1500-meter category in 3:31.43 and set a new meeting record.
Beatrice Chebet of Kenya also won the women's 3000-meter race with a thrilling time of 8:11.56. This record is the second-fastest time ever, behind Wang Junxia's 1993 world record of 8:06.11.
Hashtags

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

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
Anti-doping bodies condemn ‘dangerous' drug-fueled Enhanced Games
The Enhanced Games team attend a press conference to announce the event scheduled for May 2026. PHOTO: REUTERS LOS ANGELES – Anti-doping bodies on May 22 condemned plans for the first edition of the Enhanced Games in Las Vegas, an Olympics-style event where athletes will be free to use performance-enhancing drugs. The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) and bodies across the world have taken aim at the event after organisers revealed the date, venue and format for the competition. The Enhanced Games will be staged in Las Vegas in May 2026, with athletes participating in three sports – athletics, swimming and weightlifting. Athletes will be allowed to use drugs which are banned across international sport such as steroids and human-growth hormones, with winners of each event receiving US$250,000 (S$322,000), and a bonus of US$1 million for anyone who breaks a world record. Aron D'Souza, the Australian entrepreneur who is the founder of the event, says the Games are an exercise in testing the boundaries of human performance. 'The Enhanced Games is renovating the Olympic model for the 21st century,' he said on May 21 as details of the Games were revealed. 'We are here to move humanity forward. The old rules didn't just hold back athletes, they held back humanity. 'We are not just organising competition, we are in the business of unlocking human potential. We are the vanguard of super-humanity.' The Games will take place from May 21-24 at the Resorts World hotel in Las Vegas. Swimming will hold 100m and 50m freestyle events, along with 100m and 50m butterfly. Athletics events include the 100m and 100m and 110m hurdles. Weightlifters will compete in the snatch and clean & jerk disciplines. Wada, the global anti-doping watchdog, condemned plans for the event as 'dangerous', voicing concern it could lead athletes around the world to dabble in illicit substances with potentially deadly consequences. 'Wada condemns the Enhanced Games as a dangerous and irresponsible concept,' the agency said in a statement. 'The health and well-being of athletes is Wada's No. 1 priority. Clearly this event would jeopardise that as it seeks to promote the use of powerful substances and methods by athletes for the purposes of entertainment and marketing. 'There have been many examples of athletes suffering serious long-term side-effects from their use of prohibited substances and methods. Some have died.' Travis Tygart, the head of the United States Anti-Doping Agency (Usada), said the event was a 'dangerous clown show that puts profit over principle'. Australia's anti-doping body, Sport Integrity Australia (SIA), also condemned the risks posed to athletes participating in the Enhanced Games. 'We work to ensure that sport is safe and fair to all,' SIA chief executive Sarah Benson said in a statement. 'The Enhanced Games is promoting the complete opposite and poses a significant risk to athlete health and safety.' D'Souza, however, has pushed back on those criticisms, insisting that the competition would be conducted 'safely'. AFP Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
Enhanced Games to launch in 2026, bucking global anti-doping norms
The Enhanced Games team attends a press conference on May 21 to announce that it is scheduled for May 21 to 24 in Las Vegas, Nevada. PHOTO: REUTERS – The Enhanced Games have set their inaugural competition for May 2026 in Las Vegas, with swimming, athletics and weightlifting on the agenda for athletes using substances banned in official competition to the consternation of anti-doping bodies. Basking in Las Vegas' neon glow at the launch, founder Aron D'Souza on May 21 urged athletes to take a gamble on the novel competition that he believes can transform sports science, but critics deride as a freak show. Organisers touted what they believe to be their biggest success story so far: Kristian Gkolomeev, a Greek swimmer who never made the podium in four Olympics but surpassed one of his sport's great achievements under the Enhanced Games programme. Gkolomeev swam two hundredths of a second faster than the 50m freestyle official world record that has stood for more than 15 years, clocking 20.89 in February with an inline full-body open water suit that falls outside World Aquatics standards. 'I'm kind of like the driver in the car, but I need the team behind me,' Gkolomeev, who finished fifth in the event at the Paris Games, said ahead of the Las Vegas event. Enhanced Games have held the 31-year-old up as an example of what can be possible under their regime, while declining to disclose which 'performance enhancements' he used, citing medical confidentiality. 'He should be retired but, in fact, he's swimming faster than any human being has ever done so. Why? Because he used technology and science to enhance his performance,' said D'Souza. 'Once the world realises that, I think everyone is going to want it. Every middle-aged guy who once played competitive sport and is now suffering from back pain is going to say, 'What is he on and how do I get it?'' The Enhanced Games operate under the principle that banning performance-enhancing drugs in major competition does not protect athletes but rather stifles their performance. 'Our project is a lot like Formula One because the research that happens to make Formula One cars drive faster eventually percolates out onto the road,' the Australian entrepreneur told Reuters. 'And in the same way, the science and medicine that is used to make athletes achieve world record performances at increasingly older ages will allow all humans, all of our society to age more healthily and gracefully.' Participants could earn prize money totalling up to US$500,000 (S$645,800) per event, plus bonuses for surpassing a world-record mark. For swimming, the 50m freestyle, 100m freestyle, 50m butterfly and 100m butterfly are on the agenda. Athletics has the 100m sprint along with the 110m and 100m hurdles, while weightlifting will feature the snatch, and clean and jerk. The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) staunchly opposes the project, warning athletes that they risk bans and their health. The International Federation of Sports Medicine said the project could lead to exploitation of young athletes. 'Thinking that because you do medical checks on the spot is going to give you a good idea of the health risks of abuse of doping substances, again, is medical and scientific nonsense,' said Wada science director Olivier Rabin. 'It's like the Roman circus, you know, you sacrifice the lives of people purely for entertainment. What's the value of this? I don't think any responsible society should move in that direction.' D'Souza argues that doping in professional and amateur sport is rampant despite efforts to eliminate the use of banned substances, leading to it being done secretly and unsafely. 'Instead, at Enhanced Games, we're reversing that, making it a fair, level, transparent field so that innovation can be illustrated in a very public way to support technological progress,' he said. D'Souza announced in 2024 that he had attracted big-name investors in Paypal co-founder Peter Thiel, tech investor Christian Angermayer and former Coinbase Chief Technology Officer Balaji Srinivasan. That year he also signed the first Enhanced Games athlete, retired Australian world champion swimmer James Magnussen, who agreed to take banned performance-enhancing drugs in an attempt to surpass Cesar Cielo's 50m freestyle record. Andriy Govorov, the Ukrainian 50m butterfly world record holder and world bronze medallist, and 21-year-old Bulgarian swimmer Josif Miladinov, a European silver medallist, joined the Enhanced Games program in April. Magnussen, who had retired from competition in 2019, told reporters that training with Enhanced Games reignited his passion for the sport and that the response from his fellow athletes had been 'overwhelmingly positive'. "I was waking up each day with an enthusiasm to train, to compete. I felt so healthy, so motivated," he said. "It's honestly the happiest I've been in seven years," he said. "As athletes we have a greater risk appetite than the general population and see an event like the Enhanced Games as an opportunity." The Enhanced Games are set for Las Vegas from May 21 to 24. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
3 hours ago
- Straits Times
The pro-doping Enhanced Games are partly the Olympics' fault
NEW YORK – Performance-enhancing drugs destroy the bodies, minds and reputations of athletes. Nonetheless, a group of investors, including Peter Thiel and Donald Trump Jr, see a business opportunity. They recently announced the first edition of the Enhanced Games – a kind of doping Olympics in which athletes are allowed and even encouraged to take PEDs – which will be held in Las Vegas next May. It is a perverse concept, but that has not stopped four Olympians from already signing on. Other athletes will likely follow, lured by millions of dollars in prize money and appearance fees. The actual Olympics have nothing to do with this, but the world's most popular sporting event is not blameless. Its business model, under which athletes are paid little – if anything – creates the opportunity for something as warped as a sporting event that encourages doping to emerge. Consider the dilemma faced by Kristian Gkolomeev, an accomplished 31-year-old swimmer who has competed in the last four Summer Olympics for Greece. By his own admission, it has not exactly been a financially lucrative existence. In 2016, for example, the Greek government supported some of its top Olympians with stipends of less than US$1,000 (S$1,300) per month. Then and now medal winners receive lucrative bonuses, but Gkolomeev has never won one. Enter the Enhanced Games. In 2024, in hopes of drumming up interest in the event, organisers offered a US$1 million bounty for breaking the men's 50 and 100-metre freestyle swim. Gkolomeev signed up, juiced himself, and sure enough, 'broke' – a term that should be used loosely when it involves steroid usage – the 50m record in February. In late May, at the Enhanced Games announcement, he was unapologetic when he told reporters: 'A successful year at the Enhanced Games for me is more than I could make in 10 careers.' That is a sorry commentary on the current state of Olympic sports such as swimming. After all, it is not as if the International Olympic Committee is hurting. Lucrative media rights contracts and sponsorships allowed the organisation to earn US$7.6 billion between 2021 and 2024. What happens to that cash? The IOC says 90 per cent of it is distributed to organisations throughout the Olympic movement, from National Olympic Committees to host cities. Unfortunately, most of that money does not reach competitors. Instead, it is devoted to things like training facilities, host city stadiums and executive salaries. According to a 2020 report by Global Athlete, an athlete welfare organisation, between 2013 and 2016, only 4.1 per cent of IOC and NOC funds went to contestants. The situation does not appear to have improved over the last decade. In 2024, a congressionally mandated report found that around 26 per cent of American participants in the Olympic and Paralympic pipelines earn less than US$15,000 per year. Athletes in developing countries often have it worse. In Kenya, for example, some who trained for the 2024 Olympics received allowances of roughly US$7.50 per day. Bonuses for winning medals can make up some financial ground. In Kenya, a 2024 gold medal was worth around US$23,000; in the US, it earned US$37,500. That is a nice check, but once an athlete spreads it out over four years (or more) and accounts for intensive, often full-time training, it is far less impressive. US Olympians, for example, report spending an average of US$21,700 annually on just competition fees and memberships. That compensation and expense structure is not an accident or oversight. The modern Olympic Games were launched by a European aristocrat who expected athletes to compete for the joy of sport, not money. That sentiment has remained stubbornly intact even as the Games have evolved into a multi-billion-dollar advertising platform for the world's biggest brands. In 2024, for example, the IOC reacted furiously when World Athletics, the governing body for sports such as track and field, announced plans to pay US$50,000 to gold medalists in its events. From the IOC's perspective, compensation only serves to widen the gaps between more and less privileged countries and competitors. It is a tone-deaf response that highlights how out of touch – and perhaps ambivalent – the Olympics are with the lived reality of the athletes who generate its revenue. The Enhanced Games are built to exploit the oversight. 'One of our core principles is we want to make our athletes as rich as possible,' explained Aron D'Souza, president of the sporting event, in a May interview with Men's Health. There will be ample opportunities to do that in Las Vegas. The Enhanced Games plan to host competitions in three categories – swimming, track and field, and weightlifting. Each event will feature a US$500,000 purse, with the winner earning US$250,000. In addition, everyone competing will receive an appearance fee and is eligible to win bonuses for 'breaking' world records (as Gkolomeev did). That is potentially a lot of money, though it is not likely to be enough for the world's top Olympians – those who might win Olympic gold. They would be forfeiting their reputations and chances at sponsorship deals. But the Enhanced Games does not need that kind of competitor. After all, enhancement is all about taking someone who cannot win a race or set a record and turning them into an athlete who can. There are many people who will never touch a medal podium who will be eligible for that role. For anyone who cares about the integrity of sports, this is a tragic outcome. And it would not be the last of its kind. As long as the Olympics and other elite sporting competitions remain tethered to outdated beliefs of compensation, there will be opportunities for exploitation. Over time, each instance will only serve to erode the public's confidence in the fairness of competition. BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.