GB's Azu claims 60m gold as Robertson wins bronze
Great Britain's Jeremiah Azu claimed men's 60m gold at the European Athletics Indoor Championships to land his first individual international title, as team-mate Andrew Robertson won bronze.
Azu, 23, ran a personal best of 6.49 seconds to cross the line ahead of Sweden's Henrik Larsson in 6.52, with Robertson third in 6.55 in Saturday night's final.
Having qualified fastest from the morning heats, Azu made a further statement by setting a European-leading time and then personal best 6.52 secs in the semi-finals.
But he saved his best for the medal race, which took place just two and a half hours later, to clinch GB's first gold in Apeldoorn, the Netherlands.
"Honestly, I didn't think I won it. I thought Henrik was five metres in front of me. When you're in a line you can't really tell what is going on. I was pushing every bit of me to the line," Azu, who recently returned his training to the UK, told BBC Sport.
"I know I'm in the right place and this confirmed to me that I've made the right decisions. This is just the start of the journey for us as a team. We are coming to take it all and I'm excited to be on this journey now."
Azu becomes the ninth British man to win the title - and first since Richard Kilty won back-to-back titles in 2017.
Podium finishes for Azu and Robertson follow the bronze medals won by 1500m runner Revee Walcott-Nolan and the mixed 4x400m relay quartet.
It is a first individual international medal for 34-year-old Robertson, who received a late call-up to the squad and finished fourth in 2021.
"This time last week I was having a cheesecake, I was having a great time with my family in Scarborough," Robertson joked.
"I got the call on Wednesday to be a reserve but I was always prepared [to compete] because it has been my goal for a long time. Aged 34, to come away with my second-fastest time ever, I can't ask for any more."
Azu had a taste of gold on the international stage as part of Britain's team at the 2022 European Championships in Munich, where 100m bronze represented his first senior individual medal at that level.
But despite playing his part in Team GB's 4x100m relay bronze at Paris 2024 last summer, Azu has since described the experience of his first Olympic Games as "bittersweet" after he was disqualified from the individual event for a false start.
He has since taken the significant decision to switch his training set-up after starting his family, leaving Marco Airale's group in Italy to return home to Cardiff and reunite with former coach Helen James.
The young Welshman, who retained his British indoor 60m title in February, already appears to be benefitting from that move, now back under the guidance of the coach who encouraged him to take up the sport as a teenager.
A two-time European under-23 100m champion, Azu will now target a first individual podium on the global stage at the World Indoor Championships in Nanjing, China this month.
"Speechless. It has been a crazy couple of months. To top it off by becoming European champion, I'm so grateful to god," Azu said.
"Life is such a flash and it is so great to have these moments. I am so grateful to be standing here and calling myself a European champion."
British debutant John Otugade exited at the semi-final stage on Saturday, finishing fifth in his race in 6.67 secs.
Elsewhere on the penultimate night of action, Ireland's Mark English qualified for Sunday's men's 800m final, running one minute 45.89 seconds for third place in his semi-final, but British debutant Justin Davies missed out.
The British team will have several opportunities to add to their medal tally on the final day of competition in Apeldoorn.
Britain's George Mills will aim to deny Jakob Ingebrigtsen a fourth consecutive men's 3,000m title, which would mean the Norwegian matching the men's record of seven European indoor titles.
Fresh from his 1500m triumph, Ingebrigtsen coasted to victory in his heat and will be the strong favourite to complete a third consecutive 1500m and 3,000m double.
However, Mills, son of former England international footballer Danny, will line up as the fastest European 3,000m runner this year and controlled his heat to reach the final, where he is joined by team-mate James West.
Three British athletes qualified for the women's final, with two-time bronze medallist Melissa Courtney-Bryant, the fastest European woman this year, joined by 18-year-old debutant Innes FitzGerald and Hannah Nuttall.
Morgan Lake will target her first international medal since the 2018 Commonwealth Games in the women's high jump final, in which Ukraine's Olympic champion and world record holder Yaroslava Mahuchikh goes for a third consecutive title.
GB captain Scott Lincoln will aim to qualify for the men's shot put final during the morning session, while Jade O'Dowda contests the women's pentathlon, and sprinters Bianca Williams, Joy Eze and Amy Hunt bid for women's 60m medals.
Relay honours are also up for grabs in the men's and women's 4x400m finals, with Dutch star Femke Bol aiming to bring the curtain down with a second gold at her home championships.
Coverage of the final day of action begins at 09:00 GMT on BBC Two and the BBC Sport website and app.
Hashtags

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


Chicago Tribune
2 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Chicago Cubs miscues scrap a defensive gem in 4-3 extra-innings walk-off loss — and Craig Counsell gets ejected again
PHILADELPHIA — Matthew Boyd kept coming back to the error. Two innings earlier, the Chicago Cubs' lefty had caught Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Trea Turner leaning the wrong way at first base to end the third for his National League-leading fifth pickoff of the season. Boyd was primed to repeat it with rookie Otto Kemp in the fifth inning, but he wildly misfired and his pickoff throw got past first baseman Michael Busch to allow Kemp to advance from first to third. Kemp scored on the next pitch as Boyd left a slider over the plate to Weston Wilson, whose single put the Phillies ahead. The Cubs came back to tie it in the eighth on Ian Happ's solo home run and took the lead in the top of the 11th. But the Phillies answered with two in the bottom half as Brandon Marsh's bases-loaded single against Daniel Palencia handed the Cubs a 4-3 walk-off loss Monday at Citizens Bank Park. 'The part that sticks out to me is the error, that's a difference in that game, that inning, that run, plays out differently, frankly if I pick that guy off, and more importantly, just make a good throw,' Boyd said. 'Even if he's not out, the inning plays out differently.' That the Cubs were even in the game late is a testament to their defense helping the pitching staff navigate 16 hits. The offense managed just five, two of which were solo home runs, on a night Phillies ace Zack Wheeler tallied his 1,000th career strikeout and held them to one run in six innings. Kyle Tucker's home run was the first Wheeler surrendered in the first inning this year (13 starts). 'Our defense is super important,' manager Craig Counsell said. 'You see tonight we had two strikeouts. That means the ball is going to be in play a lot, and so we've got to play good defense. That's a strength of this team. We did it tonight, I think we'll continue to do it, and it's going to continue to be very important.' The Cubs (40-26) turned three double plays and recorded two outfield assists on throws to second base by Tucker and Happ in the second and eighth innings, respectively. For a second consecutive day, Counsell watched the end of the game from the visiting manager's office following an ejection, this time getting tossed in the bottom of the ninth inning. Counsell explained postgame he became upset when home plate umpire Stu Scheurwater didn't deny Phillies' Kemp was outside the baseline and interfered with catcher Carson Kelly's throw to first base on a chopper in front of the plate. However, Scheurwater told Counsell he deemed Kemp's actions didn't affect the play because Busch caught the ball. Counsell disagreed and adamantly believed Kemp impacted the sequence, adding, 'it's a situation where if Michael doesn't catch the ball they call him out.' Fortunately for the Cubs, it didn't come back to cost them the game that inning with Brad Keller and Drew Pomeranz getting the next three outs without a runner advancing past first base. 'He cares about this group and he cares about the team, and when he goes out there, it's to help the players to protect that guy,' Happ said of Counsell. 'And he knows the rules, he knows the rules really well and I think if there's one thing that's going to frustrate him, it's going to be the rules.'
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Border City Centurions in promotion picture after unbeaten season
CARLISLE'S Border City Centurions are eyeing promotion to the National Flag Football League (NFFL) Premiership after a perfect first half to the season. The Carlisle-based Flag American Football Team are currently at the summit of the NFFL Division 1 table after overtaking their London rivals and are pushing for promotion to the premiership. Advertisement Flag Football is a rapidly growing, high-speed, and skill-based format of non-contact American Football and is set to feature at the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. (Image: Border City Centurions) The Centurions, who were formed in 2022, defeated Division 1 North B leaders North Yorkshire in emphatic fashion last time out, with a statement 55-12 win, moving the Centurions to the top of the table and extending their unbeaten streak. The Carlisle-based outfit now faces a triple-header when they travel to Manchester this weekend (Saturday, June 14) to take on the Wirral, Lancashire, and West Lancashire county games. With nine games remaining in the NFFL Division 1 season, three wins from these games could put the local side within two wins of being crowned champions. Advertisement (Image: Border City Centurions) Ahead of the 'gruelling' triple-header, head coach Nick Weston said: "We're built for this, our guys play a gritty game and thrive on road trips against bigger teams. "After all, the bigger they are, the harder they fall, right?" Aside from aiming to clinch NFFL glory, the Centurions also have their sights set firmly on the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, with several of their star players hoping to be in the picture for potential GB squad selection.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Loanee's Middlesbrough message - and reflections on Michael Carrick's coaching work
SAMUEL ILING-JUNIOR feels his time at Middlesbrough has turned him into a better player, and has praised Michael Carrick for the one-one-one tuition he received from the former Boro boss at Rockliffe Park. Iling-Junior joined Boro on loan in January, having spent the first half of the campaign in Italy with Bologna, and made 11 starts and five substitute appearances for the Teessiders. Advertisement He played in a number of different positions, but was Boro's first-choice left-back for most of the last two months of the season, having been moved into the back four after Neto Borges suffered an injury. The 21-year-old enjoyed his time working under Carrick and was disappointed to see the former Manchester United midfielder dismissed last week. Iling-Junior is currently in Slovakia with the England Under-21 squad preparing for Thursday's opening game of the European Under-21 Championships against Czechia, and feels he is in a much stronger position thanks to his time on Teesside. 'There's definitely been a lot of lessons learned this season,' said Iling-Junior, who will return to his parent club, Aston Villa, for pre-season training later this summer. 'A lot of things that I can bring into my game and that's something that I'll take forward. Advertisement 'The biggest lesson, definitely, has been how to manage different loans because it's been my first time out. I was and am comfortable living abroad – it's something that I can adapt to and I've done it before – but being back home was exciting for me. READ MORE : 'I can only look at my time with Middlesbrough as a positive. And I've only got good things to say about Michael Carrick, who's a good gaffer and man-manager. 'Tactically, he could work with players one-to-one and he developed myself. He gave me trust and I was able to show that on the pitch. 'I definitely settled into the left-back role and going up and down the pitch. I enjoyed that, bringing my parts into the team with assists, tricks and being creative.' Advertisement While Iling-Junior was named amongst the forwards when the FA published England's squad list for the Under-21 Euros, he is one of only two realistic options for the left-back slot in Lee Carsley's team. He is competing with Newcastle United's Tino Livramento, who is more naturally a right-back, for a starting role, and is confident he will do himself justice if selected on the left of England's back four. 'It's an honour to be one of the players that the manager's chosen and I want to repay that on the pitch,' he said. 'Tino has obviously had that great season with Newcastle. The competition is always healthy. If I can bring out the best of him and he brings out the best of me and we go and win the tournament then it's happy days.' Iling-Junior has represented England at every age-group level since Under-15s, and is hoping to end his time as an Under-21s player with the high of being crowned European champions. Advertisement He will have a brief break at the end of this month's tournament, then will report back to Villa hoping to impress Unai Emery. Middlesbrough will be keeping a close eye on the situation in the hope that Iling-Junior might be made available for another loan, but the youngster will be doing everything he can to try to force his way into Villa's first-team group for next season. 'You have to put the World Cup in your sights,' he said. 'You have to knock on that door, or at least put yourself in a position to be knocking on that door. There's a pathway and there's always someone watching. 'All the boys that have made their debut from the Under-21s and are now in that (senior) squad, that just goes to show that if you keep putting your mind to it and work with the coaches, then you'll get repaid for your hard work. 'And I definitely want to get back into Villa after this tournament and have some conversations and make an impact there as well. Unai Emery has always had conversations with me, so that helps. and he's kept track of my loans. 'So, that's definitely a good relationship and once we get back after the tournament then we'll have those conversations. For now, it's about just focusing on the Euros, and we'll see (what happens) when I get back to Villa.'