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Sekgodiso runs world-leading time to win 800m gold

Sekgodiso runs world-leading time to win 800m gold

NBC Sports23-03-2025

Prudence Sekgodiso wins South Africa's first women's World Indoor medal, taking gold with a time of 1:58:40 in the 800m in Nanjing, China.

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Britain's Molly Caudery began her 2025 outdoor season with victory in the pole vault at the Diamond League meeting in Doha. The 25-year-old cleared 4.75m in warm and windy conditions at the Suheim bin Hamad Stadium in Qatar to finish top of the standings. Neither Roberta Bruni of Italy nor USA's Katie Moon could clear the height as they finished second and third with vaults of 4.63m. "I absolutely have a lot of fire in me and that's a good thing ahead of the new season," said Caudery. She won the World Indoor title last year to become Britain's first world champion in the discipline. However, Caudery failed to make the final of the event at last summer's Olympic Games in Paris. In the 1500m, Scotland's Jemma Reekie finished a credible third with a time of four minutes 7.33 seconds as Nelly Chepchirchir strode clear in 4:05.00, ahead of Kenyan team-mate Susan Ejore. Elsewhere, Amy Hunt finished third in the 100m in a time of 11.03 as she took .09 seconds off her personal best. The race was won by Tia Clayton, who outshone two-time Olympic 100m champion and Jamaican compatriot Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. The 38-year-old Fraser-Pryce was competing on the Diamond League circuit for the first time in three years, but could only finish fourth as Clayton, 20, won easily in a world-leading time of 10.92. Clayton's twin sister Tina was second in 11.02, while Fraser-Pryce, competing in possibly her final season, clocked a season's best 11.05 for fourth. Reigning men's Olympic 200m champion Letsile Tebogo produced a lacklustre performance for success in his signature event as he was almost caught on the line by Courtney Lindsey. Botswana's Tebogo ran a smooth bend but seemed to lack fluency in the home straight and glanced to his right at Lindsey as he crossed the line in a modest 20.10, one hundredth of a second ahead of the American. In the men's 800m, Tshepiso Masalela chased down Wycliffe Kinyamal to clock 1:43.11, the fastest time in the world this year. Meanwhile, Lawrence Okoye finished sixth in the discus with a throw of 65.01m, while fellow Briton Laviai Nielsen finished seventh in the 400m with a time of 52.02.

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Akani Simbine is the first South African man to win a World Indoor medal with bronze at this year's championships [Getty Images] Having anchored his nation to a relay silver at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games and become the first South African man to win a World Indoor medal in March, Akani Simbine exudes a quiet confidence in his abilities. As the world leader over 100m this year, the 31-year-old's attitude is understandable. It marks a shift in mentality for a sprinter who became known as the 'nearly man' of global athletics after missing the podium with three fourth-placed finishes at major championships - twice at the Olympics and once at the World Championships. "Having that tag as the nearly man, it's noise at the end of the day," Simbine told BBC Sport Africa. "I don't see it like that, I see it as an action that's never given up on trying to be the best. I always show up. 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