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Irish Independent
7 hours ago
- Sport
- Irish Independent
Louth club St Peter's AC Dromiskin athletes setting great times in Birmingham
Both Abbie Sheriden and Dearbhla Allen competed in the women's 3000m Steeplechase and both had really strong runs and Abbie finished with a new PB of 10.40.95. Dearbhla has had a busy few weeks winning two medals last week at the All-Ireland Schools Championships while this week she also ran a PB in the 3000m Steeplechase clocking a time of 10.29.51. This is within the Athletics Ireland Standard of 10.40 for the European U20 Championships and it was the second time Dearbhla has achieved this standard having run 10.35.66 recently in Brussels. She is now eligible to be selected for the upcoming European Championships in August which will take place in Finland. Cian Gorham also ran in the men's 1500m at the same meet in Birmingham. He is enjoying a rich vein of form and continues to show great consistency clocking a time of 3.49.29. Hopefully Cian's injury woes are behind him and he can continue to complete at the top level which will undoubtedly bring big rewards. The club also had Niamh Brady in action in the Leinster Senior 1500m race at the Championships held in Carlow. Niamh has shown very well in training of late and her hard work paid off when he claimed the bronze medal in what was a race packed with quality.


BBC News
25-02-2025
- Sport
- BBC News
Teen wins 'crazy' high jump gold after call-up four days earlier
A 17-year-old high jumper who won gold at the British Indoor Athletics Championships in Birmingham on Sunday - having only been invited four days earlier - has described his victory as "crazy".Otis Poole from Chippenham, Wiltshire, smashed his previous personal best of 2.09m, recording a height of 2.20m to take the teenager, who competes for the Yate & District Athletic Club in Gloucestershire, won the England U20 title earlier in the year and is now ranked second in the world in the U20 qualified for this summer's European U20 Championships in Finland, he is looking further ahead at potentially competing outdoors and gaining a college scholarship abroad. Speaking to BBC Radio Wiltshire after winning gold, Otis said it had barely sunk in."It felt crazy, I didn't really process it because I was so tired but, after a long sleep, I've kind of processed it. I'm not really sure how I've done it."I've ticked off one of my goals for the season, so now it's time to look further." Rapid progress Otis only started competing in the discipline three years ago and has made rapid progress in the even."When I cleared 1.95m a year and a half ago, I saw myself in the top spot for my age group, but now I'm trying to compete against the whole country, all ages. It opens up this sort of much wider spectrum."The 17-year-old currently trains under Joy Bray at the Yate club and is full of praise for her and the club's ethos."She's a very, very good coach. I'm also surrounded by good athletes in the group, and she personalises her training for each athlete."I think seeing their belief, and I think the other training partners, seeing them trying, it kind of pushes you to try and do better than them, but also do well as well."With a career as a professional athlete looming, Otis is already considering his next steps."I think I need to sit with my coach and talk about where I want to go for outdoors. "After A-Levels, I'm looking at going through the American scholarship route. "I've jumped the heights that they'll want me at, and it will make everything very cheap. Because America is very big on their sports, it drives you to do better."