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Orla Comerford posts personal best to win para 100m at Bislett Games in Oslo
Orla Comerford posts personal best to win para 100m at Bislett Games in Oslo

RTÉ News​

time11-06-2025

  • Sport
  • RTÉ News​

Orla Comerford posts personal best to win para 100m at Bislett Games in Oslo

Orla Comerford clocked a lifetime best of 11.87 to win the para women's 100m at the Bislett Games in Oslo on Wednesday. The victory in the Norweigan capital continues the Dubliner's positive start to the season, following her win at the FBK Games in the Netherlands on Monday, which saw her post 11.96 for the 100m. That time was eclipsed by the Paralympic bronze medallist in Oslo when running into a slight headwind of 0.7m/s. The Bislett Games is one of the meets that incorporates para athletics, with Comerford no doubt keen to compete in more ahead of September's World Para Athletics Championships in New Delhi. Thursday will see Rhasidat Adeleke and Mark English in action at the Oslo Diamond League. On Monday last, English became the first Irishman to break 1:44 in the 800m, lowering his own Irish record for the second time in 11 days with his run of 1:43.92 at the FBK Games.

Orla Comerford clocks lifetime best to win at Bislett Games in Oslo
Orla Comerford clocks lifetime best to win at Bislett Games in Oslo

Irish Examiner

time11-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Irish Examiner

Orla Comerford clocks lifetime best to win at Bislett Games in Oslo

Paralympic sprint star Orla Comerford continued her blazing start to the season by powering to victory in the para women's 100m at the Bislett Games in Oslo on Wednesday evening, the Dubliner clocking a lifetime best of 11.87 into a slight headwind of 0.7m/s. That brought her home well clear of Norway's Ida-Louise Overland (12.88) and Dutch sprinter Zara Temmink (12.88). The para 100m was among several events staged on the eve of the main programme at the Oslo Diamond League, where Rhasidat Adeleke and Mark English will be in action on Thursday. Comerford's race came just 48 hours after her victory at the FBK Games in Hengelo on Monday, where she clocked 11.96 into a 1.2m/s headwind. 'It's really early in the season, this is my second 100m and I was able to take some of the things from last week, change them and I'm happy we've been able to improve,' she said in Hengelo. 'The World Championships is the big one for us in New Delhi at the end of September so I'm keeping everything focused for that. I'll get a few nice races in, get back into good training and hopefully go faster and faster. That's the name of the game.' Comerford won 100m bronze in the T13 (visually impaired) category at the Paralympics last year and powered to victory in the para 60m staged at the European Indoor Championships in the Netherlands in March. With more Diamond League appearances on her horizon this summer, she's hopeful other major events will incorporate para races. 'I'm blue in the face saying it, but para athletics is athletics and if you're a fan of athletics there's no reason there can't be meets like this who all integrate with different events,' she said. 'Here's to more of that.' Elsewhere, Nicola Tuthill broke new ground in the hammer throw in Lahti, Finland on Wednesday evening. The Paris Olympian smashed her Irish U-23 record with 71.71m, which placed her third in a competition won by Finland's Krista Tervo with 77.14m. While Tuthill's throw is short of the automatic World Championships qualifying standard of 74.00m, it will all but ensure her place in Tokyo via her world ranking. There was a second Irish U-23 record at the same meeting as Ava O'Connor clocked 9:45.00 to finish third in the 3000m steeplechase, taking one second off the mark she set in California in April. Meanwhile, seven Irish athletes will be in action at the NCAA Championships in Oregon over the coming days with Sophie O'Sullivan, the reigning European U-23 champion, looking to hold the best chance in the women's 1500m. O'Sullivan, who is in her final season with the University of Washington, will race the 1500m heats on Thursday afternoon, with the final scheduled for Saturday evening.

English breaks Irish record in 800m win in Netherlands
English breaks Irish record in 800m win in Netherlands

BBC News

time09-06-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

English breaks Irish record in 800m win in Netherlands

Mark English became the first Irishman to break one minute 44 seconds in the 800m as he produced a superb run at the FBK Games in the 32-year-old recorded a new national record time of 1:43.92 in a brilliant win in the World Athletics Continental Tour Gold series on beat the record he had set just 10 days ago of 1:44.34 as he won in Bydgoszcz, two performances were an improvement on the previous record he also set of 1:44.53 in June 2024 in win is the Donegal athlete's third outdoor victory of the season after he also won at the Sound Running Track Fest meet in Los Angeles last March, English also won a European 800m bronze to take his European medal tally to on Monday, Orla Comerford won the Para-athletics women's 100m in a season's best time of 11.96 seconds, 0.06 seconds off the Paralympic bronze medallist's personal best.

Orla Comerford getting her sprint career down to a fine art after Paris
Orla Comerford getting her sprint career down to a fine art after Paris

Irish Examiner

time29-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Irish Examiner

Orla Comerford getting her sprint career down to a fine art after Paris

Orla Comerford was a couple of days removed from her Paralympic 100m T13 bronze medal at the Stade de France when she made a beeline for the summer's second major goal. This one would take a lot longer than 11.94 seconds. If she is married to athletics in the public mind after three successive Games then art is her other love. The Dubliner has a degree in Fine Art Media from the National College of Art & Design (NCAD) and works part-time in the Irish Museum of Modern Art. Sportspeople may travel the world but it's not like they get to take in a lot of it beyond hotels and stadiums. Comerford is no different, but the promise was made that, whatever happened on track, she would take in the Musée d'Orsay. The Left Bank gem is a treasure trove of French art dating from the mid-19th century through to the outbreak of the Great War. Impressionist and post-impressionist work in particular. You can hardly turn around without staring into a Degas, a Renoir or a van Gogh. Comerford was drawn especially to Edouard Manet, the father of Impressionism, and his 'Olympia' and 'Le Déjeuner Sur l'Herbe' paintings that stand as foundation stones for the entire movement. Claude Monet was another on the 'must-see' list. 'These were some of the pieces that I studied in school and inspired me to go to college and that now inspire me to share that passion for modern art with other people in the museum. That actually felt quite emotional. 'It felt like my time on the track had come full circle with that performance and then to follow it up by going into a space like that and thinking, 'oh my god, I'm here' and these pieces are the reason I'm here.' Orla will work with Allianz to support initiatives that promote para sport, inclusion and youth engagement – including the Allianz NextGen programme, which aims to inspire young people with disabilities to participate in sport and pursue their athletic dreams. Pic: ©INPHO/Dan Sheridan. When she was done, Comerford bought some postcards in the museum shop with some of her favourite pieces on the front and sent them back to Sarah Fynes, the art teacher who had lit that fire in her years before. 'It was to say to her, 'I'm here, I made it'. That was really special.' These twin passions dovetail nicely. Her role in the museum is a mental space away from the world of athletics. The hope is that she can focus on more of her own work in the years to come but there is already comfort in the fact that the arts will be there in some form when the day comes to hang up the spikes. That won't be today or tomorrow. The initial emotion when crossing the finishing line in Saint-Denis last September was one of disappointment. A gold medal and a world record had been the goals. Neither had been claimed. The two women ahead of her had both bettered that standing record but the main, and instant, salve to her emotional wound was the gaggle of 'Team Orla' family and friends waiting to acclaim her on the home straight. Getting that close has only hardened the desire to go the extra mile, or millimetre. 'It almost makes me hungrier. You've pushed everything and you haven't quite got what you wanted. You're still delighted and appreciate how far you have come. Some athletes look at another four years as a daunting thing. I just couldn't be more excited. 'The last cycle, it was just three years after Tokyo, and it was all a bit disjointed. I had injury hanging over and I just feel like I've come into this four years in a really good position and feeling really positive. I'm more ambitious than ever, I can allow myself to dream bigger.' Those injuries bear repeating. Major surgery in 2019 filtered through to Tokyo in 2021. She sat out the entirety of 2022. Her 2023 season was a breeze by comparison but still pockmarked with enough fitness issues to count as a disaster for anyone else. By the time Paris rolled around in 2024 she was still probably running with what she terms 'a bit of caution', but any remaining clouds seem to have cleared and 2025 has swept in as something of a clean slate. Mentally and physically. There was no rush to get back after the Paralympics. The Para Athletic World Championships in New Delhi don't start until September, although she was still far enough progressed in training to dominate a mixed ability 60m race in the European Indoors in March when given just four weeks' notice. That meet in Apeldoorn was fruitful in other ways. It was the first time she competed at that level under the eye of new coach Daniel Kilgallon. That allowed them to work each other out in a high-profile environment before the Worlds. Kilgallon's Tallaght-based group is a high-achieving collective that Comerford feels can drive her on again. National 60m champion Sarah Leahy is just one example of an athlete who blends talent with a raw work ethic. That can only be good. The LA Games in 2028, and another shot at gold, are the long-term goal. 'You have to shoot for the stars and if you land on the moon then that's great as well. You have to think big and dream big in terms of how you motivate your day-to-day. It has to push you in what you're doing and in Paris my goal was a gold and a world record. 'There is really strong competition in my classification and event at the moment so I know everyone is looking to go faster and push each other, but I can't get caught up in times and positions. The motivation is in the process.' One brushstroke at a time. Orla Comerford has been announced as a new brand ambassador for Allianz

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