Paris: South African Caster Semenya, whose middle-distance career could be under threat because of a new IAAF rule, romped to the fourth-fastest women’s 800metres ever and Qatari Abderrahman Samba produced the second-best 400 metres hurdles of all time in a sparkling Paris Diamond League meeting here Saturday.
Olympic and World Champion Semenya cruised home in a lifetime best of 1:54.25 seconds and the dominant Samba clocked 46.98 seconds for his fifth consecutive Diamond League win.
Semenya, who is challenging a new hyperandrogenism rule by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), took nearly a second off her personal best as she claimed her 25th consecutive final win in the event. Burundi’s Francine Niyonsaba was second in 1:55.86seconds.
The IAAF rule, against which Semenya has appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), would effectively give her a choice of taking medication to restrict her testosterone level or move to longer-distance events. It is scheduled to become effective in November unless overturned by CAS.
Only Czech world record holder Jarmila Kratochvilova (1:53.28seconds), Ukrainian Nadezhda Olizarenko (1:53.43seconds) and Kenyan Pamela Jelimo (1:54.01seconds) have run faster than the South African.
Samba became just the second runner to break 47 seconds in the 400 metres hurdles. The other was American world record holder Kevin Young, whose 46.78 won the 1992 Olympics.
Russian world champion Mariya Lasitskene also continued her dominance, winning her 45th consecutive high-jump competition with a sparkling season’s best of 2.04 metres.
American World Champion Sam Kendricks soared 5.96 metres to win a high-quality pole vault over young Swede Mondo Duplantis (5.90) and French world record holder Renaud Lavillenie (5.84) and American Ronnie Baker gained a share of the year’s 100-metres top time with a personal best 9.88 seconds.