Dutee Chand Claims Gold In Taiwan But Falls Short Of Olympic Berth
Dutee Chand, who hails from Odisha, clocked 11.50 seconds in the women's 100 metres sprint to win gold but her timing was far below the Olympic qualification standard of 11.32 seconds.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: May 20, 2016 12:45 am IST
Highlights
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Dutee Chand won the women's 100m sprint but failed to qualify for Rio.
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She is a national record holder in women's 100 metres.
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Dutee Chand-led 4x100m relay team broke the national record on May 18.
Left to compete within an hour of reaching Taoyuan City from China, experienced sprinter Dutee Chand won gold medal in women's 100m sprint event in the Taiwan Open Athletics Championships on Thursday.
Dutee competed the 100m heats within an hour of reaching Taiwan from Beijing and five hours later ran the finals which she won in 11.50 secs to bag the gold.
Her timing was far below the Olympics qualification standard of 11.32 secs.
Long jumper Ankit Sharma leapt 7.67m on his last attempt to also seal a gold medal.
Dutee was part of the national record breaking women's 4x100m relay quartet which finished fourth in the IAAF World Challenge event in Beijing on Wednesday and she flew from the Chinese capital to Taiwan where she reached two hours before the start of her event.
"Her 100m heats was at 2pm local time and our flight from Beijing reached here at noon. The drive from the airport to the stadium took one hour and she had to be ready for the heats within one hour," Dutee's coach N Ramesh told PTI from the Taiwan.
"Poor girl, she had to compete after a tiring flight and within one hour," Ramesh added.
Dutee will also run in the women's 4x100m relay finals tomorrow. Ramesh also said that his ward was disappointed as she could not compete in the individual 100m sprint event in Beijing as she was told to withdraw at the last minute despite her name was in the start list.
"She was about to compete in the 100m event and she had started her warm up at the tracks and the race was about to start. But she was told that she cannot compete and another runner ran in her place," he said.
It's learnt that the organisers kept Dutee as a reserve runner on the condition that she would compete in case another athlete withdraws from the race.
Dutee had gone to Beijing with a big hope that she will be able to qualify for Rio Olympics by competing with stronger rivals. She had missed the Rio qualifying standards by one-hundredth of a second in the Federation Cup National Athletics Championships in New Delhi last month with a timing of 11.33 secs.
"The field in Beijing was very strong. We were hopeful that she would qualify there for Rio by running in a strong field. But she could not compete there and naturally she is disappointed," Ramesh said.
Dutee will have two more events to try and qualify for the Olympics -- one each in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan -- next month, besides the National Inter-State Championships in Hyderabad also next month.