Audio By Carbonatix
Ignisious Gaisah, competing at the World Athletics Championship for the first time in the colours of The Netherlands, yesterday secured his place in the final of the men’s long jump event.
Gaisah, with a leap of 7.89m, joined 11 other jumpers for tomorrow’s final. The 2006 gold medalist at the World Indoor as well as silver medallist in Helsinki world event at the same year for Ghana succeeded in his national switch, much to the disappointment of Ghanaians, just six weeks before the competition and came under a lot of pressure with the world watching if he would make it.
Rather than going for a record jump, Gaisah, a dominant champion in Africa, secured his final ticket on his third jump with a save jump of 7.89, nothing near his season’s best of 8.13 or his personal best of 8.43m.
Gaisah, who moments before the competition yesterday tweeted: “New beginnings. New passport, new life. I welcome every new challenge,” later told IAAF news that he was relieved he was in the final list.
“There has been much talk about my decision to change nationality from Ghanaian to Dutch so it was important for me to get it right. My interest was not to make the best jump but have one that was good enough for the final. We will see about the final on Friday,” he said, declining to further talk about his nationality switch.
Inevitably with 29 men trying to make the final, there were likely to be some big name casualties in the qualifying rounds and none was bigger than Great Britain’s London 2012 Olympic Games champion Greg Rutherford.
Just a year on from his triumph in front of his home fans, Rutherford had been struggling to bounce back from a hamstring injury sustained at the IAAF Diamond League meeting in Paris last month and managed a best of just 7.87m, well shy of the 8.35m personal best set last year, although he was just two centimetres shy of making the final.
Finalists for men’s long jump:
Group A: Christian Reif (Germany) 8.09, Luis Rivera (Mexico) 8.04, Damar Forbes (Jamaica) 7.96, Li Jinzhe (China) 7.96, Sebestian Bayer (Germany) 7.95, Mauro Vinicius Da Silva Brazil) 7.92
Group B: Caceras Eusebio (Spain), 8.25, Godfrey Khotso Mokoena (South Africa) 8.16, Aleksandr Menkov (Russia), 8.11, Louis Tsatoumas (Greece) 8.00, Dwight Philips (USA) 7.95, Ignisious Gaisah (Netherlands) 7.89.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
US launches review of advanced Nvidia AI chip sales to China, sources say
12 minutes -
2 nurses, security guard arrested over alleged baby theft at Tamale hospital
23 minutes -
Elon Musk becomes first person worth $700 billion following pay package ruling
36 minutes -
Fussy eaters and TV remote hogs: How to avoid family rows over Christmas
47 minutes -
Singing at school shouldn’t just be for Christmas, teachers say
1 hour -
Pan-African Progressive Front Advances Reparatory Justice at Accra Diaspora Summit
1 hour -
Japan prepares to restart world’s biggest nuclear plant, 15 years after Fukushima
1 hour -
India express train kills seven elephants crossing tracks
1 hour -
TTU’s number-one ranking due to research commitment – Vice-Chancellor
1 hour -
US pursuing third oil tanker linked to Venezuela, official says
2 hours -
At least 13 photos removed from justice department Epstein files website
2 hours -
Margins sets example in Urban Renewal and Climate Resilience
2 hours -
Rights groups condemn new record number of executions in Saudi Arabia
2 hours -
Another 130 abducted schoolchildren released in Nigeria
2 hours -
Ken Ofori-Atta and Ghana’s Loudest Trial Before Evidence
2 hours
