Melissa Jefferson-Wooden surges to gold and place among fastest women

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Melissa Jefferson-Wooden has dominated women’s sprinting in 2025.Now the American has put a bow on her historic year by winning her first world title and conjuring one of the most spectacular 100m performances in history.On a balmy night in Tokyo the 24-year-old American was spectacular and smooth in taking gold in 10.61sec, a time that was not only a championship record but made her the fourth fastest woman in history: 0nly Florence Griffith‑Joyner, Elaine Thompson and Shelly-Ann Fraser‑Pryce have gone faster.Given she has already lowered her personal best by 0.

19sec this season after an injury-plagued 2024, who knows what else might be around the corner? “This year has been nothing short of a dream,” she said.“I have been working so hard for this very moment to come out here.I just focused on my execution so to put together the perfect race at the right time just means so much to me.”Asked later at her press conference whether it was possible she might one day break the world record of 10.49, Jefferson-Wooden did not entirely rule it out.

“As far as world records go, Flo Jo is the greatest to do it.She has put a number out there that’s definitely worth chasing.”Usually at world championships the 100m men’s and women’s finals have top billing on separate nights.Here they were squeezed together just seven minutes apart.It made for great drama.

But the downside was that it did not give the 68,000 spectators at the National Stadium in Tokyo time to reflect on a brilliant performance from the American.The race looked close for about the first 30m, with the reigning Olympic champion Julien Alfred getting out fast.But Jefferson‑Wooden had also exploded from the blocks and was quickly taking control.As Alfred faltered the 21-year-old Jamaican Tina Clayton moved up to take the silver medal in a personal best of 10.76, with Alfred having to settle for bronze in 10.

84.Later Jefferson-Wooden was also asked about comments made by the Olympic 200m champion Gabby Thomas, criticising her and her coach, Dennis Mitchell.Three weeks ago, Thomas posted on social media saying that “doping coaches should be banned for life from coaching in the sport” – a clear reference to Mitchell, who failed a test as an athlete and also admitted to the Balco inquiry in 2008 that he had asked about performance‑enhancing drugs for an athlete, Marion Jones, he was advising.The Harvard-educated Thomas also posted: “If you train under a coach who is known for doping … you are complicit.”Jefferson-Wooden refused to be drawn directly on her 4x100m relay teammate’s remarks.

“I respectfully don’t want to answer that question.Gabby isn’t here.She’s entitled to her opinions, but I don’t want to talk about that.Sign up to The RecapThe best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend’s actionafter newsletter promotion“I surround myself with love, with people who believe in me, who support me, who have seen me become the athlete that I am today.“So when it comes to outside noise and social media, at the end of the day people are always going to have their opinions.

They’re going to say what they want to say.But it’s up to me how I respond to that.And the best way for me to respond is to not respond at all.”Earlier one of the biggest cheers of the night was for the 38-year-old Fraser-Pryce, who came sixth in 11.03sec in the final world championship race of a glittering career that has brought 25 world and Olympic medals.

However, Britain’s Dina Asher-Smith, who has had a difficult season after leaving her coach in the US, was last in 11,08,Asher-Smith said: “I’m just excited for the next phase, the next year, because when you’ve got some more stability, you can make progress,”Earlier in the evening a men’s 10,000m that began in earnest with only two laps to go ended with the Frenchman Jimmy Gressier taking gold in 28,55.

77 in a burn-up, with less than 1.5sec separating the top six.In the women’s long jump Tara Davis-Woodhall added world gold to her Olympic title after jumping 7.13m to beat Germany’s Malaika Mihambo (6.99m) and the Colombian Natalia Linares (6.

92m).
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Why Portuguese red blends fly off the shelves | Hannah Crosbie on drinks

It has come to my attention that I haven’t written a column dedicated to red wine in almost two months. So sue me – it’s been hot. Mercifully, though, temperatures look to be dropping soon, so we can once again cup the bowl of a wine glass without worrying about it getting a little warmer as its aromas unfasten.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link

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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for fish baked with tomatoes, olives and capers | A kitchen in Rome

Al cartoccio is the Italian form of en papillote, meaning “contained” or “in paper”, which is an effective cooking method that traps the moisture (and flavour) released from the ingredients and creates a steamy poaching chamber – it’s a bit like a Turkish bath for food! Once out of the oven, but still sealed, the scented steam trapped in the paper returns to liquid and creates a brothy sauce. Fish with firm white or pink flesh that breaks into fat flakes is particularly well suited to cooking al cartoccio, both whole fish (cleaned and on the bone) and individual filets (estimate 110g-140g per person).When choosing fish, keep in mind our collective default to cod and haddock, both members of the so-called “big five” that make up a staggering 80% of UK consumption. Instead, look out for other species, such as hake, huss or North Sea plaice, ASC-certified Scottish salmon, sea trout or farmed rainbow trout. For more detailed and updated advice, the Marine Conservation Society produces an invaluable, area-by-area good fish guide that uses a five-tiered system to rank both “best choice” and “fish to avoid” based on the species, location and fishing method

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How to turn a single egg and rescued berries into a classic British dessert

Just a single egg white can be transformed into enough elegant meringue shards to crown more than four servings of pudding, as I discovered when, earlier this year, I was invited by Cole & Mason to come up with a recipe to mark London History Day and decided to do so by celebrating the opening of the Shard in 2012. Meringue shards make a lovely finishing touch to all kinds of desserts, from a rich trifle to an avant-garde pavlova or that timeless classic, the Eton mess. As for the leftover yolk, I have several recipes, including spaghetti carbonara (also featuring salt-cured egg yolks that make a wonderful alternative to parmesan) and brown banana curd.Architect Renzo Piano is said to have sketched his original idea for the Shard on the back of a restaurant napkin. Similarly, whenever I design a more conceptual dish such as this one, I love to start by drawing it in my sketchbook, to develop an idea of what the dish will look like, and while I was drawing the angular lines of the Shard, it reminded me of a minimalist dessert I’d eaten at the seminal AT restaurant in Paris that featured grey meringue shards that seemed to me to perfectly emulate the dramatic geometry of that iconic London building

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Cracker Barrel suspends remodeling plans after backlash over logo change

Cracker Barrel announced on Tuesday that it’s suspending plans to remodel its restaurants just weeks after reversing a logo change that ignited a political firestorm.The 56-year-old restaurant chain, known for southern-style cooking and country-store aesthetic, faced intense backlash last month after unveiling a rebranding effort aimed at modernizing its image. The company rolled out a new minimalist logo and plans for more contemporary interiors, and it updated menu items.The new logo replaced the brand’s image of an old man in overalls leaning against a wooden barrel with a simplified gold background and the words “Cracker Barrel” in minimalist lettering.The change was immediately met with intense outrage online from conservatives and far-right influencers who accused the company of going “woke”

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Australian supermarket sausage rolls taste test: from ‘perfect, flaky casing’ to ‘bland’ and ‘mushy’

With six friends and multiple kids in tow, Sarah Ayoub tests 10 brands of frozen sausage rolls to find the ones with crisp exteriors and convincingly meaty flavoursIf you value our independent journalism, we hope you’ll consider supporting us todayWith spring picnics and footy finals on the horizon, sausage rolls – one of the pinnacles of frozen celebration foods – are in order. But with up to a dozen varieties in your local supermarket freezer, it’s hard to make an informed choice.I rounded up six friends (plus a couple of kids) with discerning frozen-food palates: people who love a sausage roll and see it as a culinary staple, whether it comes from the servo or a bakery, and parents used to baking them in a pinch for dinner or for a crowd at birthday parties.We agreed that a good sausage roll is all about a flaky and crispy exterior; a soft, meaty interior; and a decent meat-to-pastry ratio. With those qualities in mind, we then set about taste-testing 10 varieties from Coles, Woolworths, Aldi and independent grocers

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Beyond the bacon sandwich: the many uses of brown sauce

I like my bacon sandwich with brown sauce, but that means keeping a bottle for a long time. What else can I do with it? Will, via emailIn the early 1980s, Tom Harris, co-owner and chef at the Marksman in east London, made a beer mat from penny coins for his dad (and in the quest to secure a Blue Peter badge): “The instructions said to put the dirty coins in brown sauce overnight,” he recalls. “The next morning, they were all shiny and looked brand new, so there’s another use for it right there!”Brown sauce is “an absolute marvel”, agrees Sabrina Ghayour, author of the recently published Persiana Easy, and not just for its cleaning prowess: “If you break it down, the sauce is packed with some pretty interesting ingredients, including my beloved tamarind.” It’s worth exploring your bottle options beyond HP, too, not least because there was much controversy back in 2011 when the brand gave its recipe, which had remained unchanged for more than a century, a tweak. “They reduced the salt [from 2