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Gout Gout channels Bolt, horses and butterflies ahead of semi-final test

about 15 hours ago
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An unenviable draw and his struggle to get out of the blocks will almost certainly end the debut of Gout Gout at the world championships in his semi-final on Thursday, but the teenager remains upbeat about his prospects having survived his first major international test.The Australian overcame a ponderous first 30m to finish third in his heat in 20.23sec, the 12th fastest time across all qualifiers for the semis.Given eight athletes will progress to the final, Gout might be considered a chance, especially given he cruised through the final 50m of his heat.He has stated his ambition for the meet is to break the 20-second barrier.

He ran 19,84sec in April, but with a 2,2m/s tailwind the time was scratched from the records, and his personal best is the 20,02sec he ran in Czechia in June,“Sub-20, that’s the goal, so let’s see in the semi,” Gout said.

“Just go out there, run like a horse, run like the wind,”His hopes of progressing have been hampered by what appears to be, like football’s group of death, a semi-final of suffering,Only two will qualify directly for the final, with another two across all three semis going through based on fastest times,Of the nine athletes in Gout’s heat, five have run sub-20, and four of those have come this season,Olympic champion Letsile Tebogo and Bryan Levell – who easily beat the Australian in the heats and last month set a PB of 19.

69sec – will give Gout a first-hand demonstration of how much improvement is needed in coming years before the 17-year-old can compete for medals in the 200m.Gout described Levell as “fast” to Channel Nine after the race.“He took off very fast and he held it, so congratulations to him,” he said.Levell had made up the stagger on Gout midway around the bend, and the teenager’s splits show just how slow he was getting out of the blocks.At the 30m mark, World Athletics timing had him placed last in the heat.

To recover and comfortably run 20.23sec highlights Gout’s top-end speed.But even before he turned on cruise control down the straight, he was struggling to make up ground on Levell or second-place Zimbabwean Makanakaishe Charamba.“I’ve just got to take the experience into the semi-finals,” Gout said.“Hopefully I get a good start, and then I’m off like a butterfly.

”With his forehead dripping in the Tokyo humidity, the teenager said after the race he tried to remind himself to stay calm.“Like, this is what you do every day, you train, you do blocks every day, you do speed workouts every day, so it is just another training session,” he told SBS.“Even though this is the biggest stage in the world, you’ve just got to go out there, treat it like a training session.”Having been in Tokyo since last Friday, Gout said he had felt the expectation building ahead of Wednesday’s performance, but he is trying to enjoy himself.“Obviously, there’s going to be expectation wherever I go, so it is what it is, and I’ve just got to go out there and do my thing and have a bit of fun.

”Gout has already done something even the great Usain Bolt couldn’t and progress beyond his first heat at his first major international meet.Bolt was eliminated in the first round of the 200m at the 2004 Athens Olympics at age 18, serving as a reminder that Gout’s potential remains immense, whatever the semi-final result.The Australian played down the comparison with the Jamaican.“I just got out of the [heat] so it is definitely great to know that I’m up against the top 24 in the world, it’s a great experience,” the Australian said, calling Bolt “the goat”, slang for the greatest of all time.“He’s the athlete everyone looks up to, so I’m just going to keep looking up to him and trying to be like him, too.

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businessSee all
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Premium bonds might beat the bond market bullies | Letter

I read the article by Larry Elliott with interest and thought I could suggest one small act of rebellion that is easily in the chancellor’s hands and could raise substantial sums of money (Let France be a warning, Rachel Reeves: stand up to the bond market vigilantes, or they’ll come for Britain next, 11 September).At the moment, interest on the vast majority of government borrowing is paid to banks, pension funds and other lenders, a significant proportion of which are based overseas. Interest paid on those borrowings varies, but can exceed 5%.While we are largely in the hands of these “bond market bullies”, we have our own bond market that is available to tap into. At the moment about £130bn is held in premium bonds, which pay out an equivalent interest rate of 3

about 15 hours ago
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Labor’s Measuring What Matters is a worthy goal – but one that has utterly failed to live up to its promise | Greg Jericho

This week, the Bureau of Statistics realised its latest series of Measuring What Matters in an attempt to assess things beyond the mere economics. It comes off the back of the bureau’s first attempt to measure productivity in the non-market sector. Both raise questions of what we value and also whether our focus is where it should be.In 2020 the then shadow treasurer, Jim Chalmers, announced an ALP government would develop a wellbeing framework that would seek to “measure what matters”. It was a worthy goal mocked by the then treasurer, Josh Frydenberg

about 16 hours ago
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UK overall inflation remains at 3.8% in August, but food price growth climbs for fifth month in a row - as it happened

Our main story today:UK inflation held steady in August, official figures show, maintaining pressure on households as the Bank of England prepares to keep borrowing costs at elevated levels.Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show the annual rate of inflation as measured by the consumer prices index remained at 3.8% last month, the same level as July and matching the forecasts of City economists.Financial markets are widely predicting that Bank policymakers will keep interest rates on hold at 4% on Thursday amid signs of sustained inflationary pressures at almost twice its official 2% target rate.The Bank of Canada cut interest rates by a quarter point today, and the US Federal Reserve is expected to make a similar move tonight

about 16 hours ago
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Taking the biscuit: consumers spend more but get less as chocolate prices rise by 15%

Whether it’s a favourite bar, biscuit or indulgent hot drink, feeding a chocolate habit costs more than it used to.The price of the chocolate on shop shelves climbed by 15.4% in the year to August, according to the latest cost of living snapshot.Although other price moves meant overall UK inflation was unchanged at 3.8% last month, chocolate was a big riser

about 17 hours ago
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Ben & Jerry’s co-founder quits, accusing Unilever of silencing social mission

The Ben & Jerry’s co-founder Jerry Greenfield has stepped away from the ice-cream brand after nearly 50 years, claiming it has lost its independence and accusing its parent company, Unilever, of having “silenced” its social mission.Greenfield said in a letter posted by his co-founder, Ben Cohen, that he could no longer “in good conscience” remain an employee of a business that he argued had been muzzled by the UK-listed Unilever, despite an agreement protecting its social mission when it was taken over in 2000.“It is profoundly disappointing to come to the conclusion that that independence, the very basis of our sale to Unilever, is gone,” he said. “If the company couldn’t stand up for the things we believed, then it wasn’t worth being a company at all.”Greenfield, who along with Cohen has no control over operations but had remained an employee to help maintain its founding social mission, called it one of the “hardest and most painful decisions” he had ever made

about 19 hours ago
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Barratt Redrow warns of budget uncertainty affecting property market

Britain’s largest housebuilder Barratt Redrow has warned of a “tough market” and expects little growth in the next 12 months amid uncertainty around property taxes.David Thomas, the executive of the company, which was enlarged by Barratt’s £2.5bn acquisition of Redrow last October, cautioned that “the housing market remains challenging and we anticipate limited growth in 2026”.High mortgage costs have squeezed homebuyers’ budgets. The Bank of England is widely expected to keep its base rate at 4% on Thursday

about 19 hours ago
cultureSee all
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What do the circus and US politics have in common? Ask these Black and brown circus artists

2 days ago
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‘We were being watched by the KGB’: how Scorpions made Wind of Change

3 days ago
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Josh Pyke: ‘I turned around and throat-punched the guy – and the whole gig stopped’

4 days ago
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My cultural awakening: a Bastille show helped me get over my crippling Covid-era anxiety

5 days ago
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The Guide #208: How theatre is holding its own in the age of artificial intelligence

5 days ago
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From Spinal Tap II to Ed Sheeran : your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

5 days ago