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‘I’m chilling’: Gout Gout passes first test as he qualifies for world 200m semi-finals

about 6 hours ago
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Few sporting debuts have arrived with as much hype, but Australian sprint sensation Gout Gout passed his first test at a major global meet by booking a place in the semi-finals of the World Championships in Tokyo.The 17-year-old handled the pressure under the bright lights of Japan’s National Stadium, powering home in a time of 20.23 seconds to grab the third qualifying place in the fifth of six heats.He finished behind Jamaica’s Bryan Levell and Zimbabwe’s Makanakaishe Charamba, the only two athletes in the heat higher than his world ranking of 16.Gout started slowly and was quickly caught by Levell on his inside, but found his stride and comfortably claimed third in a time two-tenths off his personal best of 20.

02sec.“The start’s obviously not my strong suit but as soon as I get into running I’m chilling,” he said.“Everyone wasn’t up against me apart from the top two, so I just hit cruise control last 50, last 30, and just … big Q [automatic qualifier], so that’s what I needed.”The result sets up a tantalising test for the teenager against the world’s best in one of three semi-finals on Thursday.Torrie Lewis also progressed to the semis in the women’s event, underlining Australia’s potential in one of the sport’s marquee events.

The other Australians in the event failed to progress.The 21-year-old Aidan Murphy came home sixth in his heat, stopping the clock at 20.54sec, 12 hundredths off his best.Calab Law ran a 20.91sec – half a second off his PB – and finished last within a competitive field.

Lewis progressed to the semi-finals in the women’s event, after finishing second in her heat behind the UK’s Dina Asher-Smith, with a personal best of 22.56sec.The 20-year-old was on the verge of tears and skipped her media obligations after her elimination from the 100m in the semi-finals, but appeared to put that behind her as she finished within two tenths of the 2019 World Championship gold medallist from Doha.“I had so many high expectations coming into it, and I really thought I could make that final,” she said.“I was looking at ‘did I make that final or not’, and I didn’t, so, in my mind, it was a failure.

And I knew if I had gone up to the media box, then I would have cried and I just didn’t want to cry on TV.”Her time was the eighth fastest among all qualifiers, suggesting she will be in contention for a spot in the final when the competition continues on Thursday.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 promotionLewis moved to the Netherlands this year to train with Laurent Meuwly alongside a group of top Dutch athletes and is in career-best form.“I’ve been acting a lot more professional than I was [when I was living] in Brisbane, so I feel like it was just, athletic-wise, a step-up for me, and I think it’s showing.”It was less than a quarter of a second outside Melinda Gainsford-Taylor’s national record of 22.

23sec set in 1997.Mia Gross finished eighth in her heat with a time of 23.24sec – half a second slower than her PB – after struggling to get out of the blocks, and now looks forward to the 4x400m relay on the weekend.Kristie Edwards, who is in the 4x100m squad, was also eliminated after running a 23.39sec.

American Anavia Battle was the fastest qualifier with a time of 22.07sec.The gold medallist from 2023 in Budapest, Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson, progressed comfortably with a time of 22.33sec.
politicsSee all
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France proposes ceiling on value of UK components in €150bn EU defence fund

France has proposed limiting the use of British-produced military components in the EU’s €150bn defence fund, in a move that could complicate negotiations over the UK’s entry into the scheme.Four diplomatic sources told the Guardian that French officials had proposed a 50% ceiling on the value of UK components in projects financed through the EU’s €150bn Security Action for Europe (Safe) fund.The €150bn loans scheme is part of the EU’s drive to boost defence spending by €800bn and re-arm the continent. The European commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, lauded the scheme on Tuesday, telling an audience of policymakers in Brussels that the commission had assigned loans to member states in less than six months since the idea was first mooted – “the sense of urgency we need”.The door to greater UK participation was pushed open in May when Keir Starmer and von der Leyen signed an EU-UK security and defence partnership

about 15 hours ago
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Plan to slash US steel tariffs shelved hours before Donald Trump’s UK visit

A long-coveted deal to slash US steel and aluminium tariffs to zero has been shelved on the eve of Donald Trump’s state visit to Britain, the Guardian has learned.Ministers were poised to finalise a deal this week that would have reduced Trump’s tariffs on British steel to zero, according to government officials.But that deal has been put on ice hours before the US president’s arrival in the UK, in what steel industry figures privately described as a major blow.A government source said the deal would have secured 0% tariffs on just a small quota of British steel exports, prolonging uncertainty for the industry.Instead, ministers are seeking to agree a permanent “guarantee” that US tariffs on British steel will not go above 25%

about 21 hours ago
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Two British MPs ‘denied entry’ into Israel during official West Bank visit

Two British MPs travelling as part of a parliamentary delegation to the occupied West Bank have said they were denied entry into Israel.Labour politicians Simon Opher and Peter Prinsley were travelling as part of a group that was due to meet British diplomats in Jerusalem this week, in addition to Palestinian and Israeli human rights organisations.Opher’s office said in a statement on Tuesday that the purpose of the visit, organised by the Council for Arab-British Understanding, was to “enable members of parliament to witness the vital medical and humanitarian work of a range of organisations including Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) in the occupied West Bank.” It added: “It is deeply regrettable that Israeli authorities prevented them from seeing first-hand the grave challenges facing medical facilities in the region and from hearing the British government’s assessment of the situation on the ground.” Opher, the MP for Stroud and chair of the all-party parliamentary group for health, has returned to the UK from Jordan

about 23 hours ago
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New headache for Rachel Reeves as OBR expected to lower productivity forecast

The Office for Budget Responsibility is expected to downgrade its key productivity forecast, the Guardian understands, setting Rachel Reeves on course to break her fiscal rules without significant action in the budget.The government’s independent watchdog has carried out a “stocktake” of its forecast models over the summer, and Treasury officials privately acknowledge the result will inevitably be a weaker growth outlook.One Treasury source said they expected the OBR to “kitchen sink it” – making a significant downward revision to productivity forecasts in one go rather than taking a more piecemeal approach.Reeves will respond by pointing to the long-term weakness of productivity in the UK economy and promising to tackle it with a programme of investment.The consultancy Oxford Economics, however, estimates that moving the OBR’s productivity forecast back in line with the less optimistic independent average projection would knock 1

1 day ago
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MPs give Foreign Office fall guy a mauling over Mandelson | John Crace

Just what has Stephen Doughty done to upset Keir Starmer? Are there no limits to the prime minister’s contempt and hatred? Not that Steve is a total nobody. He’s not a run-of-the-mill backbencher. But he has risen as high as he is likely to go as a junior minister in the Foreign Office. Probably higher than Steve ever expected. Certainly higher than his mates expected

1 day ago
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Mandelson not given in-depth vetting before appointment, says Foreign Office

Peter Mandelson was not subject to in-depth security vetting prior to his appointment as ambassador to Washington, the government has said.The Cabinet Office conducted a due diligence process on Mandelson before he was chosen for the role but this was not a security check, the Foreign Office said in a letter to MPs.Mandelson went through the ambassadorial appointment process, including in-depth national security vetting, only after his appointment had been announced to the public.The disclosure, made by the foreign secretary, Yvette Cooper, and the department’s top official, Oliver Robbins, raises further questions about the lack of rigour involved in Mandelson’s appointment to the top diplomatic post earlier this year.Cooper and Robbins were responding to a set of written questions from the foreign affairs select committee

1 day ago
businessSee all
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Barratt Redrow warns of budget uncertainty affecting property market

about 7 hours ago
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UK inflation holds steady at 3.8% as fuel prices offset falling air fares

about 7 hours ago
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Trump’s tariffs have hurt tea exports to the US, says Fortnum & Mason boss

about 11 hours ago
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Bold and ‘brat’: Marks & Spencer bets on womenswear to revive autumn fortunes

about 14 hours ago
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UK set on resolving standoff with big pharma, science minister says

1 day ago
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Jaguar Land Rover extends production shutdown after cyber-attack

1 day ago