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Gout Gout misses out on 200m final but says better performances are ‘coming’

about 4 hours ago
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The promising debut of Gout Gout on the international stage has come to an end after he was eliminated at the world championships in a competitive semi-final in Tokyo.The 17-year-old finished fourth in his race behind winner Bryan Levell, and missed out on the two additional time-based qualification places on offer after running a 20.36sec.Although Torrie Lewis couldn’t progress in the women’s 200m either, Australia’s middle distance runners and high jumpers found success in the National Stadium on Thursday.Three Australian women reached the semis in the 800m, including Jess Hull who was reinstated after being a victim of contact.

And for the first time, two Australians will race in a 5000m world championships final.Nicola Olyslagers and Eleanor Patterson both progressed to the final in the high jump without a miss.In the men’s 200m, Gout’s time was marginally slower than the 20.23sec he ran in his heat, and was well off the 20.02sec he produced to lower his own national record in a meet in Czechia in June.

But he was positive afterwards, and said he would build on this experience.“Semi-finalist, and to go out there and compete against the big guys, I couldn’t be prouder of myself for sure,” the teenager said.Although he failed to improve on his personal best in Tokyo, his performances in the past two days represent a solid first major championships for the year 12 student.“Obviously, I was aiming for that sub-two [20 seconds], but today wasn’t the day, God didn’t allow it today, but I know for sure in the future, it’s going to be coming.”The Australian would have needed to run 19.

97sec to make the final, and the fastest qualifier, Noah Lyles, recorded the fastest time this year with 19.51sec.Gout was the youngest athlete to compete in the 200m at the World Championships in Tokyo.He will soon return to Brisbane to complete his HSC exams, but not before watching Friday’s final.“It’s definitely going to be a great final to watch, I’m going be cheering for Noah for sure,” he said.

Lewis finished fourth in her semi in a time of 22,69sec, 13 hundredths slower than her time in the heats, but the 20-year-old said she was still happy with how the meet went,“A pretty good championships I would say, two PBs, that’s what I asked for coming in,”Sign up to Australia SportGet a daily roundup of the latest sports news, features and comment from our Australian sports deskafter newsletter promotionClaudia Hollingsworth and Abbey Caldwell progressed through the heats of the 800m, though the latter had a nervous wait after finishing outside the top-three automatic places,“It’s a big sigh of relief, I mean I’m still a little bit disappointed in the way I had to go about it, but I consider myself pretty lucky,” Caldwell said.

“I’ve got a whole new focus to lock into for the next 24 hours now and yeah, really count my lucky stars that I have another opportunity to redeem myself and show everyone that I’m a better athlete than I was tonight.”They were joined later in the evening by Jess Hull, who won a bronze in the 1500m on Tuesday.She fell in the first lap of her 800m heat after contact in the pack.Her appeal was successful and she was awarded a place in the semis.Saturday night will be the first time two Australian women have contested a 5000m final at a World Championships after Rose Davies and Linden Hall progressed from their heat.

Davies, the national record holder, came home third and Hall – having already run a heat and semi-final in the 1500m on the weekend – finished in seventh just behind her,In the men’s javelin, Cameron McEntyre finished 12th in the final after being unable to replicate his personal best throw of 80,03m in the qualification on Wednesday,
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‘The storm for Lear is inside him’: Crossing choppy seas to bring Shakespeare to Isles of Scilly

RSC touring troupe stage King Lear in a school hall on St Mary’s before continuing to the Isle of Wight“Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! Rage! Blow!” King Lear, Act III, Scene 2A fierce wind and strong swell had turned the Atlantic into a rollercoaster and when the troupe made landfall on the Isles of Scilly, several members felt rather wobbly and looked a little green around the gills.The life of a touring actor is not always glitz and glamour, but the first visit of the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) to Scilly – to perform King Lear – got off to a particularly rocky start.“It was a rough crossing,” said Oliver Senton, who plays Lear, as the 15-strong cast and crew recovered on the harbourside of St Mary’s, the largest of the islands, 30 miles off the south-west coast of mainland Britain. “We’re more used to being in a van or train when we’re going place to place. But it’s wonderful to be here, breaking territory, bringing theatre to new places

1 day ago
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Seth Meyers: ‘Trump clearly has no answer to Putin’s aggression’

As several late-night hosts take a break for the Emmys – which went to the Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Sunday night – Seth Meyers looked into Donald Trump’s lack of international leadership.On Monday’s Late Night, Meyers pointed out the hypocrisy behind the Trump’ administration’s foreign policy agenda. “Trump and the GOP spent years whining that Democrats were supposedly leading from behind, and have now declared that America will be setting the world’s agenda,” he explained. “No more waiting for other countries to act – America acts first and other countries follow us. You got that, world?”Except earlier this week, Trump announced on Truth Social that he was ready to enact sanctions against Russia for flying drones into Poland’s airspace … but not until all Nato nations had agreed to stop buying oil from Russia

2 days ago
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What do the circus and US politics have in common? Ask these Black and brown circus artists

International Black Indigenous Circus Week in Philadelphia brings together artists specializing in aerial, juggling clowning and more for various panels and showsIn an industrial building in north Philadelphia, teal and red fabric used for aerial tricks dangled from the high ceiling. Alyssa Bigbee, the co-founder of the Philadelphia-based International Black Indigenous Circus Week, called on five performers to circle around for the first rehearsal of their circus show titled The Rebellion: Anarchy. “Remember to breathe. Remember to pace yourself,” Bigbee told the group of mostly Black and brown artists. “Lean on each other and feed off of each other in terms of energy

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

‘A guy from our record company told me to take out the whistling. I said no way. When the song went through the roof, he came to me, bent over and said, “Kick my ass!”’Being a West German band made playing the Soviet Union in the late 1980s particularly special. We’d grown up in a divided country and had tried many times to play in East Germany, but they would never let us in. When we did our first gig in what was then Leningrad, the atmosphere was a bit grey, not very colourful or rock’n’roll – but hearts started opening up over the course of the 10 gigs we did in the city

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

Your EP Feeding the Wolves turns 20 this year. Have you ever fed a wolf?I’ve never fed a wolf. But I have fed a fox once. When I used to tour the UK, I’d always try and go for runs to stay fit on the road. We’d usually end up staying in these industrial areas just outside of town

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

I was afraid to be near people for two-and-a-half years, but then I got a chance to meet the band I loved – and the experience changed everythingI have always had a degree of health anxiety, but when Covid hit, it really spiked. At home with the family, I made sure we washed all our food and even then I didn’t feel safe eating it. I would bring in the post and then be worried about touching the front door. I’d shower for ages, trying to wash the virus away.I’m a journalist, so before the anxiety set in I was a pretty outgoing and adaptable person

5 days ago
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Left smouldering for a decade, the Hawthorn v Geelong rivalry is about to fire up | Martin Pegan

about 3 hours ago
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World Athletics Championships 2025: McLaughlin-Levrone wins women’s 400m, Kebinatshipi takes men’s title –as it happened

about 3 hours ago
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Gout Gout misses out on 200m final but says better performances are ‘coming’

about 4 hours ago
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Hannah Botterman fit to face France in semi-final after fearing her World Cup was over

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Tom Brady’s jaunt into the Raiders’ coaching booth exposed an NFL blind spot

about 6 hours ago
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Enhanced Games targets British stars after signing US sprinter Fred Kerley

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