Australia’s Jess Hull takes her ‘second chance’ and qualifies for 800m final

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Wearing an adhesive bandage covering a gash on her leg, Jess Hull became the first Australian woman to qualify for a world championship 800m final after powering through her semi-final in Tokyo and setting a new national record.Her time on Friday was only good enough for third place, but given the speed of the race she progressed into Sunday’s final as one of the two fastest qualifiers.And it lowered the national mark set only last month by her team-mate Claudia Hollingsworth, who finished fourth in her semi.Hull said she felt she had been given a “second chance” after her fall and reinstatement in the heat on Thursday, but she was pleased with her speed given she has already run three rounds of the 1500m.“To come out tonight and run fast and run a PB and earn my place in the final, I’m really excited,” she said.

Hull’s time of 1:57,15 broke Hollingsworth’s mark set just last month by half a second, and the 28-year-old said she knew she had to run fast when she saw the draws,“I figured the little Qs [fastest non-automatic qualifiers] were coming out of my semi just based on the depth, so I was like, ‘OK, just race the race’ and I got the time that finally I’ve been searching for,”After her bronze medal in the 1500m, the drama of Thursday, and now an 800m final, Hull said even she has been surprised by how much she had crammed into one week,“I’m not one to be dramatic, and even though dad would say that, as a coach, I’m not someone that turns up to training and has the dramatics daily, but this championship has been quite dramatic by my own standards.

”Hull had been inspected by the Australian team doctor and a physio after she fell and slid across the track on Thursday due to contact with a competitor, acquiring a wound on her inner calf in the process.Although she wore a 10cm plaster, she said she was “OK” and the cut was mostly shallow and did not need stitches.“I might feel a little more bruised tomorrow, but I don’t think so,” she said.“There’s one deep bit right on the very inside [of the cut], but the rest of it’s just superficial.”Abbey Caldwell finished fifth in her race but ended with the 14th best time in the semis, and said she was content with her performance.

“Watching Jess’s race I was quite inspired to just be aggressive and she really proves that we can do it, and we have three Aussies that are worthy of the spot in the final,”In the women’s javelin, Mackenzie Little qualified for Saturday’s final with a single huge throw of 65,54m, beating her season best by three and a half metres with an effort that would have been good enough for silver in Paris,“I threw that throw, I felt light, easy, fantastic, and it just felt so good,” she said,Sign up to Australia SportGet a daily roundup of the latest sports news, features and comment from our Australian sports deskafter newsletter promotionWorking as an emergency doctor in Sydney, Little helped saved the life of a man who had suffered a huge heart attack the week before she left for Tokyo, and combines regular night shifts with her career as an international athlete.

The 28-year-old said she now has a negative leave balance, and “it has been tough [to juggle the two] and it will continue to be tough, but I still wouldn’t change it”.Ky Robinson progressed to the men’s 5,000m final after finishing fifth in his heat, the first time an Australian will be represented in the last 16 at the world championships since Stewart McSweyn in 2019.Saturday’s action includes the 20km race walks in the day session, as well as men’s discus qualifying featuring Matt Denny.The evening includes the relay heats, and finishes with the women’s 5,000m final featuring Rose Davies and Linden Hall.
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Australia’s Jess Hull takes her ‘second chance’ and qualifies for 800m final

Wearing an adhesive bandage covering a gash on her leg, Jess Hull became the first Australian woman to qualify for a world championship 800m final after powering through her semi-final in Tokyo and setting a new national record.Her time on Friday was only good enough for third place, but given the speed of the race she progressed into Sunday’s final as one of the two fastest qualifiers. And it lowered the national mark set only last month by her team-mate Claudia Hollingsworth, who finished fourth in her semi.Hull said she felt she had been given a “second chance” after her fall and reinstatement in the heat on Thursday, but she was pleased with her speed given she has already run three rounds of the 1500m. “To come out tonight and run fast and run a PB and earn my place in the final, I’m really excited,” she said

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Sex tests brought in after data showed 50-60 DSD athletes in finals, World Athletics says

Between 50 and 60 athletes who went through male puberty have been finalists in the female category in global and continental track and field championships since 2000, according to a senior World Athletics official.World Athletics has introduced SRY screening, a gene test that uses a cheek swab to assess if someone is biologically male or female, for the world championships in Tokyo.In a presentation to a scientific panel in the Japanese capital on Friday, Dr Stéphane Bermon, head of health and science at World Athletics, outlined why the sport’s governing body believes such screens are necessary as he presented data collected over the past 25 years. He said it showed that athletes with differences of sex development (DSD), who have a 46 XY karyotype with male testes but were reported female at birth, were significantly “over-represented” in major finals and that it “compromises the integrity of the female competitions”.“Everyone is watching World Athletics and we are leading in this area,” Bermon said before telling his audience that there were “approximately 50-60 cases of DSD in athletics”

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Geelong defeat Hawthorn: AFL 2025 first preliminary final – as it happened

Jonathan Horn reports on Patrick Dangerfield’s inspirational performance and Geelong booking their place in the 2025 AFL grand final. Thanks a lot for following along, we’ll be back tomorrow to find out whether they will face Collingwood or Brisbane.Patrick Dangerfield has achieved almost everything in the game. A premiership with the Cats in 2022, a Brownlow medal in his first season with his second club in 2016, and eight All-Australian blazers between 2012 and 2020. But the 35-year-old is yet to lead a side to the promised land as captain of a premiership side

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Vintage Patrick Dangerfield leads Geelong into AFL grand final with win over Hawthorn

Patrick Dangerfield put Geelong on his back and carted them to a grand final. The 35-year-old unleashed one of the best and most important hours of his career, slaughtering Hawthorn out of the middle, on the ground, in the air, and around goals. He kickstarted what had been a sluggish Cats outfit, and propelled them to a grand final. In the end, they won in a canter.The Cats were a bedraggled outfit early – hesitant, rushed and a shadow of the hyper-locked-in team we saw a fortnight ago

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Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone: no barrier too high for the 400m queen | Owen Lewis

The American has rewritten the hurdles record book and now posted the fastest 400m flat in four decades. At 26, her ceiling seems limitlessAs Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone and Marileidy Paulino whisked around the final bend of the 400m final at the World Championships in Tokyo, did McLaughlin-Levrone think back to when Paulino handed her just one of two career losses in the event in Paris two years prior? Probably not, though she certainly had reason to. The New Jerseyan led most of that 2023 race, surging to an early advantage from the inside lane and maintaining it for three-quarters of the course. But she’d gone out too hard. The 400-meter is a cruel trial, just too long to sprint flat-out the entire way, just too short to save meaningful reserves

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‘Roll over or come back fighting’: Mo Hunt on England pain that left a scar

It is a quiet midweek afternoon on the outskirts of Bristol and, up to now, Natasha “Mo” Hunt has been her normal upbeat self. England’s scrum-half has been discussing any number of topics, from her love of rugby’s tactical nuances to her croissant-loving fans, with the easy confidence of someone relishing every second of this Women’s Rugby World Cup.Her sparkly eyed positivity is such that it’s easy to forget she has had to escape the heart of darkness to be here. Three years ago, on the eve of the last World Cup, Hunt was axed from the Red Roses squad and big knockout games such as Saturday’s semi-final against France now mean that little bit more. “When you get hurt that bad it’s never going to go away,” she says softly