Lachlan Kennedy breaks 10-second barrier for 100m but Jess Hull crashes out of 1500m final

A picture


In a historic and dramatic evening of athletics at the national championships at Sydney Olympic Park, Lachie Kennedy became the first Australian 100m sprinter to break the 10-second barrier on home soil,The celebratory mood flipped in an instant, however, after Jess Hull’s fall in the final straight of the 1500m,The incident triggered two protests and prompted her father and coach Simon to shout angrily within earshot of the press that his daughter was “robbed”, and the result remains in limbo ahead of an appeal to be heard on Saturday,In the 100m heats, 22-year-old Kennedy stormed out of the blocks and surged through the finish line on Friday night, stopping the clock at 9,96sec with only a modest – and legal – tailwind of +0.

2.It lowered the personal best he set last year in Nairobi by two hundredths of a second, and was the first time a local has run under 10 seconds for 100 metres in an event in Australia.“Honestly, I didn’t really even expect it.I was just super relaxed, super – not cruisey, I was definitely pushing it – but it just felt easy,” Kennedy said.“So I think I’ve got a bit more in the tank.

”The fastest anyone has run in Australia is Maurice Greene’s 9.87sec, set in 2000 during the Sydney 2000 final at the Olympic Stadium, barely more than a stone’s throw from the Athletic Centre where Kennedy made history on Friday.The Queenslander feels he could go under 9.9sec as soon as this year.“This is still only my second hundred [race of the season], so I’ve got so much more to give, but we’re off to a cracking start.

”Having now gone under 10 seconds twice, Kennedy said he wants to make a habit of it.“Doing it once is good, but doing it twice – I want to make a bit of a pattern of it, I want to make it routine, I want to make it the standard.”Kennedy will race 100m semi-finals and likely the final on Saturday night, before he takes on the 200m on Sunday against Gout Gout.Rohan Browning, the defending 100m national champion who beat Kennedy in Perth last year, also won his heat.The national record is 9.

93sec, set by Patrick Johnson in Japan in 2003.Johnson and Kennedy are the only Australians to have run 100m under 10 seconds in legal wind conditions.Browning and Gout have also run under the mark, but with excessive tailwinds.Kennedy said he was honoured to be the first Australian to record a legal sub-10sec run in Australia.“I sure we’ll have way more in the future, [but I am] definitely honoured to be the first.

No one can ever take that away from you.”In the 1500m finals, Cam Myers came close to a new national record when he ran 3:29.85, less than half a second off the 2023 mark set by Olli Hoare who finished a valiant second.The women’s 1500m final was the most dramatic of the night, following an incident with barely 50m to go at the end of a surprisingly slow, tactical race.Claudia Hollingsworth – the woman considered Hull’s major rival – sought to switch from the inside of race leader Hull to the outside, but appeared to clip the Paris silver medallist, who tumbled over.

Abbey Caldwell was also caught up in the carnage, and Sarah Billings slipped past to cross the line second behind Hollingsworth.The winner was later disqualified for jostling, but that decision is subject to an appeal to be heard on Saturday.Hull was deflated after finishing at the back of the pack and was comforted by her mother, as her father and coach voiced his displeasure in the stands.The runner said she could have pushed the pace earlier to minimise the risk of a fall, but the incident itself was out of her hands.“I went to close the rail because I thought I was away,” Hull said.

“Whoever was coming from behind just gave me a tap and when you’re going that fast, the slightest bump you hit the track.” She said she believed what happened was not legal, “but, it happens”.Hull, Hollingsworth, Caldwell and Billings plan to race again in the 800m that has heats on Saturday and the final on Sunday, while Hull also plans to contest the 5000m.
technologySee all
A picture

Amazon upsets ebook lovers by ending support for old Kindle devices

Amazon is to stop supporting older Kindle models leaving longtime ebook fans unable to access new content from the Kindle store.Devices released during or before 2012 will no longer receive updates from 20 May, affecting owners of older Kindles, including the earliest models such as the Touch and some Fire tablets. It is thought that 2m e-readers could be affected.Users will still be able to read ebooks they have downloaded, and their accounts and their Kindle library will remain accessible on mobile and desktop apps. Active users have been offered discounts to help “transition to newer devices”

A picture

OpenAI shelves Stargate UK in blow to Britain’s AI ambitions

OpenAI has put on hold plans for a landmark UK investment citing high energy costs and regulation, in a blow to the government which has put AI at the centre of its growth strategy.Stargate UK was a part of the UK-US AI deal announced last September, in which US companies appeared to commit £31bn to the UK’s tech sector, part of a larger series of investments intended to “mainline AI” into the British economy.It came as the Labour government seeks to make AI and datacentres the engine of its growth plans, alongside closer ties with Europe and regional growth.“This is a wake-up call for the government to manage energy costs in the UK and foundation infrastructure,” said Victoria Collins MP, the Liberal Democrat spokesperson for science, innovation and technology. “We cannot be dependent on US tech companies to build our own sovereign capabilities – whether that’s energy cost, supply or even data and phone signal

A picture

British computer scientist denies he is bitcoin developer Satoshi Nakamoto

A British computer scientist has insisted he is not the elusive developer of bitcoin, after a report claimed to unmask him as its creator.A story in the New York Times details a years-long effort to unmask Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious author of the bitcoin white paper which laid the theoretical foundations for modern digital currencies.It names Adam Back, a London-born computer scientist and entrepreneur. In a thread on X, Back promptly denied being the mysterious – and presumably ultra-wealthy – technologist.“I also don’t know who satoshi is, and i think it is good for bitcoin that this is the case, as it helps bitcoin be viewed [as] a new asset class, the mathematically scarce digital commodity,” he wrote

A picture

Britons warned about Russian hackers targeting internet routers for espionage

Russian hackers are exploiting commonly sold internet routers to harvest information for espionage purposes, the UK’s cybersecurity agency has said.The hack could allow attackers to obtain users’ credentials, redirect them to fake sites, and potentially access other devices on their home network such as phones and PCs, said Alan Woodward, a professor at the University of Surrey.The National Cyber Security Centre said on Tuesday the operations were “believed to be opportunistic in nature, with the actor targeting a wide pool of victims and then likely filtering down for users of potential intelligence value at each stage of the exploitation chain”.It follows a common pattern of cyber-actors targeting edge devices – hardware such as internet routers or internet-connected security cameras – that act as a bridge between users and the cloud.Woodward said: “It’s not the first time that warnings have come out about routers

A picture

The life-changing magic of wearing smartglasses | Letters

I read with sympathy the concerns of Elle Hunt in relation to privacy issues around Meta smartglasses (I wore Meta’s smartglasses for a month – and it left me feeling like a creep, 1 April). Clearly there needs to be ongoing development of technology and protocols that protect the public from ill-intentioned users. As the chief executive of a charity supporting people with a visual impairment, however, I would like to emphasise the point touched upon in your article: how transformative this technology is already proving for blind people.We are seeing significant numbers of our visually impaired staff and clients using Meta glasses in conjunction with their mobile phones to improve their ability to perform ordinary functions that most of us take for granted. A visual impairment can be disempowering and isolating

A picture

Tell us: do you use AI chatbots to make decisions for you?

AI chatbots like ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude are now a part of everyday life.More and more people are using them to help make decisions in their lives, like sending text messages, deciding what to cook, or navigating relationships.We want to hear about your experiences of using chatbots. Are you addicted to them? And what type of decisions are you using them for?You can tell us your experiences of using chatbots using this form.Please include as much detail as possible