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

about 6 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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cultureSee all
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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

2 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

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

Last year, more than 37 million people settled their behinds into the red-velvet upholstery, plastic chairs or wooden “I’ll only tolerate this because it’s the Globe” benches of a theatre. West End attendance has reportedly grown by 11% and regional audiences have increased by 4% since 2019 – pretty impressive amid a cost of living crisis and after a pandemic that had us all locked in our houses.The increase in attendance can be chalked up to all sorts of reasons: the post-Covid return of tourists to the UK, schemes offering more reasonably priced tickets, and big films such as Wicked leaving people wondering what that Defying Gravity note sounds like live. But I’d throw another contender into the mix: the rise of AI.For some, AI’s arrival has been exciting or, at the very least, handy – who doesn’t want to outsource life’s grunt work, or get an expert photo editor/nutritionist/therapist for nothing? For others, it feels bleak and bewildering

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

Spinal Tap II: The End ContinuesOut nowFollowing up one of the greatest comedies ever made is a tough act, but here come Rob Reiner et al to have a bash at rekindling the magic. Luckily the subject matter of an ageing band still determined to take it to 11 has plenty of real-world touchstones to keep this particular parody relevant.From Ground Zero: Stories from GazaOut nowTwenty-two directors come together via producer Rashid Masharawi and exec producer Michael Moore to create this documentary about Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza, which – as reported by a UN special committee, Amnesty International and Médecins Sans Frontières – has created the largest group of child amputees per capita in history and created a deliberate man-made famine, among other violations of international law.The Long WalkOut nowIn a version of the United States ruled by a fascist regime, a group of young men take part in a contest where they must always walk a speed of at least three miles per hour or be shot by their military chaperones. So it’s got a Squid Game meets Hunger Games vibe, based on the 1979 novel by Stephen King

5 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Charlie Kirk shooting: ‘Political violence is abhorrent to the highest ideals of this country’

Late-night hosts reacted to the assassination of the rightwing activist Charlie Kirk and decried the rising tide of political violence in the US.Seth Meyers opened Thursday’s Late Night with a separate segment on the Kirk assassination. “We are horrified by this grotesque tragedy and our condolences go out to his family and loved ones,” he said. “It should never be a matter of political ideology to mourn and to extend our fullest and deepest empathy to those who are suffering.“Political violence is abhorrent and anathema to the highest ideals of this country,” he continued

5 days ago
societySee all
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Daily weight loss pill can help cut body weight by a fifth, trial shows

about 24 hours ago
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US health officials to revisit vaccine policies using anti-vax tactics, experts warn

1 day ago
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Long Covid linked to heavier periods and risk of iron deficiency

1 day ago
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Hospital league tables will harm, not heal, the NHS | Letters

2 days ago
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Letter: Sir Kenneth Calman obituary

2 days ago
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Mothers and babies at risk of harm in ‘toxic’ NHS cover-up culture, health leader to say

3 days ago