Tokyo Olympics: Sydney McLaughlin shatters women's 400m hurdles world record to win gold

By ANI | Published: August 4, 2021 01:26 PM2021-08-04T13:26:38+5:302021-08-04T13:35:13+5:30

USA's Sydney McLaughlin created a new world record with a phenomenal run in the women's 400m hurdles final here at the Olympic Stadium on Wednesday.

Tokyo Olympics: Sydney McLaughlin shatters women's 400m hurdles world record to win gold | Tokyo Olympics: Sydney McLaughlin shatters women's 400m hurdles world record to win gold

Tokyo Olympics: Sydney McLaughlin shatters women's 400m hurdles world record to win gold

USA's Sydney McLaughlin created a new world record with a phenomenal run in the women's 400m hurdles final here at the Olympic Stadium on Wednesday.

The new Olympic champion broke her own world-best mark of 51.90, storming past compatriot Dalilah Muhammad down the home straight to win the Olympic gold medal in 51.46 seconds.

Dalilah -- the Rio 2016 Olympic champion -- took silver, going under 52 seconds in a time that also broke the former world record (51.58). Femke Bol of the Netherlands finished third in a new European record of 52.03.

McLaughlin entered the final as a clear favourite, having broken Dalilah's world record at the US track and field trials in June. However, in Muhammad, she had a worthy -- and brilliant -- adversary. She was the reigning Olympic gold medallist and an athlete she has swapped the first position within multiple races over the past few years.

McLaughlin was understandably elated with her gold-medal-winning run, saying after the race, as per Olympics.com: "I'm absolutely delighted. What a great race. I'm just grateful to be out here celebrating that extraordinary race and representing my country."

"I saw (silver medallist) Dalilah ahead of me with one to go. I just thought 'Run your race'. The race doesn't really start till hurdle seven. I just wanted to go out there and give it everything I had. It's just about trusting your training, trusting your coach, and that will get you all the way round the track."

Dalilah, for her part, was happy with her own performance. "Every question is going to be, 'am I happy or am I unhappy with silver?'," she said. "But that's not how I feel at all. I've had an amazing year and to finish with 51.5(8), shattering my personal best, is absolutely amazing.

"Just like the men's race, all three of our times would have won any Olympics, any other year. I'm so proud to be part of that history and even more proud of my teammate Sydney. I'm just happy it's a one-two final for USA, and today I'm happy with second."

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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