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DyeStat.com – News – Grant Fisher, Kara Winger Break American Records At Brussels

DyeStat.com - News - Grant Fisher, Kara Winger Break American Records At Brussels

Grant Fisher Runs 12:46.96 For 2nd Place In 5,000m; Kara Winger Slings Javelin 223-5 (68.11m) For World Lead; EJ Obiena Deals Mondo Duplantis First Loss In A Year

By Doug Binder, DyeStat Editor

Photos courtesy Diamond League AG

The professional track season passed through one of its final stops on the way to the Diamond League final next week with a spate of spectacular performances at the Allianz Memorial Van Damme in Brussels, Belgium on Friday. 

Kara Winger, who has repeated her intention to retire at the end of the season, launched the biggest throw of her career and moved all the way up to No. 12 in world history with an American record and world-leading mark of 68.11m (223-5). 

Winger, the World silver medalist in Eugene, has enjoyed the best season of her life at the age of 36. 

She surpassed her own personal best by nearly a meter and a half. 

Grant Fisher of the Nike Bowerman Track Club came through with the 5,000 meters performance that matches his 2022 fitness, swiping more than 15 seconds off his personal best with 12:46.96 that makes him the 12th fastest man — and fastest outside of Kenya, Ethiopia and Uganda — in history. 

The time was nearly seven seconds faster than the American indoor record 12:53.73 that he ran at Boston University in February. His outdoor best in the 5,000 had been 13:02.53.

Fisher finished about a second behind Kenya’s Jacob Krop (12:45.79). 

In the men’s pole vault, world record holder Armand ‘Mondo’ Duplantis of Sweden suffered a rare defeat when World bronze medalist E.J. Obiena of the Philippines made 5.91m on his third attempt. Duplantis missed all three of his tries at the height. 

Shericka Jackson and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce ran 10.73 and 10.74 in a close finish in the women’s 100 meters as the Jamaicans went 1-2. Jackson, the world champion in the 200, beat Fraser-Pryce, the world champion in the 100.

Americans Aleia Hobbs (10.91) and Sha’Carri Richardson (10.93) were fourth and fifth, respectively. 

Great Britain’s Jake Wightman, the world 1,500 champion, ran a personal best time of 1:43.65 to win the men’s 800 meters. He’s the fourth-fastest Brit ever in the 800 meters, behind Sebastian Coe, Steve Cram and Peter Elliott.

 

 

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