Lamont Marcell Jacobs of Italy won the gold in the men’s 100m at the Tokyo Olympics. Picture: Peter Jebautzke/Reuters
CAPE TOWN – The curse of the major championship finals came back to haunt Akani Simbine on Sunday as he just missed out on a medal by finishing fourth in the 100m final at the Tokyo Olympics.
The South African star, drawn in lane two, got out of the blocks smoothly, but once again did not make the best of starts as he had to watch Italy’s Lamont Marcell Jacobs roar past him in lane three.
ALSO READ: Simbine into 100m final after surviving blistering qualifiers
Americans Fred Kerley and Ronnie Baker were leading the field at around the 50-metre mark, and it looked like they could grab the gold and silver medals.
But they couldn’t shake off the tall Jacobs, who seemed to get quicker the longer the race went on, and the Italian pipped Kerley on the line to win the title in a time of 9.80 seconds – a new European record.
Kerley also produced a new personal best of 9.84 to clinch the silver, while Canada’s Andre de Grasse stormed back in lane nine to beat Simbine for the bronze in 9.89 – also a new personal best.
So close as Akani Simbine forced to settle for fourth. Read @GaryLemke from inside the Tokyo Stadium
— Team South Africa (@TeamSA2020) August 1, 2021
https://t.co/ZTqmcAYtlF#TeamSA #Tokyo2020
The 27-year-old South African Simbine was forced to miss out on a podium finish once more – having finished fifth in the 2016 Rio Olympics and 2017 world championships, and fourth at the 2019 world championships – as he could only muster a time of 9.93.
That was well short of his personal best and African record of 9.84, which he set in Hungary in early July, and which would’ve given him a bronze medal at least on Sunday.
Men’s 100m final results
1 Lamont Jacobs (Italy) 9.80
2 Fred Kerley (USA) 9.84
3 Andre de Grasse (Canada) 9.89
4 Akani Simbine (RSA) 9.93
5 Ronnie Baker (USA) 9.95
6 Bingtian Su (China) 9.98
DNF: Enoch Adegoke (Nigeria)
DQ: Zharnel Hughes (GB)
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