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Report 1 - Day 3

March 9 - 13:00

Nick Davies reports from Paris

It is now a decade since Stefka Kostadinova set the current world outdoor record of 2.09m at the IAAF World Championships in Rome, but in Bercy late last night, the Bulgarian turned back the clock. Her performance, which saw her make first time clearances at all heights up to 2.02m, was sublime. Already the reigning Olympic and World Champion outdoors and world indoor champion in 1987,1989 and 1993, Kostadinova lacked only one thing going into this competition: the world indoor record of 2.07m set by Heike Henkel in 1992. Once clear at 2.02m, and with Inga Babakova of the Ukraine and Norway’s Hanne Haugland both failing at that height, Kostadinova knew the gold was hers. And such was her confidence that when she rushed over to the judges to declare the next height one sensed her intention. The mark flashed up "2.08m" to a roar from the die-hard aficionados still left in the stadium. It was close, but Kostadinova brushed off the bar with each of her three attempts. But she had the consolation of knowing that she if she is already in 2.06 shape then her outdoor world record will be under threat later this year. Like many of the events in Paris, the women’s high jump was excellent in depth. Eight competitors bettered 1.95m, two more than in Barcelona ‘95, with Haugland and Babakova both equalling national records.

Sonia O’Sullivan, seeking to make up for her major disappointment at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta when illness wrecked her hopes, looked like she had indoor gold wrapped up when she led the women’s 3000m Gabriela Szabo and Sonia O'Sullivanwith less than a lap to go. But the lanky Irish runner, who last ran indoors in 1992, committed a cardinal error by moving out wide. As Romania’s Gabriela Szabo sneaked past on the inside with just fifty metres to go O’Sullivan grimaced in anguish but could not regain the lead. The short, fast stepping Szabo, tailor made for indoor tracks, retained her World Indoor title. Her winning time of 8:45.75 was the fastest this year while O’Sullivan broke the Irish record to clock 8:46.19. Szabo, who won Olympic silver at 1500m after "flopping" at her main event the 5000m, has proved yet again, that she can be dangerous at all distance from 1500m to 10,000m on the track, the road and cross country. Olympic 10,000m champion Fernanda Ribeiro claimed the bronze, but she was not in top form, finishing three seconds behind O’Sullivan.

 

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Paris-Bercy World Indoor Championships 1997
 
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