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The idea was to go and watch the marathon in Akihabara, which is easy to reach from my hotel: the first passage is just after 10 km. But I can't get up that early, and when I take the underground, I see that the website already shoes the passage (there is an intermediate time named “Akihabara”). I go anyway, because from what I understand there should be a “return” passage and in any case there is a second lap. I arrive at the course, where it's hard to find a place: I have to stand in the second row (there's more space on the other side of the road, but it's difficult to get there). I don't know how long it will be before the athlete pass, but shortly afterwards I see the car marking the time go by, so we're almost there. First an American passes, followed by another one and a Japanese, to the enthusiasm of the crowd. After four athletes running alone, there is a group of about ten, including the favourites. After a couple of minutes, Lonedo, the only Italian, arrives in a group of five: she is ranked 29th. When I see the timing car pass on the other side of the road, I realise that the outward and return passages are actually very close together: the athletes pass by again, naturally in the same positions, but there is an opportunity to see them better.
When almost
all had come for the outward passage and more than half for the return, I set off
towards the stadium. I read that Fantini had made a throw that should make her confident of qualification and that Arese and Riva had qualified in the 1500: once I
arrived, I read about the elimination of Bussotti and, above all, Ingebritsen
and the other favourites.
At the
entrance, the person checking tickets compliments me on my Osaka 2007 WorldChampionships t-shirt. This time, I am in the first deck, perhaps a bit too
low, in the eighth row: in fact, you can’t see the finishing straight very
well, as it’s blocked by the advertising board at trackside. There are more
“Westerners” around me than yesterday evening (but still a minority); in my row
there’s a group of Danes, whom I later discover are the family of a 1500
athlete, Hansen, who then arrives in tears (he finished second to last). I see
Fantini’s third throw, which is less than the previous ones, but she closes her group in fifth place, so with a good margin. I start to worry when, after a few
throws from the second group, she’s already eighth, but there aren’t many left
who could overtake her; in fact, she finishes tenth. Two Americans are out (out
of four): one with three fouls and one with modest throws.
The track
is cleared to make way for the arrival of the Marathon: on the screen you see
the first two, Ethiopian Assefa and Kenyan Jepchirchir, approaching. Next to
them, they put up pictures of fans turned into manga characters. The two enter
the stadium together and, until just over 100 metres from the finish, are still
neck and neck; then the Kenyan gains a small lead and wins by two seconds. Two
and a half minutes later comes a surprising third, a Uruguayan. Lonedo arrives
earlier than expected, 20th: I can hardly believe it’s her. When a Costa Rican
arrives, the announcer claims she’s the last, but in fact there are eight more
after her. The session ends with the 100m hurdles heats: the Italian women do
well, both qualifying directly.
In the
afternoon I struggle to get going again. So I set off knowing I’ll see the
races already underway: I hope at least to catch the third heat of the men’s
400, the first with an Italian (Scotti). I arrive just as it’s about to start,
so I enter through the first door I find, taking advantage of the fact that
nobody is checking that people go to their blocks. Scotti starts fast, then fades slightly:
from my position I can’t see the placings well, it looks like fourth, but
seeing the time of the first (43.90) I think he’ll be in a good spot for a
fastest time slot, and maybe he’s set the Italian record. In fact, he’s third
and the record stands by a good 0.30 seconds: 44.45! In his heat, Sito stays
close to the defending champion Watson, but only because Watson is having a bad
race; in the end, they finish in the last two places, with the Italian ahead.
Then come the heats of the women’s event, with the Italian women both finishing
fifth, not far from qualification, which was at 51.37, so not impossible.
While I was
watching Scotti, I also saw Lando clear 2.16m, the only Italian I saw at that
height, which everyone cleared on first attempt. At 2.21m the problems begin: all
miss the first, then the second, with Tamberi, after getting hyped up with the help of crowd, seemingly flying high before hitting the bar with his heel. Makes you
wonder how Fassinotti, who was left out, would have done. Who would have said a few years ago that
we could play the football fan’s game, “the one who doesn’t play is always the
best”. At least Sioli makes it on the third attempt, the others go out, Sottile
by a whisker. Sioli clears 2.25m on the second attempt and I think that might
be enough. After two attempts, nine have cleared it, so it seems almost done,
but then it’s hard to understand what’s happening, the website isn’t working.
Eventually, the announcer will declare that there are 13 left, so all are
qualified.
The first
final is the women’s discus. After the first two throws, by Altman and van
Klinken, it seems likely the gold and silver are already decided, and so it is,
though Altman will improve. The places behind are more contested, with third
passing from Cuban Morales to Swedish Kamga and then back to the Cuban. In the
confusion, I follow the fifth throw thinking it’s the sixth. There’s also the
women’s long jump, with Italian regrets: I’d chosen my seat for that, and
indeed the view is excellent. Here, too, the first jump seems decisive, with
Davis’s 7.08m (who will later do 7.13m). The second jump, Mihambo’s, is greeted
by the crowd as if it’s a great leap, but it’s only 6.60m: watching metric bar live, the jumps seem longer, so the crowd responds with murmurs even for
merely decent jumps. The German will improve to 6.99m and win silver, but the
surprise is Colombian Linares, who starts with 6.75m and reaches 6.92m, taking
bronze.
The track
events continue with the 100m semi-finals, first women’s, then men’s. Among the
women, Jefferson already runs 10.73. Second fastest for Tina Clayton, third for
Alfred, Richardson and Asher-Smith go through as fastest times. Dosso stays
with the group only for the initial metres, then finishes sixth in 11.22. Among
the men, Bednarek and Thompson finish together in 9.85, Seville does 9.86,
Lyles “only” 9.92. Jacobs runs in the first and, after a poor start, closes up
on the group, but never really contends for qualification. At least it’s his
season’s best: 10.16. The final will have four Americans (intended as from the continent)
and four Africans, no Europeans.
After the
100m semi-finals many leave, but I stay for the women’s 1500 semi-finals: for a
while I’d planned my break to go to the toilet and grab a drink right after. Two
tactical races: in the first, Sabatini loses ground on the third lap; in the
second, Zenoni stays with the group and, after a series of elbows and jostling,
finishes fourth and is in the final. In the break I miss the first two
kilometres of the 10,000 (and a few long jumps). An ultra-tactical race, though
with surges: the split at 3km is only a few seconds slower than the women’s
race, and only after 6km does the pace dip below 3 minutes per kilometre. The
crowd gets excited when the Japanese come to the front: they’ll do so twice.
Only at the sixth kilometre does someone begin to lose contact and, on the last
lap, there’s a group of 12, but without the Japanese. With 250 metres to go,
the announcer wonders if there’ll be an Ethiopian sweep, but on the last bend,
Europeans and Americans gain ground on Kejelcha, who was leading, and in the final
sprint, Gressier overtakes him. It ends with two Europeans on the podium and
three light-skinned athletes in the top five.
The highlight remains: the two 100m finals. The presentations are like a normal race, except for a theme short video: athletes already on the track, no light shows. In the women’s, a Jamaican gets out fast, but then Jefferson overtakes and pulls away, though the Jamaican holds onto second ahead of Alfred. I thought the Jamaican was Jackson, but after the finish I find out it’s Clayton. Jefferson 10.61, Clayton 10.76, Alfred 10.84. In the men’s, Tebogo starts before the starter’s gun even fires: after so many were forgiven in the preliminary rounds, this time disqualification is inevitable. They restart, and the two Jamaicans stay ahead from start to finish, while the race for third isn’t clear, at least from the stands. Although I’m very surprised, since in previous finals he always faded, this time I realise the winner is Seville, who beats Thompson and Lyles. A slow final compared to previous years: 9.89 is enough for a medal.
Compared to
yesterday, the exit is a bit quicker, but there’s more of a queue for the
metro. There I talk to my neighbour (who’s figured out I’m Italian from my
painted cheeks) about the European Championships in Rome.
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