Gender row boxer wins gold, US flop in relays

Nafissatou becomes first woman in history to win three consecutive Olympic golds

Imane Khelif of Algeria holds an Algerian flag as she celebrates winning the final and gold medal against Liu Yang of China. PHOTO: REUTERS

PARIS:

Algerian boxer Imane Khelif defied a major gender controversy to win gold at the Paris Olympics on Friday as the United States' star sprinters flew and then flopped on the track.

Khelif, 25, claimed a unanimous points decision win over China's Yang Liu in the women's 66kg final for her first Olympic medal.

"I'm very happy. For eight years this has been my dream and I'm now the Olympic champion and gold medallist," said Khelif.

"I've worked for eight years, no sleep, eight years tired. Now I'm Olympic champion."

Khelif, along with Taiwan's Lin Yu-ting, who fights for gold on Saturday, was disqualified from last year's world championships after failing gender eligibility testing. The International Olympic Committee (IOC), which runs the sport in Paris, however, insist the two fighters were born and raised as women, and have passports saying that.

"I want to thank all the people who have come to support me," said Khelif, after the final at Roland Garros, the home of French tennis.

"All the people from Algeria and all the people at my base. I want to thank all the team, my coach. Thank you so much."

On the track at the Stade de France, US sprint superstar Sha'Carri Richardson made up for her silver in the individual 100m with a gold-winning anchor run in the 4x100m relay. Richardson turned on the afterburners to overhaul Britain, Germany and France in the home straight as the US quartet took gold in a season's best time of 41.78sec.

"The moment that I will describe is realising that when we won, the USA ladies, it was a phenomenal feeling for all of us," said Richardson. But the US men again failed in their bid to win their first 4x100m gold since Sydney in 2000 with a disastrous baton fumble.

Already missing 100m individual champion Noah Lyles through Covid, a botched baton change completely slowed the US momentum, allowing Canada to snatch gold ahead of South Africa and Britain.

"You can never count us out, we feel great," said Canadian runner Aaron Brown.

Meanwhile, a nail-biting women's heptathlon saw Nafissatou Thiam become the first woman in history to win three consecutive Olympic golds, sealing victory ahead of Britain's Katarina Johnson-Thompson.

Thiam, the 2016 and 2020 Olympic champion, finished with 6,880 points after the 800m, the final event in the seven-discipline test of endurance.

Kenya's Beatrice Chebet won the women's 10,000m gold to add to her 5,000m title as defending champion Sifan Hassan finished third.

American Rai Benjamin outstripped Norwegian arch-rival and defending champion Karsten Warholm to win the 400m hurdles. Spain's Jordan Diaz won gold in the men's triple jump leading a podium consisting of three Cuban-born men.

Substitute Sergio Camello struck twice in extra time to settle a remarkable men's football final as Spain beat France 5-3.

It had looked as though Spain were going to run away with victory when they recovered from conceding an early goal to lead 3-1 by half-time.

However, France staged a memorable comeback with Jean-Philippe Mateta converting a stoppage-time penalty awarded following a VAR review.

That took the final into extra time, where Camello emerged as the hero by giving Spain the lead again in the 100th minute of an absorbing game, and then running away to seal their victory at the death.

"Coaches don't go up onto the podium. That is for the players. They did this. They fought like a family," said Spain coach Santi Denia.

China maintained its diving dominance, securing their seventh title of the Games as Chen Yiwen clinched women's 3m springboard gold.

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