Gatlin eyes double victory in Brussels

Gatlin eyes double victory in Brussels

BRUSSELS - Agence France-Presse
Gatlin eyes double victory in Brussels

In this July 18, 2014, file photo, Justin Gatlin, of the United States, wins the men's 200 meters during the Herculis International Athletics Meeting, at the Louis II Stadium, in Monaco. AP Photo

U.S. sprinter Justin Gatlin will go for a 100-200m double at the Diamond League finale in Brussels tonight, up against a raft of track stars but not Jamaican Usain Bolt.

While Bolt has already called time on his injury-plagued season, the 32-year-old Gatlin, the 2004 Olympic gold medallist in the 100m and 200m world champion in 2005 before serving a four-year doping ban, has seized his opportunity to dominate global sprinting in 2014.

The American veteran has set the fastest times of the year in both sprints, 9.80 in the 100m and 19.68sec in the 200m.

He will have Bolt's King Baudouin stadium best of 9.76sec over the 100m in his sights, but will be racing a formidable field that includes the Jamaican trio of Kemar Bailey-Cole, Asafa Powell and Nesta Carter, Briton James Dasaolu and US teammate Tyson Gay.

Former world champion Gay, who only returned to action recently after a doping ban, has clocked 9.93sec this season, but it is another American and former doping offender, Michael Rodgers, who heads the Diamond Race standings, by one point from Gatlin.

High jump

In the field, it is fitting that the men's high jump gets a show-in at the 14th and final Diamond League meet of the season.

The event has flourished in 2014, and Brussels will see Ukraine's world champion Bohdan Bondarenko, Olympic champion Ivan Ukhov of Russia and Qatar's world indoor champion Mutaz Essar Barshim all in action.

The trio of jumpers have come close to challenging the world record of 2.45 metres set in 1993 by Cuban Javier Sotomayor.

Barshim recently cleared 2.42m to match Bondarenko's best, while Ukhov has cleared 2.41. With both Ukrainian Andriy Protsenko and Canadian Derek Drouin having also gone clear at 2.40m, competition promises to be tight.

Back on the track, French steeplechaser Mahiedine Mekhissi  is looking for revenge in his favourite event after being disqualified at the European Championships in Zurich for taking off his shirt when entering the finishing straight.

Mekhissi will seek to break the European 3000m steeplechase record and become the first European to break the 8-minute mark, with only 10 athletes in track history having ever run the 3000m steeplechase under that time.

The current world record of 7:53.63 was set in Brussels in 2004 by Saif Saeed Shaheen from Qatar, a former Kenyan who was known as Stephen Cherono.

There will be a host of other stars from the European championships on show, notably Dutch double sprint gold medallist Dafne Schippers and 1500m champion Sifan Hassan, racing the 200 and 800m respectively.