Great Britain’s Zharnel Hughes reaches the 100m semi-final at the World Championships

Great Britain’s Zharnel Hughes reaches the 100m semi-final at the World Championships after clocking 9.97 seconds to finish second in his heat, as he predicts fireworks in Oregon and admits ‘it’s really exciting’

  • Zharnel Hughes has predicted fireworks in the 100m after reaching semi-finals 
  • European champion Hughes clocked 9.97 seconds to finish second in his heat 
  • He is now targeting the final, although team-mate Reece Prescod crashed out 

Zharnel Hughes predicted fireworks in the 100m after reaching the semi-final at the World Championships in Eugene, Oregon.

The European champion clocked 9.97 seconds at Hayward Field to finish second in his heat, behind favourite Fred Kerley.

He reached Saturday’s semi-final in Eugene as he targets the final in the evening but Great Britain team-mate Reece Prescod crashed out.

British star Zharnel Hughes has reached the semi-final at the World Championships in Oregon

Hughes, who reached last year’s Olympic final only to false start, expects drama on Saturday after seven sprinters ran sub-10 seconds in the heats.

‘It’s a really fast track. It’s really exciting. What excited me was when the F18s flew over the stadium, that got me gassed up,’ said the 27-year-old, who qualified fifth fastest.

‘Kerley ran 9.79 seconds, I think it’s the fastest ever in the heats. There were some good names in there but I’m not focusing on names, I’m not focusing on times. Put what happened in the season behind. What matters here matters.

Hughes ran 9.97 seconds at Hayward Field to finish second in his heat, behind the favourite

Hughes ran 9.97 seconds at Hayward Field to finish second in his heat, behind the favourite

‘I said at trials I was OK, I just have to trust myself, trust my speed. My coach has been telling me “don’t worry about the start, just focus on what needs to be done, execute it and you’ll be OK.”

‘I didn’t panic. Su (Bingtain) is a great starter, the other guys are great starters and I’ve never been the best starter in the world.’

Prescod ran 10.15 seconds to finish fourth in the fourth heat but was unable to clinch a qualifying spot in a surprise elimination.

Africa’s fastest man Ferdinand Omanyala won his race against the clock to line up in heat seven. He suffered visa issues ahead of his trip to Oregon and only landed hours before his race and qualified third.

He has also admitted the track is 'really exciting' as he bids a spot in the final in the evening

He has also admitted the track is ‘really exciting’ as he bids a spot in the final in the evening

Defending champion, the USA’s Christian Coleman back after his ban for missing drugs tests, ran 10.08 seconds as he slowed down on the line.

In the pole vault, Holly Bradshaw retired after a freak incident in the warm up saw her pole break and she landed awkwardly on the back of her neck.

She was helped away from the mat and opted to quit after experiencing some discomfort.

Laura Muir eased into Saturday’s 1500m semi-final with a controlled race to finish second behind Ethiopia’s Hirut Meshesha.

His team-mate Reece Prescod (pictured), however, was knocked out in a surprise elimination

His team-mate Reece Prescod (pictured), however, was knocked out in a surprise elimination

Muir sat at the back of the pack for the opening two laps before making her move and clocked four minutes 07.53 seconds. Katie Snowden and Melissa Courtney-Bryant failed to progress.

Amy Strickler threw 17.40m and Sophie McKinna 17.21m but they failed to reach the shotmput final.

Earlier, Great Britain missed out on a place in the final of the mixed 4x400m relay.

Laura Muir (second from right) eased into the 1500m semi-final with a superb controlled race

Laura Muir (second from right) eased into the 1500m semi-final with a superb controlled race

Joe Brier, Zoey Clark, Alex Haydock-Wilson and Laviai Nielsen clocked three minutes 14.75 seconds to finish sixth in their heat and ninth fastest.

The Dominican Republic won Friday evening’s final – the first gold of the Championships – ahead of the Netherlands and the USA.

Nick Miller qualified for Saturday’s hammer final after coming ninth in pool A, throwing 77.13m but Joel Clarke-Khan was unable to make the high jump after only clearing 2.21m.

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