Olympics-Athletics-Unpredictable new mixed 400m relay set to intrigue Tokyo

Tokyo's athletics programme will see the inaugural 400 metre mixed relay event kick off on Friday, where teams of two men and two women will compete for Olympic gold against each other offering fans unpredictable and intriguing match-ups. The United States will be the favourites for Saturday's final, assuming there are no baton blunders in Friday's heats, having claimed the 2019 World Championships in Doha.


Reuters | Tokyo | Updated: 29-07-2021 11:03 IST | Created: 29-07-2021 10:41 IST
Olympics-Athletics-Unpredictable new mixed 400m relay set to intrigue Tokyo
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Tokyo's athletics program will see the inaugural 400 meters mixed relay event kick off on Friday, where teams of two men and two women will compete for Olympic gold against each other offering fans unpredictable and intriguing match-ups.

The United States will be the favorites for Saturday's final, assuming there are no baton blunders in Friday's heats, having claimed the 2019 World Championships in Doha. Jamaica is also expected to feature prominently. But there is a level of unpredictability to the race since no gender rules are governing the order in which athletes race.

In the Doha world title race, for instance, Poland went for men in the first two legs and women in the last two while the rest of the teams ran the first and fourth legs with men. The move gave Poland a sizeable lead after the second leg, but they saw that cut back in the third before losing it completely in the fourth as the American Michael Cherry took a lead he never relinquished, helping his team set a world record time of 3.09.34 minutes. Jamaica came second and Poland eventually finished fifth.

The unpredictability of how teams choose to run their athletes promises to keep fans guessing throughout the event, though the man-woman-woman-man running order is favored by most teams. Germany boasts this year's world-leading time after they posted a 3:13.57 minute performance in June at home, according to World Athletics data, followed by Ukraine and Nigeria.

Kevin Borlee, Belgium's 2011 World Championship 400 meter bronze medallist, told Olympics.com that the event has expanded the potential pool of countries that can offer genuine competition in Olympics relay racing. "With the traditional relays you need at least four athletes of the same gender," he said earlier this year.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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