Teen speed demon crowned Australian 100m champion

In Adelaide: Two rising stars of Australian athletics were crowned national champions in a pulsating 25-minute period on Saturday afternoon.

Adam Spencer, 22, triumphed in an incredibly deep men's 1500m field in Adelaide — another stunning moment in what's been a meteoric past 12 months. A lethal finishing kick secured the crown in a slow and tactical battle, Spencer taking victory in 3:37.68.

And not long after at a sunny SA Athletics Stadium, an 18-year-old from Sydney's west by the name of Sebastian Sultana snatched the men's 100m title. Running into a headwind of -1.2 metres per second, the teen star clocked 10.27.

EXCLUSIVE: Why Australia's fastest woman opted out of national 100m dash

READ MORE: Astonishing story behind weightlifter's Aussie defection

READ MORE: Milford slapped with ban for 'brain explosion'

Rohan Browning, Australia's fastest man with a personal best of 10.01 posted at the Tokyo 2021 Olympics, finished fourth.

"I didn't expect that," Spencer told reporters trackside.

"I thought I was going to fall over the last 20 metres. My legs were lactic and I saw the shadows of everyone coming, but I managed to get over the line, so I'm pretty happy."

https://twitter.com/AthsAust/status/1779050405777010795

Spencer annihilated his 1500m personal best at the London Diamond League in July last year, clocking 3:31.81 to chop off 4.97 seconds.

Some eight months later, he's come up trumps in a field featuring Olympic finalists Olli Hoare and Stewart McSweyn, teen prodigy Cameron Myers, 3:33.64 runner Jesse Hunt and 3:51.51 miler Jack Anstey, who make for possibly the greatest depth in Australian 1500m running in history.

Sebastian Sultana in action in the men's 100m semi-finals.

Spencer is in the box seat to be selected for his first Olympic team, given he's nailed the 3:33.50 Paris 2024 entry standard and won the national title.

Spencer (3:37.68) led home Hoare (3:37.83) and Hunt (3:37.88).

In the men's 100m, Sultana (10.27) was trailed home by Josh Azzopardi (10.39) and Jacob Despard (10.41).

"It feels amazing," Sultana told media trackside.

"After the semi I knew I could get it done and to actually get it done was really good."

Saturday also saw Naa Anang claim the women's 100m title with a run of 11.34 (-0.6).

Jessica Hull, one of the golden girls of Australian athletics, won the women's 1500m final in 4:01.39.

Discus giant Matt Denny broke his own national record and claimed another Australian title with a throw of 69.35 metres.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply