No respite for Omanyala in Florence as another Kerley, Jacobs battle is lined up

ATHLETICS No respite for Omanyala in Florence as another Kerley, Jacobs battle is lined up

Joel Omotto • 14:24 - 16.05.2023

Africa’s fastest man will be tested to the limit as he is set to take on the world and Olympics champions in back-to-back Diamond League meetings.

Commonwealth Games 100m champion Ferdinand Omanyala will come up against a star-studded cast yet again at the Florence Diamond League in Italy on Friday, June 2.

Omanyala, who is the fastest man in the world over 100m so far this year following his 9.84 at the Kip Keino Classic in Nairobi last weekend, will line up alongside the likes of world champion Fred Kerley and Olympic champion Marcell Jacobs in the men's 100m.

The star-studded headline event will also feature reigning Diamond League champion Trayvon Bromell and fellow Americans Erriyon Knighton and Kenny Bednarek. That will come just days after the runners have faced off in Rabat, Morocco on Sunday, May 28.

Omanyala lived up to the billing at Kasarani Stadium as he won ahead of Bednarek (9.98) and Marvin Bracy-Williams (10.03) to send a warning to his rivals.

While he did not manage to break his African record of 9.77 as promised, the 26-year-old will be encouraged to have run his first official sub-10 of the season as his time was certified as a world lead.

Omanyala shrugged off competition from Bednarek and Bracy-Williams to claim victory with some distance to announce his intentions of going for a medal at the World Athletics Championships in Budapest in Hungary.

He will, therefore, head to Florence with a spring in his step even if the field also involves Kerley, whose personal best is 9.84, recorded in 2021 when he won silver at the Tokyo Olympics, and home favourite Jacobs, who won the race in 9.80.

There will also be American and world bronze medalist Trayvon Bromell, whose personal best is 9.80 clocked in the US Olympics trials in 2021, as well as former world champion Yohan Blake of Jamaica, who ran 9.92 to win gold at the 2011 World Championships, and South African Akani Simbine.

Simbine is a man Omanyala knows too well, having beaten him to win the African title in Port Louis, Mauritius last year.