PRETORIA (Reuters) – Former world 800 metres champion Caster Semenya qualified for the London Olympics on Friday
when she eased to victory in one minute 59.58 seconds at a Yellow Pages Series meeting.
Semenya, 21, underwent gender tests at the 2009 Berlin world championships where she won the 800 gold
medal.
She did not compete for almost a year until the International Association of Athletics Federations cleared her
to run again after accepting the conclusions of an expert medical panel.
The South African Olympic committee requires
athletes to meet the qualifying time twice, one at a local meeting and once in an international competition.
Semenya
reached her first qualifying mark when she finished second in last year’s world championships in Daegu, South
Korea.
“It’s a weight off my shoulders and I’m very happy with my time,” Semenya told reporters. “I just ran my own
race and it went okay, it’s best that way and I enjoyed it, that’s why I qualified.”
Semenya failed to reach the
qualifying standard in last weekend’s national championships in the coastal city of Port Elizabeth, clocking 2:02.68 in
windy conditions. On Friday she became the first woman in 21 years to run under two minutes on South African
soil.
“The start was good and we had trained hard and planned to qualify in South Africa. There’s now no need for me
to go to the
African championships and I know my plans for the European season, I must just be patient,” Semenya
said.
“I possibly can go quicker, tonight was just my third race of the season, and I hope to go below 1:57 in Europe,
but it depends on my training, which needs to strengthen me up for the Olympics. I need to last and one race does not mean
anything.”
Semenya, who is now coached by former Olympic and three times world champion Maria Mutola, said she would
compete in Ostrava on May 25 and in Rome on June 1. She would then run some 400 metres races to work on her speed.
The
evening meeting brought just one more Olympic qualifying performance, with Olympic silver medallist Khotso Mokoena leaping
8.29 metres to win the long jump.