GOTHENBURG, Sweden, Aug 8 - Portuguese Francis Obikwelu will be hoping
to complete the first step in his bid for a sprint double at the European
championships when the men's 100 metres is decided on Tuesday.
Obikwelu, the fastest European this year, is aiming to become the first man
to win the 100 and 200 at the championships since Italy's Pietro Mennea in 1978.
The Portuguese and his most likely rival Frenchman Ronald Pognon completed
their heats with ease on Monday despite the event being marred by false starts.
So far four of the six heats in the opening round and two of the four second
round heats have had false starts.
"It has been a problem from the beginning. Since I have been running at the
age of ten I have never seen anything like this," said Obikwelu, who won both of
his heats.
"We can only wait there for the gun. The reaction is getting slower and
slower.
Obikwelu won his second heat in 10.28 seconds, 0.09 ahead of Slovenian Matic
Osovnikar in second with Belgian Erik Wijmeersch third on 10.49.
IN CONTROL
The Portuguese looked firmly in control of the race despite slowing down over
the last 20 metres.
Pognon, the only Frenchman ever to run 100 metres in under 10 seconds,
produced the best time of the second round heats when he won in 10.19 seconds.
Briton Dwain Chambers, another favourite going into the semi-finals before
the final later on Tuesday, only just scraped through by finishing fourth in his
second round heat.
In the heptathlon home favourite Carolina Kluft looks set to cruise to a
second consecutive European title as her biggest threat Eunice Barber of France
pulled out with a thigh injury after two events on Monday.
After four of the two-day combined event's seven disciplines the Swede tops
the standings on 3,990 points with Kelly Sotherton 124 points back and another
Briton Jessica Ennis a further five behind.
On Tuesday, world and Olympic champion Kluft competes in the long jump, the
javelin and 800 metres in her bid for gold.
The men s long jump, 20 km walk and 10,000 metres will also be decided on
Tuesday.
World champion Kajsa Bergqvist, another Swede, begins the defence of her
European title in the women's high jump qualifying round.