Diamond League: Chopra returns to Doha as javelin masterclass beckons
The Peninsula
Doha, Qatar: Reigning Olympic, world and Asian Games javelin champion Neeraj Chopra India s national record holder with a best of 89.94m will make...
Doha, Qatar: Reigning Olympic, world and Asian Games javelin champion Neeraj Chopra - India’s national record holder with a best of 89.94m - will make a welcome return to the Seashore Group Doha Meeting on Friday, May 10, alongside former world champion Anderson Peters (GRN) and Olympic and world medallist Jakub Vadlejch (CZE).
Chopra is an inspirational figure and has blazed a trail for Indian athletes throughout his career to date. He was the first Indian track and field athlete to set a world record (under-20) when he threw 86.48m to win the 2016 World U20 Championships, which was also the first time an Indian athlete had won a global track and field title.
He won javelin gold at the 2018 Asian Games, the first Indian athlete to do so, and made history in Tokyo when he became the country’s first Olympic gold medallist in track and field. That trend continued at the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest when he became the first athlete from India to strike gold.
Chopra set the tone for his 2023 gold medal-winning summer with victory in the opening meeting of the Wanda Diamond League in Doha ahead of Vadlejch and Peters (88.67m). The javelin event has built a reputation for its high quality in recent years and conditions permitting, much will be expected of the key protagonists on 10 May. Peters, who finished third 12 months ago, delivered a national record and the fifth-longest throw in history in 2022 (93.07m), while Wanda Diamond League champion Vadlejch, who was runner-up to Chopra in 2023, recorded a personal best in the memorable 2022 meeting with his first ever throw over 90m (90.88m).
The trio will be joined at the Qatar Sports Club by European champion Julian Weber (GER) - PB 89.54m; World Championships finalist Oliver Helander (FIN) - PB 89.83m; Qatari record holder Ahmed Bader Magour - PB 85.23m; Asian Games silver medallist and World Championships finalist Kishore Jena (IND) - PB 87.54m; Lithuanian record holder and World University Games champion Edis Matusevicius - PB 89.17m; Asian champion and Asian Games bronze medallist Roderick Genki Dean (JPN) - PB 84.28m; Moldovan record holder and Olympic finalist Andrian Mardare - PB 86.66m; and Pan American Games champion Curtis Thompson (USA) - PB 87.70m.