Italian Sprinter Jacob Returns With 9.67 Seconds
Italy's Olympic sprinter Lamont Marcell Jacobs clocked 9.67 seconds to win the 100m at Austria's Reuffen Open, marking his return after injury, though excessive wind assistance prevented it from being ratified as an official record.
Lamont Marcell Jacobs, Italy's former Olympic gold medalist in the 100 meters at Tokyo 2020, returned to form with a 9.67-second run to win the 100-meter championship at the Reuffen Austrian Open in Austria. This marks the second-fastest time ever recorded, trailing only Usain Bolt of Jamaica.
Jacobs, who had been absent from major competitions due to injury, reclaimed his champion status in Austria with a 9.67-second finish. However, the record was registered only as Jacobs' personal best because wind assistance measured +4.1 meters per second exceeded the allowable standard of +2.0 meters per second.
Nevertheless, this performance signals Jacobs' triumphant return to form, as the time ranks as the world's second-fastest speed, behind Bolt's 2012 world record of 9.58 seconds and ahead of Tyson Gay's 9.68 seconds from the 2008 U.S. Olympic trials.
"I'm very happy because I was able to improve in every race," Jacobs said. "Of course the wind helped too. Only Bolt has a better time than this. I'm very satisfied with this achievement."