Sports News | Race to Make the Race: Kenya Sprinter in Late Dash to Worlds

Get latest articles and stories on Sports at LatestLY. Kenyan sprinter Ferdinand Omanyala is in a race to make his race at the world championships in Eugene, Oregon. The clock is ticking even before the medal contender in the 100 meters is due for his first qualifying heat at Hayward Field on Friday night.

Nairobi, Kenya, Jul 14 (AP) Kenyan sprinter Ferdinand Omanyala is in a race to make his race at the world championships in Eugene, Oregon. The clock is ticking even before the medal contender in the 100 meters is due for his first qualifying heat at Hayward Field on Friday night.

Omanyala is due to leave Kenya only on Thursday because of a delay in receiving his visa to travel to the United States. He'd given up hope of running but the visa was finally issued a day before his race and he will embark on a late dash to make it in time.

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The flight time from Nairobi to Oregon is 20-plus hours at best. But if all goes well with flight connections Omanyala thinks he will make it with just a few hours to spare.

Omanyala tweeted on Thursday that he had his visa and a seat on a flight out of Nairobi.

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“Am positive that I will compete,” he wrote. “Thanks so much for your support and prayers.”

Omanyala gave up hope earlier in the day, when his visa still had not been issued.

“I don't understand why my passport is still in the U.S. Embassy," Omanyala said on an early morning program on Kenyan radio station Vybez Radio. “Officials have been working on it overnight and I'm hoping to get some positive news but, either way, the race is tomorrow (Friday) and I can't make it.”

Omanyala, who has the third fastest time in the world this year in the 100, had said he was “shattered” to miss the worlds.

But in a late scramble, Omanyala was due to leave Kenya at 6 p.m. local time, the ministry of sports said. One Kenyan newspaper speculated that, with flight connections, Omanyala would touch down in Eugene around three hours before his qualifying heat.

Omanyala gave notice he might be a medal hope in Eugene after he beat Olympic silver medalist Fred Kerley of the U.S. at a meet in Kenya in May. He clocked 9.85 seconds to win that race at the Kip Keino Classic.

Only Kerley and fellow American Trayvon Bromell have run faster times this year. AP

(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)

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