Great Britain’s 4×400 metres relay men and women win bronze medals

The men’s quartet struck first, swiftly followed by the women on the final night of action at Stade de France

Rachel Steinberg
Saturday 10 August 2024 18:51 EDT
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Great Britain’s Charlie Dobson (left), Alex Haydock-Wilson, Lewis Davey and Matthew Hudson-Smith (right) celebrate winning bronze in the men’s 4x400m relay final (Martin Rickett/PA).
Great Britain’s Charlie Dobson (left), Alex Haydock-Wilson, Lewis Davey and Matthew Hudson-Smith (right) celebrate winning bronze in the men’s 4x400m relay final (Martin Rickett/PA). (PA Wire)

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Great Britain added more medals to their tally as the men’s  and women’s 4×400 metres relay teams collected bronze at the Stade de France.

The United States took gold in the men’s relay, narrowly beating Botswana’s silver medallists to the line in Olympic record time.

Alex Haydock-Wilson led off for GB, and though individual men’s 400 metres silver medallist Matthew Hudson-Smith found himself locked into a battle for second,  Britain remained third after his second lap.

The leaders extended their advantage, and by the time Lewis Davey handed off to Charlie Dobson and he rounded the final bend, there was considerable distance both in front of and behind the British anchor.

The women’s 4×400 metres quartet of Victoria Ohuruogu, Laviai Nielsen, Nicole Yeargin and Amber Anning quickly followed up by making it a perfect five relay medals from five finals with bronze in the final track event of the Paris Olympics.

It quickly became clear that no-one was going to catch a dominant US team featuring Paris 200 metres individual gold medallist Gabby Thomas and hurdler Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, who lowered her own world record earlier this week.

It instead became a dogged battle for silver and bronze after Anning pulled Great Britain into second on the back straight but, as she approached the finish, found herself in a neck-and-neck battle with the Netherlands and Ireland.

The United States took gold in 3:15.27, the Dutch claimed silver, and Anning held firm to claim bronze in 3:19.72.

Jamaica had also been in the mix, but ruled themselves out of contention in the second leg when Andrenette Knight lost the baton after bumping into Ireland’s Rhasidat Adeleke.

Earlier, Georgia Bell snatched 1500 metres bronze for a first Olympic medal in a race won by Kenya’s Faith Kipyegon in Olympic record time.

Bell patiently executed her race and started to pounce on the back stretch in the final lap.

Laura Muir, the Scottish Tokyo 2020 silver medallist, started to close in as the leaders approached the final bend as the two British women sat fourth and fifth.

Bell told the BBC: “I am in a very good mood! I don’t know if I have ever been this happy. That was an absolutely crazy race.

“I thought I am not not the fastest person in that race, but I thought if I was brave and just got stuck in then I could make something special happen. I am over the moon. An Olympic medallist.

“I knew it was going to be painful, and I know I can finish strong, so I knew as long as I didn’t let a gap go and I was there with 100 metres to go, I thought I would be able to do it. I had to dig deep in the middle. I didn’t realise how fast it was until I crossed the line.”

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