Zharnel Hughes withdraws from 200m heats with ‘hamstring tightness’
Hughes is the world 100m bronze medallist.
British sprinter Zharnel Hughes has withdrawn from Monday night’s Olympic 200m heats due to a hamstring issue.
Hughes, the world 100m bronze medallist, came up short of reaching a second straight Olympic final at that distance on Sunday night after clocking 10.01 to finish 14th of the semi-finalists.
He skipped the European and British championships after sustaining a hamstring injury, but was given a discretionary place and before these Games said he was feeling fit ahead of Paris.
“No decision has been taken as yet in relation to his relay involvement.”
Hughes was hoping he could wrap up some unfinished business in Paris, three summers after he was disqualified from the 100m final for a false start, the first Briton to reach the blue riband showdown in 21 years.
The 29-year-old was also part of the British 4x100m relay team in Tokyo who were stripped of silver after CJ Ujah failed a doping test and was banned from the sport for 22 months.
In May, Hughes, Eugene Amo-Dadzie, Richard Kilty and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake secured Great Britain a relay spot in Paris at World Athletics Relays Bahamas 24.
Heats for that relay begin on Thursday morning, though Hughes could also be saved for Friday’s evening’s final should the British quartet qualify.
He was more forthcoming after failing to make the 100 metres final on Sunday night, saying: “I am disappointed. I gave it my best. You all know I had a hamstring injury.
“It is not the easiest thing to come back from, especially what I had, a grade two on the outside of the (right) hamstring.
“Not getting enough races to be race sharp, that was my issue. Everything had to be rushed. After the injury you start to get the treatment right away.
“I know what I am capable of. I had to be battling with an injury.
“It kind of sucks, last minute just before the Olympics, but I am a fighter. I am very determined, and that’s why I wanted to give it a go.
“I got the training in but the races is what I needed to get me race sharp.
“As a competitive athlete, you want to be a part of the mix. I rarely miss out on finals, so this is one a bit hard to swallow.
“I will just move on from here. The road sometimes can be rocky, there are days that you guys don’t see the work behind the scenes and injuries that come along. We try to give our best. Today I gave it my best.”