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UWA hosts their Rodeo Showdown.

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UWA hosts their Rodeo Showdown.

UWA hosts their Rodeo Showdown.

MERIDIAN, Miss. (WTOK) – The West Alabama Rodeo team has begun the 2024-2025 season.

 

The women’s team is coming off their second consecutive National Championship.

 

They competed for the first time this season at Missouri Valley College last weekend and placed fifth.

 

“It was a little bit of a learning curve for as many new girls as we have, but we all we performed really well. And, I’m hoping this weekend we can all perform really well too, here on our own turf, in front of our own community. So, it’ll be a good time,” said Riley Webb, a senior barrel racer and goat tyer.Good News:Sha’Carri Richardson Announced She’s Six Weeks Pregnant For Jamaica Boyfriend see more👇👇👇Breaking News:10 Dark Secrets Of Bisexual Olympics Gold Medalist Sha’Carri Richardson….Sha’Carri Richardson flops as Julien Alfred claims bragging rights at Brussels Diamond League.Olympic champion Julien Alfred got her revenge against American world champion Sha’Carri Richardson in a highly anticipated 100m race at the Brussels Diamond League final.

 

The Saint Lucian sprinter, who previously triumphed over Richardson at the Paris Olympics reaffirmed her dominance with a powerful finish that secured her the title.Richardson who had been a favorite to win faltered and finished a disappointing eighth.Alfred crossed the line in a stunning 10.88 seconds cementing her status as one of the world’s top sprinters.

 

It was a hard-earned victory especially after a shaky start from the blocks but she gained momentum halfway through the race surging ahead in the final stretch and leaving the field behind.

 

Close on her heels was Great Britain’s Dina Asher-Smith who clocked 10.92 seconds to take the second place.Asher-Smith, coming off a challenging season, put up a strong fight but was narrowly edged out by Alfred in the final meters of the race.Marie-Josée Ta Lou of Côte d’Ivoire secured third place with a time of 11.05 seconds, adding another podium finish to her impressive career.

 

Richardson, the reigning world champion, struggled to maintain her top form. She finished last in the field with a time of 11.23 seconds, well below her personal best.The American, who has been in the spotlight throughout the season, failed to recover from a poor start and never found her rhythm.

Richardson had entered the race with high expectations, particularly after her recent Zurich Diamond League victory, but the highly competitive Brussels Diamond League proved too tough this time.The race unfolded dramatically, with Alfred getting off to a less-than-perfect start.As the sprinters burst out of the blocks, it appeared that Dina Asher-Smith had the early lead, with Ta Lou also starting strongly.

 

Alfred, however, demonstrated her incredible ability to build speed in the second half of the race. By the 60-meter mark she had overtaken her competitors with a powerful burst of speed.

 

As the finish line approached, Alfred pulled away from the rest of the field, securing her victory by a clear margin.Asher-Smith fought hard to keep pace, but Alfred’s explosive finish left no doubt about who would claim the top spot.

 

Ta Lou held on for third, while Great Britain’s Daryll Neita narrowly missed the podium, finishing fourth with a time of 11.14 seconds.

 

Luxembourg’s Patrizia van der Weken finished fifth in 11.16 seconds, followed closely by Gina Bass Bittaye of The Gambia, who clocked in at 11.19 seconds.

 

The USA’s Tamari Davis took seventh with 11.21 seconds just ahead of Richardson who finished eighth.Belgium’s Rani Rosius the hometown favorite completed the field crossing the line in 11.37 seconds.Ethiopia’s Berihu Aregawi held off a stiff challenge from compatriot Habos Gebrhiwet to claim the Diamond League Trophy in Brussels, Belgium on Friday.

 

Aregawi ran a smart race, staying in the leading pack for most of it before shaking off his challengers in the final two laps.

 

However, Gebrhiwet and another Ethiopian Haile Bekele stayed with him before setting up a grandstand finish.

 

Aregawi would clock 12:43.66 to win the race, as Gebrhiwet claimed second place in 12:44.25, while Bekele completed the podium in 12:45.63.

 

Kenya’s Nicholas Kipkorir managed fourth place in a time of 12:49.59, a season’s best, having come just ahead of Ethiopian Yomif Kejelcha, who also managed a season’s best, having finished fifth in 12:51.21.

 

Kejelcha appeared to be the one to beat at some point in the race but faded off badly when his compatriots put on the afterburners.

 

Aregawi needed a strong finish to win the race after Gebrhiwet had threatened to spoil his party.

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