'You cried with me' - Ackera Nugent pens emotional post to Jamaican idol for help in bouncing back

'You cried with me' - Ackera Nugent pens emotional post to Jamaican idol for help in bouncing back

Funmilayo Fameso 06:00 - 26.08.2024

Ackera Nugent penned an emotional post to legendary Jamaican hurdler for help in bouncing back winning ways in Silesia after unfair Olympics.

Following a record-breaking performance at the Silesia Diamond League, Ackera Nugent penned an emotional post to Jamaican hurdling legend Danielle Williams for help in bouncing back after an unfair Paris Olympics outing.

The speed hurdler Nugent blazed to her first Diamond League triumph in the women's 100mH event to bounce back to winning ways in grand style as she set successive meeting records of 12.30s and 12.29s (-0.5) in the heats and final.

Her senior compatriot and double world champion Williams placed third in a Season's Best (SB) of 12.38s, behind United States Grace Stark in 12.37s.

Ackera Nugent blazed to the 100mH victory in Silesia

It was an important victory for the 22-year-old, who developed an unfair injury in the Olympic final in Paris, thus caused her to not finish the race and diminished her chances of medalling.

However, Nugent shrugged it off by getting a deserved third-place finish in Lausanne three days ago, and her victory in Silesia booked her spot in the Diamond League final in Brussels, where she is one of the top favourites for the title.

After her outstanding victory in Poland, the Jamaican champion posted on her X page how her senior compatriot Williams was instrumental in moving past her Olympic disappointment and finding herself back.

Danielle Williams is a two-time world 100mH champion

"To my idol growing up thank because after getting an injury at the Olympics I thought my season was over you hold me and cried with me, to not wanting to run the circuit you hold my hand and told me you got me and you kept your word thank u," she wrote.

Nugent has a personal best of 12.28s clocked earlier this year to win the Jamaican title and with her meeting record-breaking performance in Silesia into a strong headwind of -0.5, she's now highly rated to challenge Nigeria's Tobi Amusan's world record of 12.12s.

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