Sprinter Zoe Hobbs has officially become the first New Zealand woman to run under 11 seconds for the 100 metres. Hobbs created history at the Sydney Track ...
She later anchored a New Zealand A team - also including Brooke Somerfield, Portia Bing and Anna Percy - to second in the women’s 4x100m team, clocking 44.59. “To give it some context, I’m sure that time would have been quick enough to have made the Olympic women’s 100m final in Tokyo (the time would have advanced her sixth fastest to the final). There wasn’t much wind out there tonight, which is similar to what you get in big stadium. When I heard the time and the wind was legal, I was absolutely stoked to finally dip under the 11-second mark legally.” I had a little bit of a shock at the end of the race, when I saw 10.99 flash up [this was later rounded down to 10.97] and I started celebrating and then I thought, no, wait for the wind. I felt I was still recovering a bit from the emotional high of nationals.
After her wind-assisted run last week, Kiwi sprinter peels off the fastest-ever time on Australian soil, while Olivia McTaggart posts pole-vault PB.
“There wasn’t much wind out there tonight, which is similar to what you get in big stadium. I put so much technical strategy into the competition, I enjoyed it so much. “I was in overdrive,” she said. I’m so happy.” “It feels so good,” Hobbs said. “I was quite alert today. When you reframe it in that context, it is pretty wild, and to do it in my third race of the season is crazy.” [the same stage at the world outdoors over 100m](https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/women-in-sport/300639224/kiwi-sprinter-zoe-hobbs-powers-into-100m-semifinals-in-recordbreaking-style) and become a [finalist at the Commonwealth Games](https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/commonwealth-games/300653921/zoe-hobbs-reveals-covid-battle-on-eve-of-commonwealth-games-after-impressing-in-womens-100m), Hobbs is now the 2023 world leader, and big dreams are starting to become a reality. “To give it some context, I’m sure that time would have been quick enough to have made the Olympic women’s 100m final in Tokyo [it would have advanced her to the final as sixth-fastest]. [It was the second time in a week that Hobbs had hammered out new national records.](https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/women-in-sport/300821374/recordbreaker-zoe-hobbs-smashes-11second-barrier-to-win-100m-title-at-national-champs) “When I heard the time and the wind was legal, I was absolutely stoked to finally dip under the 11-second mark legally.” “I had a little bit of a shock at the end of the race, when I saw 10.99 flash up [this was later rounded down to 10.97] and I started celebrating, and then I thought, no, wait for the wind.
11 March Zoe Hobbs created history at the Sydney Track Classic tonight by running a staggering mark of 10.97 (+0.5) to scalp one tenth of a second from her ...
She later anchored a New Zealand A team – also including Brooke Somerfield, Portia Bing and Anna Percy - to second in the women’s 4x100m team, clocking 44.59. “To give it some context, I’m sure that time would have been quick enough to have made the Olympic women’s 100m final in Tokyo (the time would have advanced her sixth fastest to the final). When I heard the time and the wind was legal, I was absolutely stoked to finally dip under the 11-second mark legally.” I had a little bit of a shock at the end of the race, when I saw 10.99 flash up (this was later rounded down to 10.97) and I started celebrating and then I thought, no, wait for the wind. There wasn’t much wind out there tonight, which is similar to what you get in big stadium. I woke up on Monday not feeling that great but thankfully I was able to execute today.
The performance follows her wind-assisted breakthrough at the NZ national championships.
Kiwi champ Shane van Gisbergen has won the opening Supercars race of the season in Newcastle, with Triple Eight teammate Broc Feeney driving their Gen3 ...
New Zealand's Zoe Hobbs has become the first women to run a legal sub-11 second time in the women's 100 metres in Australia at the Sydney Track Classic.
"I really wanted to pick a race that I can really test and see where I'm at and that was tonight, it was a perfect opportunity to do it," Hull said. "I didn't really feel like I was on my own because the crowd was so loud," Hull said. Jessica Hull continued her excellent form by clocking an Australian 3000m record of 8 minutes 31.81 seconds, eclipsing the old mark by almost five seconds in winning the Australian 3000 metres title. "I saw the time and I'm like, 'oh my God, I don't want to get too excited' just in case it wasn't legal, but in any conditions I'll be stoked with a sub-11," Hobbs said. New Zealand sprinter Zoe Hobbs has set the fastest women's 100 metres time in Australia in a sizzling performance at the Sydney Track Classic. Hobbs clocked an all-comers record of 10.97 seconds on Saturday, eclipsing the previous record of 10.99 set by Greece's Ekaterini Thanou at the Sydney 2000 Olympics.
Kiwi sprinter Zoe Hobbs admits she's still coming to grips with the significance of her first legal sub-11 seconds 100 metres performance at Sydney.
Just seven days after posting a tailwind-aided sub-11 second 100-metre win at the NZ National Championships, Kiwi sprinter Zoe Hobbs has done it again at ...
With the 2024 Paris Olympics in her sights, Hobbs says her recent performances have given her confidence as she gears up for a huge 18 months on the track. Now with another record to her name, Hobbs says she is still coming to terms with the race that has allowed her to join an elite club of sub-11 sprinters around the globe. 🇳🇿 Zoe Hobbs has broken the 11-second barrier with a HUGE time in the Women's 100m Final at the Sydney Track Classic!
When she's not treating the fastest athletes in the country as a physio, Livvy Wilson is trying to beat them - as one of our top sprinters.
“Cali was the best experience for me as a physio,” she says. “I have to admit I didn’t think I’d still be going at my age, but the love of the sport has kept me in it,” she says. “I felt really relaxed during the race and I wasn’t expecting to see a PB pop out,” she says. “I’ve been treating Zoe for a few years now and so for her to come out and run like she did off an injury was just amazing,” Wilson says. “There’s no better feeling than running fast,” she says. She was initially advised to have six months off sport. Wilson was a talented youth touch rugby player (her dad is legendary All Black winger Stu Wilson). Injuries are part of the process.” It's the fastest 100m time run in the world this year.) Naturally it lifts you,” the 30-year-old says. She tells Sarah Cowley Ross of her challenging path to get this far. As a mark of her maturity in the sport, combined with her physiotherapy background, Wilson is optimistic she’ll be able to come back and run in the later stages of the domestic season.