Express & Star

Matthew Hudson-Smith’s hot off the blocks in Diamond League

Matthew Hudson-Smith enjoyed a glorious return home as he won the men’s 400m at the Birmingham Diamond League meeting.

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Great Britain's Matthew Hudson-Smith wins gold in the Men's 400m Final during day four of the 2018 European Athletics Championships at the Olympic Stadium, Berlin..

The Wolverhampton ace was back at the Alexander Stadium, having grown up there with the Birchfield Harriers.

And the 27-year-old – although the stadium has undergone a full renovation ahead of the Commonwealth Games – relished competing in front of his friends and family on familiar ground.

Hudson-Smith was victorious with a time of 45.32 seconds on Saturday, pipping USA trio Bryce Deadmon, Kahmari Montgomery and Vernon Norwood to the post in an exciting race.

Meanwhile, Dina Asher-Smith insists she is just warming up as she began working towards a world title defence with victory over Jamaica’s Shericka Jackson at the weekend.

Asher-Smith stormed to victory in the 100m race in 11.11 seconds.

Asher-Smith is gearing up to defend the 200m title she won in Doha three years ago and was happy with how things are going.

She said: “I feel like I’ve progressed, I feel like I’ve worked really hard but if you speak to loads of athletes, loads of people always think they’ve improved.

“I do believe I have more scope in both 100m and 200m and we’ve worked really hard over the past three years to get that. If you think in 2019 I was just a different person, mentally, and in a different position physically.

“I’ve never been much of a time person because sometimes you can execute a recipe of movements and it’s a mad headwind or it’s freezing cold. I just don’t think it’s ever wise to get bogged down in whether it’s a good time, although I’ll take it.

“If it’s not such a good time there are so many things that contribute to running a fast time and so many of them out your control. I don’t tend to focus on it.”

The 26-year-old also helped the Great Britain women’s 4x100m team storm to victory at the Alexander Stadium in a world-leading time of 42.29secs.

Earlier, Canada’s Aaron Brown took the men’s 100m win in 10.13s with Olympic champion Andre de Grasse fourth.

Of the British hopefuls, Zharnel Hughes was disqualified with Adam Gemili fifth, Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake sixth and Reece Prescod seventh, and they also suffered a nightmare in the men’s 4x100m relay.

Hughes went too early for the final changeover with Richard Kilty to complete a poor afternoon.

Keely Hodgkinson, who won Olympic silver last summer, ran one minute 58.63s to win the 800m comfortably to prove she has shaken off the thigh tear which forced her out of the World Indoor Championships in March.

“It’s definitely an improvement from last year but I just think the bar’s been raised so much this year,” she said. “Having run 1.55 last year, my aim this year is to be running 1.58s, 1.57s, 1.56s consistently.

“I want to be up there in the Diamond Leagues, not coming fourth or fifth. So as much as Championships are where it’s at, I want to be more consistent throughout the year.”

Reigning world heptathlon champion Katarina Johnson-Thompson was eighth in the long jump with 6.41m.

Laura Muir took victory in the women’s 1500m, the Scot ran four minutes 02.81s as she continued her build up to the World Championships in July.

It was a welcome return after she cancelled her indoor season due to a lingering back problem.

She said: “I didn’t think I’d even be running here. So not just to be running, but to be competitive and to be winning. I’m very happy.

“Initially I had back pain but it was just because I was compensating, I jammed up a joint in my back.

“We fixed that and found out it was the hip instead. I was compensating so much without realising it, making it hard to work out where the pain was.

“I went and got specialist scans in London and found the stress response in the femur and that was that, hard to start rehab from there - on crutches, in the swimming pool and then the gym.”

Holly Bradshaw, who won Team GB’s first-ever Olympic pole vault medal with bronze in Tokyo last summer, failed to clear 4.45m while Josh Kerr was fifth in the 1500m.