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Hamblin and D'Agostino show power of sportsmanship at Rio Olympics

Source: Xinhua   2016-08-17 08:34:47

RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug. 16 (Xinhua) -- They may not have achieved what they came for, but middle-distance runners Nikki Hamblin and Abbey D'Agostino are assured of their places in Olympic Games folklore.

New Zealand's Hamblin and D'Agostino of the United States fell to the ground after tripping in the early stages of Tuesday's second women's 5000m heat here.

D'Agostino was first to recover, urging D'Agostino get back on her feet and finish the race. Both regained their footing before D'Agostino again went to ground. This time Hamblin played the role of motivator.

"Someone had to go help her," Hamblin said. "And if I could even give her one per cent back of what she gave me when she helped me get off the track, that would be amazing.

"She was like, 'go on, go on, I don't know if I can run, keep going, keep going!' "She was saying, 'I can't put weight on my knee.' It was buckling."

Despite both athletes showing obvious signs of discomfort, they managed to finish the race, albeit well behind their fellow competitors.

In moving scenes at the Olympic Stadium, the crowd rose to its feet and offered rousing applause as Hamblin crossed the line in 16 minutes 43.61 seconds. D'Agostino finished 26.41 behind her.

"She ran four and a half laps barely being able to run," Hamblin said.

Both athletes embraced each other after the heat before D'Agostino departed the arena in a wheelchair.

It isn't the first time Hamblin has stumbled during a major event. The 28-year-old also suffered a nasty fall while competing in the 1500m at the 2011 World Championships in Daegu.

Hamblin said it didn't matter that she failed to advance beyond the heats, adding that she and D'Agostino would share a lifelong bond as a result of their experience in Rio.

"You come into an Olympic Games and everyone wants to win, everyone wants to medal," Hamblin said. "But, really, as disappointing as this experience is there is so much more to this than a medal.

"When someone asks me what happened in Rio in 20 years time, that's my story."

Editor: chenwen
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Hamblin and D'Agostino show power of sportsmanship at Rio Olympics

Source: Xinhua 2016-08-17 08:34:47
[Editor: huaxia]

RIO DE JANEIRO, Aug. 16 (Xinhua) -- They may not have achieved what they came for, but middle-distance runners Nikki Hamblin and Abbey D'Agostino are assured of their places in Olympic Games folklore.

New Zealand's Hamblin and D'Agostino of the United States fell to the ground after tripping in the early stages of Tuesday's second women's 5000m heat here.

D'Agostino was first to recover, urging D'Agostino get back on her feet and finish the race. Both regained their footing before D'Agostino again went to ground. This time Hamblin played the role of motivator.

"Someone had to go help her," Hamblin said. "And if I could even give her one per cent back of what she gave me when she helped me get off the track, that would be amazing.

"She was like, 'go on, go on, I don't know if I can run, keep going, keep going!' "She was saying, 'I can't put weight on my knee.' It was buckling."

Despite both athletes showing obvious signs of discomfort, they managed to finish the race, albeit well behind their fellow competitors.

In moving scenes at the Olympic Stadium, the crowd rose to its feet and offered rousing applause as Hamblin crossed the line in 16 minutes 43.61 seconds. D'Agostino finished 26.41 behind her.

"She ran four and a half laps barely being able to run," Hamblin said.

Both athletes embraced each other after the heat before D'Agostino departed the arena in a wheelchair.

It isn't the first time Hamblin has stumbled during a major event. The 28-year-old also suffered a nasty fall while competing in the 1500m at the 2011 World Championships in Daegu.

Hamblin said it didn't matter that she failed to advance beyond the heats, adding that she and D'Agostino would share a lifelong bond as a result of their experience in Rio.

"You come into an Olympic Games and everyone wants to win, everyone wants to medal," Hamblin said. "But, really, as disappointing as this experience is there is so much more to this than a medal.

"When someone asks me what happened in Rio in 20 years time, that's my story."

[Editor: huaxia]
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