Indian-origin Shanti Pereira races to win Singapore’s first gold in Asian Games athletics in 49 years

Shanti Pereira, a Singaporean, won a gold medal in the women's 200m sprint which is the first athletics gold medal for the city-state since 1974.

SINGAPORE (TIP): Singapore is celebrating its first athletics gold win in 49 years at the Asian Games with its Indian-origin sprinter Shanti Pereira winning the women’s 200m final in Hangzhou, China. Pereira clocked 23.03 seconds to finish the race on Monday, October 2, at the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Centre Stadium. This is the first athletics gold medal for the city-state since 1974, when sprinter Chee Swee Lee won the women’s 400m race.
China’s Li Yuting took the silver with 23.28 seconds and Bahrain’s Edidiong Ofonime Odiong came third at 23.48 seconds in the Monday race. Odiong’s compatriot, Salwa Eid Naser, was disqualified for a false start.
Draped in a Singapore flag, the 27-year-old crouched down on the track and covered her face with her hands, before raising her arms in victory, reported Channel News Asia.
On Saturday, Pereira ended her country’s nearly 50-year wait for a track and field medal at the Asian Games, after she clinched a silver in the women’s 100m.
Pereira, whose 200m personal best stands at 22.57 seconds, then topped all three heats for the event the next day, with a time of 23.14 seconds.
This was her first Asian Games 200m final. At the last edition in 2018, she did not advance past the semi-finals. The Singaporean has overcome much to get to where she is today, said the Channel report. She first burst into the nation’s consciousness at the 2015 Southeast Asian Games when she took gold in the 200m, clocked a personal best, and set a new national record. Her win also ended a 42-year gold medal drought for Singapore in an SEA Games sprint event.
In August, Pereira became the first Singaporean to make a World Championships semi-final after a stellar showing in the 200m. She also met the qualifying mark for the event at the 2024 Olympics in Paris.

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