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    Morocco: Tebogo Shifts Focus to 200m in Rabat

    Gaborone — Rabat takes centre stage this Saturday as the sprint sensation, Letsile Tebogo, steps onto the track to officially open his 200-metre Diamond League account at the Meeting International Mohammed VI.

    For the 21-year-old sprint prodigy, this race marks a pivotal shift in his season, representing his highly anticipated return to the global stage in the very discipline where he made history as Africa’s fastest man and secured the country’s historic first-ever Olympic gold medal.

    Highly motivated to collect vital qualification points for the Wanda Diamond League Final, Tebogo enters the weekend facing a true championship-level preview.

    While he missed out on the top three during his first two 100m Diamond League outings in Xiamen and Shanghai, the world number two remains entirely unfazed by the early-season noise.


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    Treating the initial months of the year as strategic building blocks, he opened his 200m campaign back in February with a relaxed 20.75 seconds in Francistown, a time he is now poised to shatter.

    This weekend’s meeting represents an immense escalation in competitive intensity. In the official entry lists, Tebogo will line up against a formidable grid of global rivals. The powerhouse line-up features USA’s Kenneth Bednarek and Courtney Lindsey, alongside Canada’s Andre De Grasse.

    South Africa will be heavily represented by Wayde van Niekerk and Sinesipho Dambile, while Jamaica’s Bryan Levell, Cuba’s Reynier Mena and local favourite Yassine Hssine of Morocco round out the world-class field.

    In an interview, Sunday Standard sports editor, Botlhale Koothopile noted that the young athlete has faced some domestic criticism over the last few months due to a perceived dip in form. Koothopile explained that because of the exceptionally high standards Tebogo has set since emerging as one of the world’s premier sprinters, the nation now expects him to consistently post elite times throughout the year, both in and out of season.

    “When athletes plan their season, they take many factors into consideration, chief among them being the overall length of the season and the timing of key competitions. With this strategic planning in mind, elite runners build momentum gradually to ensure they peak at the exact right moment for major championship events,” he said.

    At the Meeting International Mohammed VI, Koothopile says spectators should expect a fiercely competitive performance from Tebogo, but not necessarily his absolute peak.