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Recently, environmentalists have been making headlines with their uncalled appearances on many occasions in public. With an aim to grab attention, these protesters hibernate in public before popping up unannounced. The protestors have often picked sporting venues as their hotspots which attract a wider audience of participants, fans, and spectators. Though safety measures are taken to keep them at bay the disruption is surely real.

An ongoing series of track and field competitions recently became prey to their unpleasant presence. What happened next was an unexpected scenario of a Norwegian sprinter clenching his title despite the disturbance.

World record holder wins race amid protestors’ invasion

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Absolutely nothing could keep Norwegian sprinter Karsten Warholm from his win at the Galan Diamond League meet in Stockholm. However, the sprint was unlike any other as a bunch of environmental protesters disrupted the event just 10 meters from the finish line. A video of the incident was posted on Twitter by @FitzDunk, captioned, “Protestors stormed the track in today’s diamond league! Disrupting the men’s 400mh finish. It is unclear what they were protesting at this moment.”

As shown in the video, several protesters were kneeling on the track stretching a banner over six lanes when the sprinting competitors struck them. This caused the majority of the runner to race through it. Two-time world champion, Warholm, won the 400-meter hurdles competition clocking at 47.57 seconds. He went into the outside lane while initially starting in lane 8.

Post-race, the 27-year-old sprinter showed his frustration on the matter saying, “It is permissible to protest, but this is not the way to do it,” he further added “It is disrespectful to those who are here to do a good job. I must honestly admit that I’m pissed off.” While his displeasure was evident after Sunday’s incident, his timed run was just a few minutes short of his previous world record.

Karsten Warholm’s historic world record

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One of the greatest races in Olympic history has to be the men’s 400m hurdles at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Sprinting fans were shocked when he beat his world record by more than three-quarters of a second on August 3, 2021. With a timing of 45.94 seconds in the 400-meter hurdles for men at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, he broke the 46-second barrier for the first time.

via Reuters

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Warholm’s performance at the Olympics was far better than his Diamond League record-breaking time of 47.08, which was a huge benchmark ahead of the Tokyo Olympics 2021. The athlete remains golden with the tag of being the fastest 400-meter hurdler in history and Norway’s most successful track athlete.

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