Diamond League Finals: Neeraj Chopra ends season with second-placed finish, misses title 1cm | Sport-others News
India’s star javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra came agonisingly close to winning a second Diamond League crown before missing it a whisker, finishing runner-up for the second consecutive year with a throw of 87.86m in the season finale in Brussels.
The 26-year-old Chopra, who had won the Diamond League Trophy in 2022, marked his best throw of the night off his third attempt but fell 1 centimetre short of Grenada’s Anderson Peters, who made an 87.87m effort on Saturday.
Peters, a two-time world champion, produced his best throw of the day in his opening attempt. Germany’s Julian Weber took the third spot with 85.97m.
Chopra, who added a silver to his Olympic medal tally in Paris following a horic gold at the Tokyo Games, thus ended his season on a high. Chopra, who has a personal best of 89.94m and season’s best of 89.49m, had a series of 86.82m, 83.49m, 87.86m, 82.04m, 83.30m and 86.46m.
The top three led the seven-man field in the same order for the whole competition.
Peters will collect a Diamond League trophy and USD 30,000 for emerging as the DL champion this season.
Chopra will pocket USD 12,000 for his second-place finish in the grand finale, which marked the end of the prestigious Diamond League series after 14 legs and the end of international athletics season. The Haryana athlete remained consent throughout the season, though he won just one international event this season, the Paavo Nurmi Games in Turku, Finland on June 18.
He had made the Diamond League final cut after finishing fourth in the overall standings with 14 points from his two second-place finishes in DL one-day meets in Doha and Lausanne on May 10 and August 22.
Chopra has been struggling with his fitness this season and is expected to meet a doctor to rectify a groin injury that has affected him all season and came in the way of his quest to hit the 90m mark.
On Friday, national record-holding 3000m steeplechaser Sable had finished ninth in a 10-man field in his maiden DL final with a mediocre time of 8 minute and 17.09 seconds to end a largely disappointing season. He had finished 11th in the Olympic Games.