LONDON coach tote bags outlet clearance , Aug. 6 (Xinhua) -- While American Justin Gatlin attendedthe medal ceremony at the London Stadium, he was booed again quitelike Saturday when he grabbed the 100m title from 11-time worldchampion Usain Bolt.
Gatlin who last won the title at 2005 world championships wasoverlooked for his surprise win and his celebration was ruined byloud booing from a sell-out 60 coach tote bags outlet ,000 spectators Saturday while bronzemedalist Bolt, in his farewell world championships coach shoulder bags outlet clearance , received ahero's treatment.
The scene repeated on Sunday when they were called to step onthe podium to receive medals from IAAF President Sebastian Coe.With his two-spell doping ban that ended in 2010, the 35-year-oldGatlin has never stopped fighting controversies and it looks thatthe stunning comeback win is not able to change the situation.
In an earlier medal ceremony coach shoulder bags outlet , British heptathlon athlete JessicaEnnis-Hill was given the gold medal from the 2011 Daegu worldchampionships after Russian rival Tatyana Chernova was stripped ofthe title for doping.
Another highlight of the day was outside the stadium as theorganizers set the men's and women's marathon course through thecity's historic scenic sites.
Kenya's Boston marathon winner Geoffrey Kipkorir Kirui claimedthe men's title with two hours 8 minutes and 27 seconds to firstrace past the finish line on London's historic site Tower Bridgewhile women's gold medal went to Rose Chelimo of Bahrain in2:27:11.
"This is the best moment of my career, easily. I am so happy towin the world title because it is my first time at thesechampionships coach satchel bag outlet clearance ," said Kirui.
"I was not expecting to be world champion. I feared theEthiopian because he had such a fast time, so I just followed myplan to 35km and then felt my body to see how I was doing. Good forme it responded well coach satchel bag outlet ," he said. "Winning this title has been mygoal for so long. Now my goal will be to repeat it."
Ethiopia's Tamirat Tola took silver in 2:09:49 and AlphonceSimbu of Tanzania bagged a bronze in 2:09:51.
Women's two-time world champion Edna Ngeringwony Kiplagat ofKenya settled for silver in 2:27:18 and Amy Cragg of the UnitedStates took away the bronze medal with the same time as Kiplagat.Enditem
(Buzzwords in 2016)
1."Prehistoric powers"(??裂?)
China’s national swimmer Fu Yuanhui, who won a bronze medal at the semifinal of women's 100-meter backstroke in Rio Olympics, scored numerous viewers in China in a TV show.
When told by the reporter that she had qualified for the final and asked whether she had preserved her strength, Fu made a super exaggerated facial expression and blurted out “I have used all my prehistoric powers.” “'Prehistoric powers', or "honghuangzhili" in Chinese, soon became internet meme and was swiftly adopted as a term for an unstoppable force. The other English versions include “Primeval Power”, “Premordial Power”.
2. "Skinny blue mushroom"(?艮窮?)
A man from Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region uploaded a video of himself talking about his misfortune experience in love, particularly his loneliness after his girlfriend was away. He moaned in his heavy accent,”Unbearable, I want to cry”, which in Chinese is “Nanshou xiangku”, and these four Chinese characters sound much like “Lanshouxianggu”, which in English is "skinny blue mushroom". "Lanshouxianggu" soon went viral on the internet and took off as a meme, mostly as a way to mock the southern Guangxi accent. The other English version of “Lanshouxianggu” is “Blue thin mushroom”
3."Melon-eating masses"(???露)
Reports show that the one possible origin of the term is from an elderly uncle. In an interview with the reporter, the elderly uncle said “I know nothing about it. I am just eating watermelon on the roadside.” From then on, internet users often use it, sometimes derogatorily, to describe a massive group of passive onlookers at a major incident or event. The other English versions include “Watermelon eaters.”, “Watermelon-eating spectators”,”Onlookers”, “melon-eating masses”.
4. "A small target" (鬼??)
Chinese billionaire Wang Jianlin suggested young men to be not "too ambitious" and "set a small target first, like earning 100 million yuan ($14 million)" during a television show in August. What followed was an avalanche of sarcasm online as people pointed out the impossibility of earning the equivalent of $14.3m in their entire lifetimes, let alone as a first step. The term has been used sarcastically to refer to an impossible goal. The other English versions include “A small goal”, “A small plan”,“A tiny goal”.
5."Ge You?repose"(?膽堅)
Two decades after a television show named I Love My Family was broadcast, the comfortable but inelegant inclining of Chinese comedian Ge You turned into an emoji icon and created a wave of good humored interpretations and imitations. As the representative sitting position of Beijingers, it is also dubbed the Beijing Slouch. The other English version includes “Ge You slouch”.
6."Friendship sinks only too quick"(堂縷?鬼?綱???)?
What kind of a ship never sinks? Friendship! A group of cartoons starring cute penguins that went viral on social media tells you how friendship sinks. The phrase mocks how easy it is for a cyber friendship to fall out. Any tiny trigger can lead to a broken friendship, from taking a bad selfie of your friend to losing weight when they cannot.
(Source: Agencies)
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Yin Hang of China celebrates after the women's 50km race walk on Day 10 at the IAAF World Championships 2017 in London, Britain on Aug. 13 coach luggage bags outlet clearance , 2017. (XinhuaHan Yan) Yin Hang of China celebrates after the women's 50km race walk on Day 10 at the IAAF World Championships 2017 in London, Britain on Aug. 13 coach luggage bags outlet , 2017. (XinhuaHan Yan) Yin Hang (L) of China celebrates with Ines Henriques of Portugal after the women's 50km race walk on Day.