Neeraj Chopra wins first Diamond League title with 88.44m throw; first Indian to achieve feat

Neeraj Chopra became the first Indian to win a Diamond League title after winning the Men’s Javelin event at the Zurich Diamond League Final 2022 with a best throw of 88.44m on Friday.

Published : Sep 09, 2022 01:41 IST

Neeraj Chopra of India celebrates following their victory in Men’s Javelin Throw during the Weltklasse Zurich 2022, part of the 2022 Diamond League series at Stadion Letzigrund on September 08, 2022 in Zurich, Switzerland.  | Photo Credit: Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images

Olympic gold medallist javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra on Thursday achieved yet another historic feat as he became the first Indian to win the prestigious Diamond League Finals title here. Chopra began with a foul but jumped to the top spot with a throw of 88.44m -- his fourth career best -- in his second attempt, and that turned out to be his winning effort. He had 88.00m, 86.11m, 87.00m and 83.60m in his next four throws.

Olympic silver medallist Jakub Vadlejch of the Czech Republic finished second with a best throw of 86.94m which he registered in his fourth attempt. Julian Weber of Germany was third with a best of 83.73m.

The 24-year-old Indian superstar is now the Olympic champion, World Championships silver medallist and Diamond League champion. All these he had achieved in just 13 months. He won the Olympic gold on August 7 last year in Tokyo.

He has produced 88m-plus throws six times this season which showed his consistency. He holds the national record of 89.94m, which he achieved this season.

Chopra also ended his international season with a history-scripting performance. The Diamond League Finals can be considered the most prestigious competition outside of the Olympics and World Championships.

Read highlights: Neeraj Chopra wins maiden Diamond League title with best throw of 88.44m; first Indian to do so

It was Chopra's third appearance in the Diamond League Finals. He had finished seventh and fourth respectively in 2017 and 2018.

Chopra was also awarded a Diamond Trophy, USD 30,000 prize money and a wild card for the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest, Hungary.

He, however, has already qualified for the World Championships as his Lausanne-leg winning throw breached the 85.20m qualifying mark.

The Diamond League encompasses 32 Diamond Disciplines, following a championship-style model. Athletes earn points at the 13-series meet to qualify for the final of their respective disciplines.

Chopra had made a spectacular return from a one-month injury lay-off by winning the Lausanne leg of the Diamond League series on August 26 and qualifying for the Finals here.

He had become the first Indian to clinch a Diamond League meet title in Lausanne with his third career-best throw of 89.08m.

He had missed the Birmingham Commonwealth Games (July 28 to August 8) due to a minor groin injury he had suffered during his silver-winning performance in the World Championships in the USA in July.

The six-man field in Zurich was without world champion Anderson Peters of Grenada, who is recovering from injuries after he was assaulted inside a boat in his country last month.

With Thursday's win, Chopra has beaten the 31-year-old Vadlejch for the fifth time since winning gold in Tokyo Olympic Games in August last year.

Vadlejch was sixth and fourth when Chopra finished second in Paavo Nurmi Games (June 14) and Stockholm Diamond League (June 30).

While Chopra won silver in World Championships in Eugene, Vadlejch clinched a bronze before the pair again clashed in Lausanne on August 26.

DIAMOND LEAGUE WINNERS-
MEN
100m- Trayvon Bromell 
200m- Noah Lyles 
400m- Kirani James 
800m- Emmanuel Korir 
1500m- Jakob Ingebrigtsen
5000m- Nicholas Kipkorir Kimeli
110m hurdles- Grant Holloway 
400m hurdles- Alison dos Santos 
300m steeplechase- Soufiane El Bakkali 
Long jump- Miltiadis Tentoglou
Triple jump- Andy Díaz Hernández
High jump- Gianmarco Tamberi 
Pole vault- Armand Duplantis 
Shot put- Joe Kovacs 
Discus throw- Kristjan Ceh 
Javelin throw- Neeraj Chopra 
WOMEN
100m- Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce 
200m- Shericka Jackson
400m- Marileidy Paulino
800m- Mary Moraa 
1500m- Faith Kipyegon 
5000m- Beatrice Chebet
100m hurdles- Tobi Amusan 
400m hurdles- Femke Bol 
300m steeplechase- Werkuha Getachew 
Long jump- Ivana Vuleta
Triple jump- Yulimar Rojas
High jump- Yaroslava Mahuchikh
Pole vault- Nina Kennedy 
Shot put- Chase Ealey 
Discus throw- Valarie Allman 
Javelin throw- Kara Winger