Yogesh Kathuniya wins another silver medal for India; Saudi sprinter sets World Record

"VAN" (Sports Desk, New Delhi - 30.09.2025) :: Saudi Arabia’s Naif Almasrahi breezed to victory with a new World Record in the men’s 100m T44 final in the IndianOil New Delhi 2025 World Para Athletics Championships in the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium here on Tuesday. He clocked 10.94 seconds on a morning when F56 Discus Thrower Yogesh Kathuniya added a silver to India’s kitty.

David Dzhatiev (Neutral Para Athlete) in the men’s 200m T35, Davd Jose Pineda Mejia (Spain) in the men’s 400m T20 and Tunisia’s Yassine Gharbi in the men’s 400m T54 accounted for the other three other Championships Records set on Tuesday morning, but the goodly home crowd reveled in cheering Indian F56 Discus Thower Yogesh Kathuniya on each of his throws.

Yogesh Kathuniya, gunning for his maiden gold at the global level, had to settle for silver after each of Brazilian ace Claudiney Batista’s six throws were better than the Indian’s best effort of 42.49. The 28-year-old Kathuniya picked up his third successive silver in the World Championships in addition to the two silver medals in the Paralympic Games.

“It is a different feeling since I won silver on my home ground,” Yogesh Kathuniya said “Everyone was watching, the family members were also here. There was a lot of pressure in the Paris Paralympics, but here everyone was cheering me on,” he said, pointing out that he was not worried about the talk of gold and focused on the process.

Meanwhile, Yogesh Kathuniya’s coach Lakhwinder Singh said the medal was the result of planning and execution, though the colour of the medal was not what they had hoped for. “The distance was a little less than his personal best, but we were aiming for a throw between 44m and 45m,” he said.

Naif Almarsrahi, who created the sole world record of the morning, said he could not express his feelings. “I wasn't prepared to get this time. In my mind, I was preparing to get to 11 (seconds), but my competitor was running so fast, I had to run faster,” he said. “It's hot, but it's similar to where I live in Saudi Arabia. And also, the track is one of the best I have run on.”

With an emotional win in the men’s 400m T54 final, Tunisia Yassine Gharbi returned to the global podium after nearly six years. He missed a Paralympic Games and two World Championships in the wake of a ban for testing positive for Boldenone in an out of competition test in December 2020. He went without a medal in the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games.

With the Paris 2024 Paralympics gold medalist Dai Yungqiang (China) and silver medalist Athiwat Paeng-Nuea (Thailand) lining up at the start, it promised to be a good race. The Thai athlete, who had set a new Championships Record of 45.01 seconds in the heats, cruised to the lead at the halfway stage, but the Tunisian produced a fantastic second half to break the beam.

It was a second successive World Championships gold medal for David Dzhatiev in the men’s 200m T35 final. He drew satisfaction from beating Paris Paralympics champion Ihor Tsvietov (Ukraine) and World record holder Dmitrii Safronov, also a Neutral Paralympics Athlete, to the gold medal in 23.01 seconds.

The musical chairs featuring Brazil and China at the top of the medal table continued, the South American country taking the lead with the Discus Throw gold. Brazil now has 5 gold, 10 silver and 2 bronze medals whila China has 4 gold, 7 silver and 4 bronze medals. India, with 2 gold, 3 silver and a bronze is in the seventh spot.

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