Andre De Grasse crossed the finish line with his arms open wide, certain he’d just sprinted to yet another Canadian title in the 100 metres.
So the six-time Olympic medallist was surprised to see Ottawa’s Eliezer Adjibi listed first on the board at Claude-Robillard sports complex.
“I was kind of confused. I mean, I thought I won, I didn’t see anybody in my peripheral,” De Grasse said. “I was like, OK, maybe I got snuck on the outside or something, because I didn’t see anybody.”
Luckily for him, it was only a scare. A timing system issue gave Adjibi the edge before officials corrected the results following a review.
The 29-year-old De Grasse of Markham, Ont., captured gold in 10.20 seconds Friday at the Canadian Olympic and Paralympic track and field trials, finishing ahead of Adjibi (10.23) and Toronto’s Aaron Brown (10.25).
De Grasse said he hasn’t experienced that type of scenario in a long time.
“Maybe like my junior years,” he said. “It was a good joke.”
But Adjibi wasn’t laughing.
Initially surprised to see his name atop the leaderboard with the pack so close at the finish line, he started thinking a late lean forward had given him the edge.
Adjibi’s name didn’t budge from the top for a few moments, so he sprinted gleefully in celebration down the track in front of a stunned crowd.
“I waited, I waited, I waited, and I see my name is still first, I was like, ’Oh (crap), I won,'” he said. “They made me do the lap, I came back and damn, boom. I didn’t win.
“I can’t do anything about it, so it’s OK.”
National record-holder Audrey Leduc of Gatineau, Que., won the women’s 100 in 11.20 to confirm her place in the Paris Summer Olympics.
Sarah Mitton is also going to the Games after winning women’s shot put gold. Mitton threw 19.62 metres to lead the field and secure her fourth-straight Canadian title.
The 28-year-old from Brooklyn, N.S., is ranked first in the world in shot put. She won world championship silver last year and world indoor gold in March. At the Tokyo Games in 2021, Mitton finished 28th.
Earlier Friday, Christopher Morales Williams of Vaughan, Ont., advanced to the men’s 400-metre final after leading the semifinal with a time of 45.77. Olympic decathlon champion Damian Warner of London, Ont., also moved on with a time of 47.46.
World champion Marco Arop of Edmonton began defence of his Canadian title with a 1:43.53 in the 800 semifinal.
Alysha Newman of Delaware, Ont., cleared 4.75 metres to take the women’s pole vault.
The trials continue through Sunday. The Paris Games begin July 26.