With a joyous smile across her face even before she made the jump and egged on by the packed Emirates Arena crowd,Olyslagers soared over,which pressurised Mahuchikh into a third failure at 1.99m.
The competition won,Olyslagers had three cracks at 2.02m to no avail,but the 27-year-old could celebrate becoming the eighth Australian to win gold in the indoor championships’ 39-year history – and the first since Sally Pearson in the 60m hurdles in 2012.
“I’m feeling really thankful. I went into the competition willing to challenge myself knowing I hadn’t competed indoors before,and I actually wasn’t aiming for the medals,” Olyslagers said.
Having equalled the Oceania record of 2.03m in her season-opener outdoors in January,Olyslagers may now have stamped herself as an early favourite for Olympic gold in Paris ahead of 22-year-old outdoor champion Mahuchikh.
A duel between Olyslagers and her world-class domestic rival Eleanor Patterson,who took silver ahead of her in Budapest,never materialised.
An out-of-form Patterson withdrew earlier in the week to concentrate on her Olympic preparations.
The other spectacular duel for gold on the opening night ended with the men’s 60m title going to former champion Christian Coleman ahead of fellow US sprinter Noah Lyles.
Coleman exploded from the blocks to edge Lyles by 0.03 seconds,winning in a world-leading 6.41.
US shot put great Ryan Crouser heaved a championship record 22.77m ahead of New Zealander Tom Walsh (22.07),while Belgium’s Noor Vidts successfully defended her 2022 pentathlon crown.
Middle distance star Catriona Bisset battled into Saturday’s 800m semi-finals on her 30th birthday,finishing second in her heat in two minutes 02.24 seconds.
But Bisset’s training partner Linden Hall bowed out in the 1500m,finishing fourth in her heat (4:09.83).
AAP