The countdown to the 2017 IAAF World Championships has begun, and this year’s event is special for many reasons, least of all for the fact that it will serve as the final outing for triple World Record (WR) holder Usain Bolt.

The impending retirement of the multiple Olympic and World Championships GOLD medallist has thrown the stage wide open for the next generation of athletes to aim to dominate their respective events like the Jamaican legend did.

Here are five budding athletes to watch out for at the London 2017 World Championships, all of whom are racing in the World Championships for the first time, and will be hoping to make their presence felt.

 

5. Christopher Belcher (100m)

Not many may have heard about Christopher Belcher, but if making the US team to the World Championships is all it takes to be reckoned with, the youngster has surely earned his place on our Top 5 list of young athletes to watch out for in London.

The 23-year old currently occupies the 4th spot (tied with Cameron Burrell) on the men’s 100m 2017 world rankings with his Personal Best (PB) of 9.93s set in the semis of the NCAA Championships in June. He went on to finish 3rd in the final in 10.19s, with Christian Coleman taking the title in 10.04s. He is ranked 8th in the 200m on the world list with his PB of 20.01s.

Christopher Belcher reacts after the Men’s 100m Final at the 2017 USA Championships. (Photo Credit: Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

Having been slowed down by injury last year, Belcher bounced back in style to set a wind-aided mark of 9.99s at the Aggie Invitational in April, which was the second fastest time in the world at the time.

He then extended that form to the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference outdoor championships in May where he won triple GOLD in the 100m (10.04s), 200m and 4x100m, leading North Carolina A&T men’s team to their first conference title in 21 years.

Christopher Belcher earned his spot to the World Championships after finishing 3rd in the men’s 100m. (Photo Credit: MEAC Media Relations)

The Junior turned pro in June after signing a professional contract with Nike, and went on to finish 3rd behind Justin Gatlin (9.95s) and Coleman (9.98s) at the US Track and Field Championships, returning a time of 10.06s to secure his spot on the London-bound team.

For an athlete who is making the US team for the first time in his career, Belcher will be delighted at the prospect of rubbing shoulders with the big guns and will be aiming for an upset.

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Yemi Galadima is a Senior Sportswriter and Editor at Making of Champions. She has a bias for Athletics and was previously a Sports Reporter at the National Mirror, where she hosted a weekly column ‘On the Track with Yemi Olus’ for over two years. A self-acclaimed ‘athletics junkie’, she has covered national and international events live, such as the African Athletics Championships, African Games, Olympics and World Athletics Championships. She also freelances for World Athletics.

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