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Rodgers speeds to year's fastest 100 meters

(Reuters) - Veteran American sprinter Mike Rodgers cruised to the year's fastest 100 meters when the 33-year-old clocked 9.89 seconds in qualifying at the U.S. championships in Iowa on Thursday. The performance, in what Rodgers said were new shoes, stole the show from America's younger generation of sprinters on the first day of the meeting that will decide the United States team for next month's Athletics World Cup in London. "I felt like I could have run faster," said Rodgers, who has been dogged by injury in recent years and not run that fast since 2015. "I kinda slipped (at the start) because of the wet track but I am fine." Talented 20-year-old Noah Lyles had the second fastest time, 9.92 seconds, but unlike Rodgers, his run was wind-assisted, coming with an aiding wind of 3.4 meters per second. The wind on Rodgers' race was 1.4 mps, under the allowable 2.0 mps. Two others broke 10 seconds on the fast track at Drake University in Des Moines. The 28-year-old Isiah Young won his preliminary race in 9.93 seconds while Cameron Burrell, the son of former world record holder Leroy Burrell, posted the same time in finishing behind Rodgers. World indoor 60m bronze medalist Ronnie Baker, the pre-meet co-favorite with Lyles, was next in 10.00 seconds as he won the opening preliminary. The previous best time for the year was 9.91 seconds by Britain's Zharnel Hughes. The final is set for Friday with neither injured world indoor record holder Christian Coleman nor 100m world champion Justin Gatlin competing. Collegian Ashley Henderson led women's qualifiers, clocking 10.91 seconds with a big tail wind. Collegiate champion Aleia Hobbs ran 10.97 seconds for the best performance with an allowable wind. American record holder Molly Huddle won her fourth consecutive women's 10,000 meters title, running 31:52.32 to defeat Marielle Hall (31:56.68). Olympian Lopez Lomong overtook Shadrack Kipchirchir to win the men's 10,000 in 28:58.38. Three field events also were decided, the most noteworthy being collegiate champion Keturah Orji's third-round triple jump of 14.59 meters to upset U.S. record holder Tori Franklin, who leaped a wind-assisted 14.52 meters on her last attempt. Kara Winger claimed her eighth national javelin title (62.88m) and Valarie Allman won the discus (63.55 meters). The meeting, which ends on Sunday, lost one of its most talented young drawcards when 400m hurdles world junior record holder Sydney McLaughlin withdrew. McLaughlin had been planning to run the 400m but decided not to compete after feeling tightness in one of her quadriceps while warming up. The qualifying race was to have been the 18-year-old's professional debut. (Reporting by Gene Cherry in Raleigh, North Carolina; Editing by Greg Stutchbury)