Double amputee Oscar Pistorius, S. Africa teammates make Olympic final after protest
(CBS/AP) LONDON - Oscar Pistorius and his South African teammates are moving on to the 4x400-meter relay final at the Olympics without even finishing the heats.
The double-amputee will get a chance to run for an Olympic medal after track officials awarded an extra spot in the final following a successful protest by South Africa.
In the opening round Thursday, a Kenyan runner collided with South Africa's Ofentse Mogawane as he made his way around the final bend. Mogawane, running the second section of the relay, fell to the ground and clutched at his left shoulder as the baton rolled away.
Set to run next in the relay, Pistorius stared at the scene in disbelief. He put his hands on his head and began walking off the track, figuring his time in London was done.
In the span of two hours, Pistorius went from crestfallen to celebration. On Twitter, he said, "IT'S ON!! We in the FINAL."
Pistorius later tweeted:
Following the race, Kenya was disqualified from the competition when the referee ruled that Vincent Mumo Kiilu cut across too soon and caused Mogawane to fall. Kiilu had a spike mark on the back of his right shoe.
The IAAF said the Pistorius' team will run in Lane 9 after the jury met and "agreed to advance the South African team, even though they did not finish the race, considering that they had been severely damaged in the incident with Kenya."
Originally, three teams from the two heats were supposed to advance automatically, along with the next two fastest times. The last lane was going to be empty.
This was quite a day for Pistorius.
Quite an Olympics, too.
After a long battle for inclusion in able-bodied competition in the individual events, Pistorius ran the 400 meters and advanced to the semifinals before bowing out.
Double-amputee Oscar Pistorius has realistic shot at Olympic medal, says "I feel very strong"
He won another moral victory last week when the IAAF announced he could run any part of the 4x400 relay at the Olympics, not just the opening leg when runners have to remain in their assigned lanes for a lap.
"This whole experience was one of the highlights of my career," said Pistorius, the first amputee to compete in track at the Olympics. "I just had the most amazing experience representing my country. My experience here, everything has been superb. From the organization to the crowd to the fans and to friends. I couldn't have hoped for a better time.
"It's so hard. You have so much support from back home. We would have loved to have represented our country today and finished the race.
Now, as turns out, Pistorius and his teammates will get that chance.