Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake urges Great Britain to look to future after relay bronze
Great Britain finished behind Canada and the United States on Saturday

Skipper Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake insists it is time to look to the future after Great Britainās relay bronze.
The 28-year-old helped the 4x100m menās relay squad to third at the World Championships on Saturday.
Jona Efoloko, Zharnel Hughes, Mitchell-Blake and Reece Prescod finished behind Canada and the USA in 37.83 seconds in Eugene.
A new team helped banish some of the pain from last yearās Olympics when Hughes, Mitchell-Blake, Richard Kilty and CJ Ujah won silver, only to be stripped of their medal following Ujahās positive drugs test.
Mitchell-Blake said: āItās fuel for the fire going forward. We cannot control the past, we can control the present and ultimately that dictates the future and thatās what weāve got to focus on.
āThere are no demons, weāre all blessed. We get a medal every year, itās becoming normalised and under appreciated.
āI feel relay medals are brushed under the rug due to our consistency on the menās and womenās teams. When the medal tables come out there are always relay medals and we step up every year.
āWe all stepped up and we have shown over the years our quality consistently now. Everyone has shown they are capable of stepping in.
āUltimately the aim is to come away from the next world champs with a gold and go onto Paris. It is a stepping stone, we will get better and we have got to raise our game going forward.
āWe will enjoy this moment together, appreciate the fact that we got a medal and refocus after this to the rest of the season.ā
Prescod ran just his second senior relay, after his debut in the heats, with Efoloko also drafted into the team for the first time.
āI got asked to do a job for the team. It was my first relay and I wanted to deliver for the team. Iām glad they trusted me and I was glad to be part of it. Itās a whole new cycle now,ā said Prescod.

It came after the women finished sixth following an injury to Dina Asher-Smith at Hayward Field. The 26-year-old suffered what appeared to be a hamstring problem as she approached the final changeover with Daryll Neita .
Earlier, Jess Judd and Eilish McColgan finished 13th and 11th respectively in the 5,000m final, which was won by Ethiopiaās Gudaf Tsegay.
The womenās 4x400m relay squad of Ama Pipi, Laviai Nielsen, Victoria Ohuruogu and Nicole Yeargin reached Sundayās final by finishing second behind the USA in three minutes 23.92 seconds.
āWe have got such strength in the UK. I think we have eight girls under 52 seconds, so we have come and are representing our strongest team. Iām really proud to be a part of this team,ā said Nielsen.
Earlier, Lorraine Ugen and Jazmin Sawyers reached the final of the long jump.
The British pair both posted 6.68m to finish in the top 12 of qualifying, despite not hitting the automatic mark of 6.75m.
Sawyers, who came eighth at last yearās Olympics in Tokyo, recorded a seasonās best with Ugen finishing fifth in Group A on Saturday morning in Eugene.
They will now compete in Sundayās final, the last day of competition in America.
Sawyers said: āIām happy ā the job in qualifying is to make it to the final. Thereās definitely some technical things I can do better, but thatās my first world final at my third try so Iām really happy.
Cindy Sember qualified for the Sundayās 100m hurdles semi-final after running 12.67 seconds in her heat.
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