Fraser-Pryce starts second leg of double bid

Jamaica's Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce competes in the women's 200m heats at the athletics event of the London 2012 Olympic Games in London. Fraser-Pryce stayed on track for an Olympic sprint double on Monday as fellow Jamaican Veronica Campbell-Brown took her first step towards a third consecutive 200m gold

Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce stayed on track for an Olympic sprint double on Monday as fellow Jamaican Veronica Campbell-Brown took her first step towards a third consecutive 200m gold. Fraser-Pryce, who successfully defended her 100m title in London, looked impressive in easing to victory in heat six of the first round of the women's 200m in a time of 22.71sec. Campbell-Brown timed 22.75sec in heat five as American Sanya Richards-Ross, chasing a 200m-400m double after winning the one-lap sprint 24 hours earlier, topped the qualifying times with 22.48sec. Three-time 200m world champion Allyson Felix of America, who finished second behind Campbell-Brown over 200m in Athens 2004 and Beijing 2008, ran 22.71sec. Felix came into the event in superb form, having run a personal best and world leading time of 21.69 at the US Olympic trials, the fastest for 14 years. Campbell-Brown ended Felix's winning streak at last year's world championships in Daegu, South Korea, last year. Asked about the possibility of achieving a trio of titles, Campbell-Brown told BBC TV: "It is a great stiuation to be in, I am not going to let pressure overwhelm me or anything, I am just taking it step by step. "The objective is to get to the final and just run as best I can there." Carmelita Jeter, pipped to the 100m gold by Fraser-Pryce, also qualified for Tuesday's semi-finals. Speaking about recovering after the women's 100m, Felix said: "I am doing pretty good. I got some treatment. I am just excited about this race (the women's 200m)." The first woman to do the 100-200m double was legendary Dutch runner Fanny Blankers-Koen, who performed the feat in London in 1948.