AFP, Glasgow :Yohan Blake’s return from injury ended in despair as the Jamaican sprinter suffered a hamstring injury during the Glasgow Diamond League meeting on Friday. Blake, the second fastest man in history, has been plagued by fitness issues for much of the past two years and, in just his second race this season, he left the track at Hampden Park in a wheelchair after more problems. The 24-year-old was slow out of the blocks in the 100 metres final and looked uncomfortable as the race reached midway. The Olympic silver medallist then suddenly pulled up and fell to the track as his compatriot Nickel Ashmeade edged out American Michael Rodgers by a fraction after both finished in 9.97 seconds. Fellow Jamaican Nesta Carter was just a hundredth of a second behind as the fastest 100 metres ever run in Scotland ended with three men under 10 seconds. Blake had been accused of chasing cash over medals after he snubbed this month’s Commonwealth Games in the city in favour of running at the money- spinning Diamond League meet. But his warning that he was not fit enough to run in both competitions proved correct. Britain’s James Dasaolu, who finished fourth on a season’s best time of 10.03 seconds, said: “I didn’t really see what happened to Yohan. We sprinters are taught to focus only on what is going on in our own lane. “But this event requires maximum effort and his fall just shows what happens when you are carrying these types of injuries. “You have to go at 100 per cent and anything out of place slightly can blow. You are very delicate but you have to be just right when you are running against sub-10 guys.” A shadow had been cast on the event after London 2012 hero Mo Farah pulled out last week. The double Olympic champion, who still hopes to make Glasgow 2014 in a fortnight’s time, had been scheduled to run in Saturday’s two-mile race but withdrew when he was struck down with abdominal pains while training in the United States. But home favourite Elidh Child gave the 12,000-strong crowd at Hampden a night to remember as she recorded the second quickest 400m hurdles ever run by a Scottish female. The Perth athlete impressively outclassed a high-quality field, including three rivals who had personal bests quicker than her own. And the 27-year-old put down a fine marker ahead of the Commonwealths by finishing in 54.39 seconds – just 0.17 off her own Scottish record. Heptathlete Katarina Johnson-Thompson showed why she is favourite for gold at the Commonwealth Games with a personal best 6.92m to finish second in the long jump. The Liverpool athlete continued her stunning form this year to come within three centimetres of the British record. Shara Proctor, the holder of that record and now the only woman above Johnson-Thompson on the British all-time list, had to settle for third with 6.82m. s