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Duplantis sets sights on outdoor gold at the World Championships
Duplantis sets sights on outdoor gold at the World Championships
July 13, 2022 | 11:48 PM
After sweeping all before him in recent seasons, Swedish pole vaulter Armand Duplantis arrives in Eugene seeking the one main prize that has so far eluded him in his short career — gold at the World Championships.The 22-year-old Louisiana native has had a meteoric rise to the top since bursting onto the scene in 2019, setting world records and winning Olympic gold, but his best result at the World Championships is a silver medal won in his debut year. “I am in a great shape and it is all about building to the world champs,” Duplantis said after a recent Diamond League meet. “I don’t really feel the pressure, only the pressure I put on myself. I think I could go high in Oregon, and it is important to be in my best shape there.”Duplantis set the current world record of 6.20 metres at the World Indoor Championships in Belgrade earlier this year, and sailed high over the bar to set a world-best outdoor mark of 6.16 metres at the Diamond League event in Stockholm in June.For the American fans that will pack the stands in Oregon, it’s a case of what might have been. “Mondo”, as he is nicknamed, could have competed in the stars and stripes of the US, but he was convinced to pick Sweden by youth team coach Jonas Anshelm.“His older brother Andreas represented Sweden as a pole vaulter as well. I went via Facebook, contacting Andreas asking for the phone number to Greg, Mondo and Andreas’ father, saying I would like to have Mondo in the team,” Anshelm told the official Olympic YouTube channel in an interview.Mondo initially rejected the Swedish approach, but things changed when his father was offered a role in the Swedish coaching set-up. “A couple of weeks later he (Greg) called me up and said ‘we’re on, we’ll go for Sweden’,” Anshelm recalled.Duplantis’ preparations for the World Championships have been taking place in Louisiana, partly at the Louisiana State university where he made his name and partly at the backyard facility he and his family built during the pandemic.Having declined to have a go at the world record in Stockholm, he may well choose to try to set a new mark in Oregon. “This is an entertainer. He’s going for it, he will put on a show for you,” is how Anshelm describes him, and few would argue against Duplantis being one of the big draws in Eugene.Sifan Hassan dials down expectations Triple Olympic medal winner Sifan Hassan will not be chasing hat-trick of titles at the World Athletics Championship in Eugene, Oregon, but rather add only one other event to her bid to win the 5,000 metres world title.She will make a decision this week whether it be the 1,500 metres or the 10,000 metres. The Dutch distance runner did the 5,000 metres and 10,000 metres gold double at last year’s Tokyo Olympics and took bronze in the 1,500 metres and says the stress of chasing the triple left her exhausted.“I took a lot of rest and found it very difficult to get going again, to get focused,” she told the Dutch media in the build-up to the world championship, which starts tomorrow. “The Olympics was a highlight. It was really difficult to set new goals thereafter. I was running away from running. I had no motivation. But then I began to miss running,” she added.It was only 10 weeks ago that the 29-year-old decided to refocus but says she has taken a deliberate decision to take it a little easier. “Somewhere along the line you’ve got to give up something in order to have a longer career,” she told the Algemeen Dagblad.Hassan ran her first race of the season last Friday, winning the 5,000 metres race at an event in Portland.
July 13, 2022 | 11:48 PM