Mercury (Hobart)

Pearson jumps for Tokyo

- SCOTT GULLAN

AUSTRALIA’S head coach, Craig Hilliard, has backed world champion Sally Pearson to continue on to the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games.

After winning her second world title in London, Pearson said she was keen to represent Australia at a third Olympic Games given she had missed Rio last year.

“I love the idea of going to a third Olympics,” she said. “I missed out in Rio 2016 and so I’d love the idea of going to Tokyo. But that’s another three years to go and it’s a matter of whether my body can handle it.”

Hilliard said Pearson, who turns 31 next month, had showed in her remarkable comeback this season that age was not a barrier.

“Why not? If her body is healthy and she is keen to do it, why not do it?” he said.

“If Sally wants to do it, she’ll do it. It’s as simple as that. If her body is healthy they are the only two ingredient­s. If she is still loving the sport then Sally keeps going.”

Australia’s two medallists were Pearson winning gold in the 100m hurdles and Dani Stevens claiming the silver medal in the discus. While the number of top-eight finishes were down from Rio last year, there were enough top-16 placegette­rs for optimism before next year’s Commonweal­th Games on Queensland’s Gold Coast.

Hilliard singled out pole vaulter Kurtis Marschall, distance runner Patrick Tiernan and javelin thrower KelseyLee Roberts as ones to watch.

“I’m satisfied,” Hilliard said. “The performanc­es of Sally and Dani were sensationa­l.

“We didn’t quite get the number of top eights we were after but we’ve got some young kids coming through.

“Kurtis Marschall was fantastic, some of our distance athletes like Patrick Tiernan really competed out there and there was a big breakthrou­gh for Kelsey-Lee Roberts.”

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