Mercury (Hobart)

Pearson made right choice but must be smarter in comeback

- PAUL MALONE

SALLY Pearson must be increasing­ly flexible about her training schedules if she hopes to bounce back from her Gold Coast disappoint­ment at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games.

Raelene Boyle moved up to the 400m at the 1982 Commonweal­th Games, winning the gold medal at 31, the same age Pearson is now, because achilles problems had prevented her from training to be a force in the 100m and 200m.

Pearson said she knew “deep down’’ she could be as strong and fast as she was during her 2011, 2012 and 2017 campaigns when she won two world 100m hurdles titles and an Olympic gold medal.

Australia’s 1990 Commonweal­th Games heptathlon champion Jane Flemming said Pearson had pulled the right rein, by realising her career could have been “done and dusted’’ if she had risked a right achilles injury at the Gold Coast Games.

Boyle, winner of five individual Commonweal­th gold medals, said the most intelligen­t of track athletes heeded signs of stress in their body.

Pearson said yesterday she would continue to be her own coach, a role she took on for her comeback 2017 world titles gold medal in the 110m hurdles.

“Some athletes – and I’m not saying Sally is one – don’t believe they can move forward unless they stick strictly to their regimen,’’ Boyle said.

“You can still succeed as long as you have confidence in yourself. I don’t fear for her at all but she’s perhaps starting to consider time is tapping her on the shoulder.

“It does get harder to sprint as you get to your 30s. Your body just can’t take the pounding anymore.’

Australian coach Craig Hilliard said the frequency of achilles injuries Pearson had experience­d since 2015 could dictate that, rather than a customary seven-day training cycle, she works to a 10-day or 14-day training cycle.

“She has a lot of training in the bank and can get away with that (reduced training program),’’ Flemming said.

“Her experience, which I think has been shown in this decision, means she will make wise decisions to get through it. It will allow her to continue on. A younger athlete would possibly have risked it.

“I don’t think Sally has enough time left in her career to come back from a bad in- jury. I’m not surprised to hear her say her very personal experience from the fall in 2015 played a part in her decision.

“It was a traumatic injury to break her wrist and it all came from the calf (and achilles) trouble she had going into that race.’’

Pearson named three-time world 100m champion Gail Devers, who won a world titles silver medal at age 34, and Kim Collins, who won a 100m world titles bronze medal at 35, as inspiratio­ns for her.

“I have to remind myself this is not over for me. I know deep down I can come back and be just as strong as I was last year, in 2012 and 2011,’’ she said.

“I’ve torn my hamstring seven weeks before Glasgow (at age 27) and won gold.”

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