Edmonton Journal

Shoes too good to be true?

Olympic champ warns new carbon technology could hurt credibilit­y

-

Norwegian hurdler Karsten Warholm is not against innovation in sports but feels the new carbon-technology shoes are hurting athletes' credibilit­y, the men's 400 metre hurdles champion at the Tokyo Olympics told Reuters.

Warholm shaved 0.76 of a second off his own world record — a massive margin in a one-lap race — to hold off American Rai Benjamin to win in Tokyo in one of the all-time great Olympic races.

Benjamin took silver in 46.17, also half a second inside Warholm's previous record of 46.70, while Brazilian Alison dos Santos took bronze in 46.72 as six of the top 7 finishers set national or continenta­l records.

Following his victory, Warholm criticized the thick-soled shoes of Benjamin, despite also wearing spikes with a carbon plate that unquestion­ably improves performanc­e.

“What I said was misunderst­ood in some way, because I had one comment about it after the race and it just blew up and that wasn't my plan at all,” Warholm, 25, said.

“To be honest, I don't know if that shoe (Nike) is the best shoe. My shoe (Puma) is maybe just as good, but that's not what it is about, necessaril­y. I haven't done the science.

“When somebody does a great performanc­e now, everybody will question if it's the shoe, and that is the credibilit­y problem.”

With a super-speedy track at Tokyo's Olympic Stadium to aid, Sydney Mclaughlin also shattered her own world record ahead of fellow American Dalilah Muhammad, also inside the old mark in the women's race. The sprints also witnessed fast times.

Warholm said he wanted athletes and not technology to get more credit and would want whoever breaks his record to be simply better than him.

“Hopefully, somebody is doing the research and hopefully World Athletics are there to protect both athletes but also the audience,” he said.

“... And that's what I feel the sport of track and field is all about. You can compare things. Yes, there will always be small difference­s ... even though I'm all for technology pushing it a little bit forward, in all sports.”

When he saw the astonishin­g time after going past the finish line in Tokyo, Warholm looked shocked. He ripped his vest apart and beat his chest in celebratio­n before sinking to his knees.

“I was just a bit embarrasse­d that I wasn't able to rip the shirt like fully off,” he said with a smile. “But it was a lot of emotions ... it's something that I wanted really bad. Also with the Olympics, it's not a medal that you can go out and fight for every year.

“I knew that this was the moment that I really just had to grab with both hands because it's not that many times you get the chance to be in perfect shape during the Olympics and it was very important for me to win.”

Warholm, a two-time world champion in 400m hurdles, said he was ready to try new events.

“The first natural one would be the 400m without hurdles, and I'm going to do that already at the end of this month in Switzerlan­d,” he said.

“... I'm also dreaming about doing a great 800 once, but that's going to take some years and it's going to take a different type of training. So I'm not ready to go there just yet.”

 ??  ?? Karsten Warholm
Karsten Warholm

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada