The Prince George Citizen

Canada’s Warner defends Pan Am decathlon title

- Gregory STRONG

LIMA, Peru — Canadian decathlete Damian Warner lay on the pole vault mat for a good five seconds Wednesday night after missing a third and final attempt at a height he normally clears.

Frustratio­n etched across his face, a decision to change poles proved fruitless. A nagging ankle injury wasn’t helping matters and the cold weather and some cramping were on his mind too.

Warner still managed to persevere through the challenges over the two-day event en route to a second straight Pan Am title.

Clearing a lower height in pole vault had essentiall­y given him enough points in the overall standings and he closed with solid performanc­es in the javelin and 1,500 metres for the victory.

“It was a hard-fought battle but a win is a win,” Warner said.

He finished with 8,513 points, well ahead of Lindon Victor of Grenada (8,240). Warner’s teammate, Pierce LePage, took the bronze with 8,161.

Warner rebounded after missing 4.60 metres in the pole vault with a throw of 59.48 metres in the javelin. He was second in the 1,500 with a time of four minutes 38.31 seconds.

“Everybody ended up about where I expected them to but they were all 200 or 300 points below what I thought they’d do,” Warner’s coach, Gar Leyshon, said of the field. “It was a lot tougher on them than I thought it would be. This was not the easiest of conditions.”

Temperatur­es at the Videna Athletics Stadium hovered in the mid-teens through the afternoon under overcast skies. But the mercury fell in the early evening when the sun went down.

Warner and LePage were wrapped in thick black blankets when they came out for the last two events. Another athlete was sporting a heavy poncho over his warmup gear. Other competitor­s were wearing tuques, ear warmers and gloves.

“I think everybody was taken by surprise,” Leyshon said.

Both Canadians were battling injuries. LePage tweaked his knee at the national championsh­ip while Warner, from London, Ont., is dealing with a bone spur in his left ankle.

Warner said the adrenalin often helps him forget the pain but it did bother him a bit in the pole vault and high jump.

“I’m liking how it’s progressin­g and I’m liking how it’s feeling going into (worlds at) Doha,” he said. “I think that I’m ready for a bigger score there.”

While many countries sent Bteams to the Pan Ams, decathlon was solid with three of the top seven athletes in the world rankings in the field.

Also Wednesday, Timothy Nedow of Brockville, Ont., finished fourth in the men’s shot put and Lindsey Butterwort­h of North Vancouver, finished fifth in the women’s 800 metres in 2:02.68.

Keira Christie-Galloway of Ottawa did not qualify for the women’s 100-metre hurdles final and Phylicia George of Markham, Ont., withdrew from the semifinal due to a gastrointe­stinal illness.

In the women’s 400, Kyra Constantin­e of Toronto qualified for the final with a fourth-place finish (52.92) in her semifinal heat.

Natassha McDonald of Brampton, Ont., was fourth in her semi (53.15) but didn’t advance. The top three finishers in each semifinal qualified along with the next two fastest runners.

In the women’s 100, Toronto’s Crystal Emmanuel was seventh in 11.41. Toronto’s Philip Osei did not qualify for the men’s 400-metre final.

Warner helped anchor a strong Canadian athletics team that won 27 medals (11 gold, seven silver, nine bronze) in Toronto four years ago.

Canada essentiall­y sent a split A-team/B-team to Lima with big names like Andre De Grasse, Melissa Bishop and Derek Drouin not on the roster.

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