Toronto Star

Decathlete Warner eyes triple for openers

Canadian record could fall in season where world title is in reach with Eaton done

- LORI EWING THE CANADIAN PRESS

A Canadian record and a hat trick are on the line when Damian Warner makes his season decathlon debut this weekend.

The 27-year-old from London, Ont., is the favourite to capture a third Hypo Meeting title in Gotzis, Austria, and his coach Les Gramantik believes Warner’s national record could fall in the process.

“I wouldn’t be surprised,” Gramantik said. “But that doesn’t mean that he will. I think the components are there. But it’s a funny game — you have a slip here, slip there . . . ultimately the biggest challenge is to win, not just to score.”

Warner won the prestigiou­s Hypo Meeting, which brings together the world’s top decathlete­s and heptathlet­es, in both 2013 and last year.

The event will be a good gauge of Warner’s progress since he moved from London to Calgary in December to work with Gramantik. It will be the only internatio­nal decathlon Warner will do before the world championsh­ips in London in August.

“I’m here to see where I’m at, at the start of the season, to start off the season well, and just move on from there and build on it,” Warner said at Friday’s introducto­ry news conference.

Warner, a world silver and bronze medallist, is a favourite to claim Canada’s first decathlon world title, particular­ly after the retirement of American Ashton Eaton, who’s dominated the event for several years.

“Everybody feels all of a sudden a door swung wide open for Damian because Ashton is gone. But there’s always going to be athletes out there who are capable,” said Gramantik, who mentioned Kevin Mayer of France — who edged Warner for silver in Rio — and Lindon Victor of Grenada, who’s shattered the NCAA record twice already this season.

“As I always say to people, ‘Others also train. You’re not the only one training.’ But I think definitely it’s a more wide-open opportunit­y to be- come world champion or to become an Olympic champion.”

Warner’s Canadian record of 8,695 points was set at the 2015 world championsh­ips in Beijing.

He’s set personal bests in both discus and shot put already this season, and Gramantik said Warner is “running awfully fast.”

Warner sprinted to a blistering­10.15 seconds in the 100 metres in Gotzis last year — it stands up as the world’s fastest decathlon 100 metres in history.

Asked Friday if he liked this year’s new track surface in Austria, the Canadian said “The track feels pretty good. I don’t quite remember how it felt last year, I know it was fast. Hopefully this one’s fast as well. We’ll see (Saturday) just how good the results turn out.”

The 67-year-old Gramantik is best known for helping decathlete Michael Smith to world silver and bronze. He also coached Jessica Zelinka, who was fourth in the heptathlon at the 2008 Olympics and sixth in 2012 in London.

Gramantik said his coaching philosophy with Warner is simply to “build a better athlete.”

“It’s a fun project for me, it’s an incredible opportunit­y before I die to have an athlete of his calibre,” Gramantik said with a laugh.

 ?? DIETMAR STIPLOVSEK/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Canadian Damian Warner clears a hurdle on the way to winning the Hypo title for the second time in 2016.
DIETMAR STIPLOVSEK/GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Canadian Damian Warner clears a hurdle on the way to winning the Hypo title for the second time in 2016.

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