For the 2nd time in two weeks, Jyothi Yarraji breaks national record in 100-metre hurdles
NEW DELHI: For two decades, the Indian women’s high hurdles record stood untouched. Young sensation Jyothi Yarraji has now bettered it twice in less than a fortnight.
On Sunday, the 22-year-old broke her own 100m hurdles mark to win at the Loughborough International Athletics Meet in the UK.
Jyothi clocked 13.11secs, edging out England’s Jessica Hunter (13.26sec). The hurdler from Visakhapatnam broke the record for the first time on May 11, clocking 13.23secs at the Cyprus International Meet in Limassol. It improved on the mark of 13.38 secs, twice achieved in succession by Anuradha Biswal in 2002.
“It feels very special to break the record twice,” a delighted Jyothi said from Loughborough. “I was chasing the record, but I want to go under 13 seconds. I am happy I am closing in on it.”
It has been a great month for Jyothi, who twice saw her go under Biswal’s 13.38secs not recognised for technical reasons. The Asian record is 12.44 secs (Olga Shishigina of Kazakhstan) and Kendra Harrison (US-12.20) holds the world mark.
“I was excited but a little nervous, scared. I don’t have the experience competing outside. The foreign girls are good. I was not sure how the race would go. I took the lead after the 3rd hurdle but someone seemed to be catching up on the 5th or 6th hurdle. I just concentrated and pushed. It was good,” she said.
On the road
Jyothi, who is competing in overseas meets for the first time, is seen as a big talent. When it comes to hurdles though, PT Usha remains the benchmark—her 400m national mark set in 1984 still stands.
Going into the season, her British coach James Hillier held a month-long training session in the Spanish island of Tenerife. “There is a good facility in Tenerife where athletes can train together. She has good natural speed, elastic strength and reactive strength. Of course, she needs to get better and snappier on the hurdles, keep developing her speed and become stronger,” Hillier, a former hurdler, said.
One of the most technical but visually appealing events in track and field, Hillier compares doing 100m hurdles to ‘running in a jungle at night.’
“You don’t know what’s coming your way. You have to be brave enough to attack the hurdles. Running hurdles can be scary. You can hurt yourself anytime.”
He watched Jyothi in a domestic meet last year and called her up to the Reliance Foundation Athletics High Performance Centre in Bhubaneswar. She hasn’t looked back since. “There was no training during Covid in 2020 and when things opened, I pushed myself in training because of the world universities meet. I was injured (meniscal tear) and it was difficult even to walk. “Coach (Hillier) asked me if I would like to train with him and it was a good opportunity. It was a good hostel facility and I didn’t have to spend anything. Otherwise, it was difficult to sustain my training,” said Jyothi, whose father works as a security guard. “Whatever my father earns is just enough to run the family, I’ve to look after my training.”
Sneaking out
As a child, running was more an adventure for Jyothi. She would slip out of the house—at the risk of spanking from her elder brother—to run in her school in Kancharapalam village near Vizag.