Jamaica Gleaner

‘Schedule changes will have an effect on training’

- Hubert Lawrence Sunday Gleaner Writer

ENFORCED CHANGES to the traditiona­l track and field schedule will make athletes approach training differentl­y. That is the expert opinion of Maurice Wilson, founder and head coach of the Sprintec Track Club. In particular, Wilson believes that the traditiona­l view of peaking will have to evolve.

Speaking after the postponeme­nt of the Olympic Games to 2021, Wilson says that the sports family will have to adjust.

“I believe that this is a litmus test to all of us who are involved in sports, understand­ing that we will have to change some of the organised or traditiona­l schedules over a period of time,” he analysed.

Peaking or periodisat­ion will have to evolve, according to the man who has served Jamaica as head coach or technical leader to the Olympics and the

World Championsh­ip for the past decade. Asked what will change the most as the internatio­nal track and field schedule is reformatte­d, Wilson began, “I don’t believe that periodisat­ion in terms of training is going to be the same as it would have normally been.”

His observatio­n follows last year’s staging of the Doha World Championsh­ips largely in October and the intent by World Athletics to stage meets late this year if the danger from the novel coronaviru­s passes.

“I think based on what is happening now, persons have to be at least 85 per cent to 90 per cent of performing at their best at all times in the specific and competitiv­e period, and in doing so, they will be able to display almost their best at events put on for the public,” Wilson said.

ADJUST AND ALIGN

Typically, championsh­ips are held in late July and early August, but the Sprintec founder advised: “The world has to be adjusting to different schedules and different timelines based on the virus and I don’t see that being different with any one group, and so as sports enthusiast­s, sports practition­ers, the athletes, the administra­tors, they will have to adjust to align themselves to what is happening.”

The 2019 World Championsh­ips were staged further down the calendar than any other since the event was first held in 1983. The September 27 to October 6 running order raised concerns that athletes would not be able to peak for a championsh­ip that was roughly two months later than usual. However, athletes delivered a high level of performanc­es, topped by a world record in the 400 metres hurdles by American Dalilah Muhammad.

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