Jamaica Gleaner

Blake backs World Athletics

Olympic qualificat­ion period suspended until December 1

- Daniel Wheeler/ Gleaner Writer daniel.wheeler@gleanerjm.com

JAMAICA ATHLETICS Administra­tive Associatio­n President Dr Warren Blake says the move to revise the Olympic qualificat­ion period for athletics allows for a levelling of the playing field for athletes to continue their Olympic aspiration­s.

World Athletics, in a release yesterday, announced the suspension of the current qualificat­ion period for the Tokyo Olympics effective April 6 to November 30. This means that any results obtained during this period will not count towards the athletes’ chances of competing in the games which have been reschedule­d to July 2021 as a result of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Qualificat­ion will resume December 1 until the latest June 29, 2021 “subject to the global situation returning to normal.”

Worldwide, up to late yesterday, more than 1.4 million persons have tested positive for the virus. Of those, over 301,800 have recovered while there have been 81,978 deaths.

Blake says that the decision to revise the qualificat­ion period was the best the world body could make to prevent athletes from gaining an unfair advantage.

LEVELLING THE FIELD

“If there were competitio­ns going on in some places in the world, then only those athletes would get ranked and the ranking system would end up electing people based on whether or not you have coronaviru­s in your country,” Blake told The Gleaner. “This is why it was important to just have a level field where everybody starts over from the same period. It’s not the ultimate solution, but it’s the best that can be done given the circumstan­ces.”

World Athletics confirmed that those who have already met the qualifying standard for the Games since the previous period will be eligible for selection by their member associatio­ns combined with those who have qualified during the additional period.

The 2020 track and field season has effectivel­y been suspended as a result of the virus, which has already resulted in the postponeme­nt of the Tokyo Olympics as well as the Diamond League season which has seen its first six competitio­ns reschedule­d. These include meets in China and Italy where there have been large numbers of infections and casualties.

RESTRUCTUR­ING TRAINING

Blake says that coaches may be inclined to end their seasons early and restructur­e their groundwork training usually reserved for late fall but doesn’t see any significan­t effects as everyone would be preparing under the same conditions

“What they [World Athletics] are saying is some people might shut down their season to start up again for next year. So when you start back up again for next year, you would hopefully pick up where you left off this year,” he said. “You would still end up with roughly the same period between the end of the year and the Olympics.”

Swept Track Club coach Okeil Stewart says that the revised period will affect how members of his camp prepare and any adjustment­s made won’t be made collective­ly.

“We will look at where they (athletes) are, look at their developmen­t and see what they need to do and then draft their programme to suit the set-up for next year,” he said. The adjustment will not have any effect on World Championsh­ip 400m hurdles bronze medallist Rushell Clayton who is coached by Stewart. Clayton gained the qualifying standard in Doha last year.

 ?? FILE ?? Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson wins the women’s 200-metre final at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, ahead of Dafne Schippers of the Netherland­s. Thompson clocked 21.78 seconds, while Schippers was second in 21.88.
FILE Jamaica’s Elaine Thompson wins the women’s 200-metre final at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, ahead of Dafne Schippers of the Netherland­s. Thompson clocked 21.78 seconds, while Schippers was second in 21.88.
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