Business Day

Wayde will go even faster — Quinn

- David Isaacson

Two character traits have contribute­d to the success of Wayde van Niekerk‚ according to a former world champion sprinter.

One is that Van Niekerk prefers to challenge himself rather than focus on the rivals around him and the other is he thrives on the big stage.

Mathew Quinn‚ who tipped Van Niekerk to beat the 300m world best held by Michael Johnson this week‚ says the speedster “runs for himself‚ to challenge himself”.

He did not want to beat 400m rivals Kirani James and LaShawn Merritt, “he wants to give his best. Constantly test his limits. He just happens to smash everyone when testing himself‚” said Quinn‚ a 4x100m relay gold medallist at the 2001 World Championsh­ips.

In the space of 19 days, Van Niekerk has run personal bests over three distances: the 200m (19.84sec South African record and world lead in Jamaica)‚ 100m (9.94sec in Slovenia) and most recently, the 30.81 300m in the Czech Republic.

He was already the only man on the planet to have run a sub10 100m‚ sub-20 200m and sub-44 400m‚ but after lowering his previous 31.03 300m personal best‚ Van Niekerk is being touted as the only man to have also done a sub-31 300m.

“He lives for the big occasion and the big challenges. In Jamaica, he wanted the SA [200m] record and went out and got it‚” said Quinn‚ adding Van Niekerk would lift his game even higher at the World Championsh­ips in London in August.

After breaking Johnson’s 400m and 300m world marks‚ the question must be posed whether Van Niekerk is capable of beating Johnson’s 200m 19.32 effort, which stood as a world record until Usain Bolt lowered it twice‚ to 19.30 in 2008 and then 19.19 in 2009.

Bolt’s countryman Yohan Blake is the only other man to have gone faster than Johnson‚ clocking 19.26 in 2011.

“I think the vibe [and] the excitement of worlds‚ we will see something special from him [Van Niekerk] in the 200m.

“Maybe not time‚ but more performanc­e. In the 400m, he knows he has Merritt’s and James’s numbers. Fred Kerley brings out a new challenge.”

US student Kerley holds the 400m world lead on 43.70‚ while Van Niekerk is not even in the top 140 in the world. But that is likely to change when he runs his first internatio­nal one-lapper in the Lausanne Diamond League next Thursday.

“I think he will go 43. No one will be close and he won’t have to push hard,” said Quinn.

In London, Van Niekerk will attempt to become the second man to win the 200m and 400m World Championsh­ip double after Johnson in 1995. /

 ??  ?? Wayde van Niekerk
Wayde van Niekerk

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