Cape Argus

Manyonga has revenge in mind but faces big SA threat

- OCKERT DE VILLIERS

BEATING a quality field including American Olympic champion Jeff Henderson will go a long to erasing Luvo Manyonga’s one-centimetre loss at last year’s Rio Games when he lines up at the Shanghai Diamond League meeting on Saturday.

The meeting will be historical as three South Africans with contest the long jump, including former national record holder Khotso Mokoena and Ruswahl Samaai.

It will be the first time since Rio that Manyonga, goes up against Henderson, who narrowly beat the South African for the Olympic title last year.

Mokoena will also look to exact revenge after Manyonga demolished his SA record in March before leaping to another continenta­l best of 8.65m last month.

The event is effectivel­y a repeat of the Olympic final with the top six from Rio entered.

Manyonga’s coach Neil Cornelius said that while a lot has been made about his charge’s ability to break the world record, their focus was on beating a loaded field.

“My expectatio­n for Luvo is to win, the distance is not an issue for me. I know there is a lot of talk about him jumping further than nine metres and although I am confident it will happen, he needs to send out a message to his competitor­s,” Cornelius said.

“This is a meeting of taking revenge for the Olympics... and we are not scared of these guys, they don’t intimidate us.”

Manyonga has been the event’s gold standard so far this season having improved his personal best from last year by 17 centimetre­s.

While Manyonga will face a quality field, none of them with the exception of Samaai are close to the form he is in.

The 25-year-old’s SA record of 8.65m moved him into 11th place on the world all-time list.

Based on form, Samaai will go into the meet as Manyonga’s biggest threat with his personal best of 8.49m at the recent SA Championsh­ips.

Cornelius said Manyonga took a short break after the nationals before they made adjustment­s to his balance.

“Luvo has the tendency to drift to the right when he gets to the take-off board which sees him lose some distance with his jumps,” Cornelius said.

“There has been improvemen­ts and this will be a fantastic preparatio­n for the world championsh­ips (in London in August).”

Completing the SA challenge in Shanghai, national 400m hurdles record holder LJ van Zyl faces Olympic champ Kerron Clement of the US and world champion Nicholas Bett of Kenya.

Van Zyl will look to build on the success from his first internatio­nal race of the season at the Doha Diamond League meeting last weekend when he finished third.

With a seaon’s best of 49.29 seconds, Van Zyl has set himself the target of dipping below 49 seconds in Shanghai.

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