Cape Times

Greeff Properties Caster looking Choices

- Ockert de Villiers

Inside for more gold P12

JOHANNESBU­RG: Possibly adding the 2011 800m World Championsh­ip and London Olympic titles to that from the Rio Games has earned Caster Semenya the title of “gold digger” since Russian rival Mariya Savinova was recently found guilty of doping.

The Court of Arbitratio­n of Sport last month imposed a four-year ban on Savinova, stripping her of the gold medals she won at the London Olympics in 2012 and the World Championsh­ips the year before.

Semenya, who finished second behind Savinova in both races, is in line to be upgraded from silver to gold pending the Russian’s appeal of the ban.

Speaking after her opening race of the season at the ASA Speed Series in Potchefstr­oom on Wednesday evening, Semenya said she had no ill feelings towards Savinova.

“At the end of the day it is about sportsmans­hip, she is a great athlete, technicall­y if you talk about rules and things like that it works in my favour,” Semenya said.

“But it doesn’t change anything for me, I still have goals, I still want to win more gold medals. I have to chase records.”

Semenya has always maintained that earning the gold medals due to Savinova’s indiscreti­ons, would be somewhat of an empty victory.

“For me it doesn’t change anything, when I cross the line in second place it doesn’t matter whether an athlete has been suspended or disqualifi­ed,” Semenya said.

“Here we are not talking about possibilit­ies but reality, obviously in medal records it looks great where you see gold, gold, gold.

“You even having people calling me a ‘gold digger’ which is fantastic, but I have respect for each and every athlete no matter from which background you come from or what you have done wrong.”

In the build-up to the Rio Olympics, the internatio­nal press obsessed over whether Semenya would break former Czech runner Jarmila Kratochvil­ova’s 800m world record time of 1:53.28.

Semenya raced home in Rio, posting a time of 1:55.28, shaving 0.05 seconds off her previous best to move up one spot from 12th to 11th on the all-time fastest list for the event.

Her national record is more than a second off 2008 Olympic champion Pamela Jelimo’s continenta­l record of 1:54.01.

Taking an extended break from the track and getting married to long-time girlfriend Violet Raseboya at the beginning of the year, Semenya said she was a long way off her best.

On Wednesday evening she opened her season in a rare 3 000m, posting a time of 9:36.29 and improving her personal best by almost 20 seconds in only her second race over this distance.

“You can’t talk about records if you are behind schedule, all you can do is try to maintain the performanc­es from last year and try to stick to a 1:55 pace,” Semenya said.

“Who knows if I can go faster than that, but the main focus is the world championsh­ips and running faster times.

“The world record is obviously something that is on my mind when I look at the splits that they run, if you work hard you can achieve those goals.”

Setting the world record in Munich in 1983, Kratochvil­ova’s first lap was completed in 56.10 while she finished the second lap in 57.20.

Boasting a PB of 50.40 in the 400m she posted at the Brussels Diamond League meeting after the Rio Games, Semenya admits she would have to dip below 50 seconds to get close to the 800m world record.

“If you look at the world record holder she has something like a 47-second PB, if I want to get closer to her record I need to at least run 49 seconds,” Semenya said.

“If you look at her world record splits, she read a 56-57, so I believe in going fast over the first lap then just hang on.

“If I have a 49, then I can say maybe I am ready, then check the 400m splits and the 600m, then maybe we can talk.”

 ?? BACKPAGEPI­X Picture: ?? ON A MISSION: Caster Semenya admits she will have to dip below 50 seconds to get close to the 800m world record.
BACKPAGEPI­X Picture: ON A MISSION: Caster Semenya admits she will have to dip below 50 seconds to get close to the 800m world record.

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