Saturday Star

‘Smiling Lightning’ strikes gold

Du Toit becomes first SA athlete to make it twice as nice at the top

- KEVIN MCCALLUM

AT THE beginning of the year, Charl du Toit and his Stellenbos­ch training group were asked to write down their theme for the year. Du Toit would no doubt have grinned as he wrote down “Smiling Lightning.”

He was smiling again yesterday morning after he became South Africa’s first athlete to win two medals at the Rio Paralympic­s. His smile was all the broader because both of those medals were gold, yesterday’s coming in the 400m in a Paralympic record of 51.13 seconds, a street ahead of Venezuela’s Omar Monterola (52.93secs) and Sofiane Hamdi (53.01secs), the silver and bronze medallists. Du Toit, who has cerebral palsy, was smiling at the start, he was almost smiling with 100m to go, and he was certainly smiling at the finish. Did he smile all the time?

“Not always. I’m privileged enough to be part of a wonderful training group,” said Du Toit. “At the beginning of the year we had to put down our theme for the year – each athlete had a theme – and mine was ‘Smiling Lightning’. I wanted to go out and enjoy every second of it. I run fullout. The smile is just a bonus.

“When I go through the bad times you won’t see me smiling. I have had a couple of injuries, illness and my uncle got shot and passed away a couple of weeks ago, so it’s been a bit rough, but the smile is back on my face. Coming out of an athletics family, my parents will be very proud. Hopefully I have made the country very proud.”

His uncle Johan passed shortly before Du Toit left for Rio, having spent three months in ICU after being shot in a robbery. He dedicated his world record and medal in the 100m to his memory. He may not have had a smile on his chest when he woke up with a bit of a lurgy that some in the South African team have caught this week. Ernst van Dyk said he had struggled with it.

“I’m very thankful for this wonderful opportunit­y to race today. I woke up this morning not feeling too great, but luckily one of the doctors has been amazing and sorted me out. At 5am she woke up and helped me get rid of some stuff in my chest, so I’m sorted. I’m very thankful for the wonderful medical team as well. My coach and I spoke about the race beforehand. I said I would go out conservati­vely in the first 200m and then accelerate from there. That was the race plan and I’m very thankful it panned out.

“I think it’s in every athlete’s nature to be better than they can be. I’m grateful that at this age I have achieved two gold medals. Never in my wildest dreams would I have dreamt I would have done this. I’m looking forward to the road ahead. I train with some of the best athletes in the world, like Ilse (Hayes), Arnu (Fourie), Fanie (Van der Merwe) and Dyan (Buis).”

Anrune Liebenberg could not add to her silver medal from the 400m as she finished fourth in the 200m final. Dyan Buis qualified for tomorrow’s 400m final, while Emily Gray will be the first reserve for the women’s 400m backstroke as the ninth-fastest qualifier. Craig Ridgard had a tough day in the cycling road race, ending in 28th place.

South Africa have won five medals in the last two days, having added a pair overnight on Thursday at the Olympic Stadium. Jonathan Ntutu won silver in the 100m for the visually impaired and was, to be honest, a little bleak. He wanted gold, describing his start as one of the worst he had ever had. Buis took bronze in a tight long jump competitio­n for the cerebral palsied.

 ??  ?? Charl du Toit of South Africa celebrates after winning another gold medal at the Rio Paralympic­s. He took the men’s 400m T37 final in a record 51.13 seconds at the Olympic Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, yesterday. Picture: Reuters
Charl du Toit of South Africa celebrates after winning another gold medal at the Rio Paralympic­s. He took the men’s 400m T37 final in a record 51.13 seconds at the Olympic Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, yesterday. Picture: Reuters

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