Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Jackson is ready for a new golden generation

- By RACHEL STEINBERG

OLYMPIC silver medallist Colin Jackson is convinced this summer’s Paris Games could give rise to a “new generation” of household names in British athletics.

The decorated Welshman secured a silver medal in the 110 metres hurdles at the 1988 Games in Seoul and five years later won gold at the World Championsh­ips with a world record time of 12.91 seconds that stood for 11 years.

Jackson, 57, accepts his friend Usain Bolt’s now hung-up spikes might occupy an unfillable place in athletics, but feels the sport is more than ready for new superstars to emerge – an occurrence he believes is only possible at an Olympics.

He said: “If we have a successful team, which it’s believed to be, and we get five or six medals, if we achieve a ‘Super Saturday’ as we did in London 2012, that will be another kick-start, because that signifies a new generation.

“We won’t be looking at Jess (Ennis-Hill), Mo (Farah), Greg (Rutherford) any more. You’re looking at the next generation, touching distance for all up-andcoming athletes, and us pre-historic athletes will be happy to celebrate their success.”

Jackson believes Paris’ proximity and UK-friendly time zone, combined with – unlike the coronaviru­s-restricted

Tokyo 2020 Games – full houses and weeks of “wall-towall athletics” across both the Olympic and Paralympic Games could catapult his sport back into the spotlight.

Take your pick of talent, from Zharnel Hughes – tipped by Bolt himself as a contender for 100m gold in Paris – world champion Josh Kerr hoping to upgrade his 1500m Tokyo bronze, 2024 world indoor pole-vaulting champion Molly Caudery or Commonweal­th T38 100m champion Olivia Breen, who Jackson feels has “stepped up her game” since winning T38 long jump bronze at the Tokyo Paralympic­s.

Jackson, now a regular commentato­r, has spent plenty of time around para athletes and saw his career take off alongside that of fellow Welsh athlete and prolific Paralympic champion Tanni Grey-Thompson.

Still, he admits it was not until he became the internatio­nal sports director for the Wings for Life World Run, which raises funds for spinal cord injury research, that he truly began to appreciate some of the specific challenges those affected face, from difficulti­es regulating temperatur­e to insufficie­nt government support.

The event, backed by Allwyn in a three-year partnershi­p, takes place on May 5 this year, with everyone departing at the same time – midday in the UK – regardless of time zone across the globe.

 ?? ZAC GOODWIN/PA ?? The Oxford men’s team during a training session on the River Thames in London ahead of tomorrow’s Boat Race
ZAC GOODWIN/PA The Oxford men’s team during a training session on the River Thames in London ahead of tomorrow’s Boat Race
 ?? ?? World indoor pole-vaulting champion Molly Caudery
World indoor pole-vaulting champion Molly Caudery

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