Scottish Daily Mail

Little old ladies come over to say well done!

WIGHTMAN ON THE BRILLIANT REACTION TO HIS 1500M WORLD TITLE SUCCESS

- By CATHAL DENNEHY

The glow of a gold medal can be measured in many ways. For Jake Wightman, one way to gauge it is with the number of well-wishers who approached him when he returned to Teddington after winning the world 1500m title.

‘Are you that lad who won the race?’ asked one elderly lady as she crossed the road. After Wightman confirmed he was, he was met with an excited: ‘Well done, you!’ A trip to the local coffee shop went much the same. Before the World Championsh­ips, the owner did not really know who Wightman was. After it, ‘he made a big fuss’ and as they sat together outside, dozens of strangers offered congratula­tions.

‘It makes you realise it was a bigger deal,’ says the Scot. ‘As far as I know, athletics is a tiny sport that no one watches, but it transcende­d into a lot more.’

Wightman finds such interactio­ns a little surreal but he knows it comes with the territory. he says: ‘I like speaking to people, so if people come up chatting I’d happily speak back. The part of it that could get annoying is if it disrupts your race routine.’

That was the case on Wednesday night in Monaco, where Wightman took victory over 1,000m in 2:13.88 after a warm-up beset by requests for autographs.

‘Kids were shouting at me to get me to sign stuff before the race. It’s not that big a deal but I want to try to enjoy as much of it as I can,’ he says. ‘You don’t get these periods often. I might never have it again.’

Life has been radically different since he outkicked Olympic champion Jakob Ingebrigts­en to win the world title in Oregon, with Ingebrigts­en saying he was disappoint­ed to lose to an inferior athlete. What did Wightman make of that comment?

‘There’s probably some truth behind it, but I don’t care,’ he says. ‘I wouldn’t disagree with it. Most of the year I am the inferior athlete but on the day I wasn’t the inferior athlete, which is the only one I care about.’

Wightman was brought back to earth in the Commonweal­th 1500m final last weekend, where he could not fend off the late charge of Australia’s Ollie hoare and Kenya’s Timothy Cheruiyot and had to settle for bronze. ‘It was disappoint­ing initially but it could have gone so much worse so to get a medal, I was pleased,’ he says. ‘I didn’t have the same hunger to be at Commies as I thought I would, as it wasn’t worth in my head the same as a world title, but doing it for Scotland was the main thing.’

Two championsh­ips down, one to go, and at next week’s europeans in Munich, Wightman will drop down to 800m.

his breakthrou­gh this year can be traced largely to his focus on endurance work in the winter. Since the age of 16, his father and coach, Geoff, has had him running at least one parkrun each year and Wightman is encouragin­g others to follow his lead. ‘It’s a great chance for runners of any ability,’ he says.

his mission next week is all about speed. Wightman might sit atop the 1500m tree globally, but at 800m he knows he is an underdog — albeit a dangerous one.

‘I’d love a medal,’ he says. ‘But the ultimate goal would be to win it. If I can win a world title over 1500 and a european title over 800, that’s a pretty good season.’

National Lottery players raise vital funding into sport in the UK, including over £3.6m to Parkrun. This weekend, the Lottery and Parkrun have joined forces to encourage people across the UK to take part in a local parkrun. Visit www.parkrun.org.uk

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Golden moment: Wightman after his 1500m win
GETTY IMAGES Golden moment: Wightman after his 1500m win

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