The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Rutherford getting ready to leap into retirement

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Greg Rutherford, the former Olympic, world, European and Commonweal­th long jump champion, has announced his intention to retire from athletics at the end of the summer.

Rutherford’s finest hour came during ‘Super Saturday’ at London 2012, when he was one of six Britons to capture Olympic gold on a day that has gone down as one of the finest in the nation’s sporting history.

He went on to claim bronze at Rio 2016 but injuries restricted him to just three competitiv­e outings last year and he has decided he will bring the curtain down on his career later this year.

The 31-year-old said in an Instagram post: “I’m incredibly proud of my career. I’ve achieved so much but retirement comes early to those of us for whom sport is a livelihood.

“It only feels like yesterday I was winning my first major medal but now 12 years on, I sit here as the greatest long jumper Great Britain has ever had, one of the most successful in European history and someone ready to hang the spikes up for good.”

Rutherford followed up Olympic glory by topping the podium at both the Commonweal­th Games and European Championsh­ips in 2014. He completed the set at the 2015 World Championsh­ips in Beijing, the same year he clinched the Diamond League title.

The Milton Keynes athlete, the indoor and outdoor British record holder, plans to defend his European title – he won a second gold in Amsterdam in 2016 – in Berlin in August as part of his swansong.

A succession of injuries that have required operations – including four to his right ankle, one to his left and a groin reconstruc­tion – have taken their toll on Rutherford.

He said: “As an athlete you often have pain, whether it’s training niggles or serious injuries, but with my ankle it is like having a dull toothache all the time.

“I just don’t want to be in pain every single day of my life, which is how things currently are.

“I’ll be 32 later this year. I don’t want to be the old man on the team who is making up the numbers. I want people to remember me for the good times.”

 ??  ?? Greg Rutherford celebrates his London gold.
Greg Rutherford celebrates his London gold.

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