‘My ultimate destination is not Tokyo. I want to go on to 2024’
Whitlock, Britain’s first Olympic gymnastics champion, plans to compete beyond this year’s delayed Games in Japan
When the athletes arrive at Tokyo’s low-attendance Olympics, many will focus on what is missing: atmosphere, electricity and families clutching hand-painted banners. But that is not the way Max Whitlock will be thinking.
A ruthless competitor, Whitlock is familiar with performing in nearempty halls, because he began his career long before the boom in British gymnastics, so he expects to feel at home in Japan’s echoing arenas.
“When I started out, the British nationals used to be held in a sports hall in Surrey,” says Whitlock, who has travelled a long way from Guildford’s Spectrum Leisure Complex to become the most successful gymnast this country has produced.
“You’re talking about a couple of hundred seats. The sport was so small then, and there wasn’t that potential of making a career out of it. So it’s a proud feeling to have helped gymnastics become one of the most-watched Olympic sports.
“It seems strange to be going back full circle, in terms of the lack of an audience in Tokyo. But the positive is that I have seen both sides. When you’ve been around for a long time, you can lean on your experiences.”
From the tenor of these comments, you might imagine Whitlock to be a greybeard. In fact, he is 28. But then, gymnasts are the mayflies of sport, athletes with an accelerated life cycle. A fortnight ago, when Basel hosted the European Championships, it was 16-year-old Jessica Gadirova who turned in Britain’s best performances.
“I’ve always felt like the young one, but the whole thing has switched within a few years,” Whitlock says. “In Basel, it wasn’t only the generation below me, it was the generation below that – people like Jake Jarman, who is 19.
“I enjoyed sitting with the younger guys and chatting about my learning curve. Growing up, I didn’t have much access to older gymnasts because there weren’t many around. I am not saying these young lads don’t know what they are doing, but for tips and tricks, they can come and talk to me.”
Whitlock’s contribution to the Europeans did not extend too far beyond advising his team-mates. During qualifying, his pommel routine came to grief when he lost form during a late series of spindles. He was forced into an untidy dismount, and so failed to reach Sunday’s final.
He was “gutted” at the time, but shook it off quickly. “Me and Scott [Hann, his coach for the past 16 years] looked at the bigger picture and spoke about why we think the mistake happened. If the Europeans had gone perfectly, you don’t learn too much.”
Whitlock’s comments reveal where his priorities lie – not in Basel. Over two previous Olympic cycles, he has timed his run perfectly. In London, he took bronze on pommel – one place behind his trailblazing friend and rival
Louis Smith – plus another bronze in the team competition. In Rio, he upgraded to gold on pommel, while also winning the floor event and bronze in the all-around.
So it was that Whitlock became Britain’s first Olympic gymnastics champion – and
did it twice over. One day, he hopes to be mentioned in the same breath as serial winners from other sports. Mo Farah, perhaps, or Sir Chris Hoy. “I look up to people who have done it again and again,” he says. “I know from my own experience that it becomes 10 times harder after the first one. If you can repeat it, that’s a lot more rewarding.”
Hence his pragmatic decision not to defend his floor title in Tokyo. “It’s sad not to be part of that event,” admits Whitlock, who has chosen to target another gold on pommel, also performing on high bar and parallel bars in the team event.
“I’ve tried my floor routine out at a few competitions, and it hasn’t been at the stage I wanted. I’ve had to be adaptable because, during lockdown, I was training on a pommel horse in the garden. But then, nobody has had a smooth buildup going into these Olympic Games.
“For me, one of the biggest challenges of Tokyo being delayed is that I am a year older. It doesn’t sound a lot, but every year is more difficult. My body isn’t what it was at 18 or 22. I can’t train like I used to, so I’m learning to get the balance right. It’s about longevity. I don’t want Tokyo to be the ultimate destination. I want to go on until Paris in 2024.”