The Scotsman

Scots aiming to do better than Glasgow

- By DUNCAN SMITH

It may be over 10,000 miles from Hampden to the Gold Coast but Scotland’s athletics chief believes the 26-strong team can produce an even better overall performanc­e Down Under than they achieved on home soil.

The track and field selection for April’s Commonweal­th Games in Queensland was confirmed in Stirling yesterday, with high hopes that the impressive showings by the nation’s athletes in the past few years will continue and deliver a clutch of medals to Team Scotland’s tally.

Nineteen of the athletes named were part of the team that delivered their best Commonweal­th Games medal haul for 20 years in Glasgow threeand-a-half years ago.

Since those heady summer days in Mount Florida, the sport has gone from strength to strength with a record 15 athletes selected for the Rio Olympic Games two years later and six for the Paralympic Games. At this summer’s home World Championsh­ips in London there were a record 16 scots on the British team, captained by the inspiratio­nal Eilidh Doyle, who will compete for a third successive Commonweal­th Games medal over the 400m hurdles in Gold Coast.

Doyle’s fellow Glasgow medallists, 800m runner

Lynsey Sharp and hammer thrower Mark Dry, are also named and aiming to replicate their podium finishes.

One of the standout performanc­es at those London World Championsh­ips came from Scottish Athlete of the Year Callum Hawkins, whose fourth place in the marathon equalled the best ever British performanc­e in the event.

In a strong endurance squad, Andrew Butchart will make his Commonweal­th Games debut following topeight finishes at both Olympic Games and World Championsh­ips, while Olympians Eilish Mccolgan, Steph Twell and Lennie Waite form a formidable force in the women’s events.

Fellow Olympian Beth Potter is set for an unpreceden­ted double in Gold Coast. Already named to represent Scotland in triathlon she will take to the track for the 10,000m following the conclusion of that competitio­n. In doing so she will become the first athlete to compete in two sports for Scotland at a single Games.

The Gold Coast 2018 Parasport programme is the largest in Commonweal­th Games history.

Having broken her own world record to take gold over 200m at the World Paraathlet­ics Championsh­ips in London, going on to take a second gold in the 100m and bronze in the 400m, 21-yearold Sammi Kinghorn steps up in distance to tackle both the 1,500m and the marathon.

Scottish athetics performanc­e director Rodger Harkins said: “When you take in the way Scottish athletes and coaches have stepped up over the past two years – and their involvemen­t in the Olympics in Rio and then London 2017 – then we see the strength and the depth.

“What we have with this selection is a team with a very high percentage of final contenders. The overall selection policy for Team Scotland was predicated on a top six-finish in each event. So immediatel­y that raised the bar in terms of standards from Hampden, because the selection for Glasgow 2014 was based on a potential top eight finish.”

Also confirmed for Gold Coast are boxer Sean Lazzerini, gold medallist for Team Scotland at the 2015 Commonweal­th Youth Games, and men’s Beach Volleyball pairing Seain Cook and Robin Miedzybrod­zki.

 ??  ?? 0 Eilidh Doyle: Medal bid.
0 Eilidh Doyle: Medal bid.

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