The Scotsman

Doyle leaps into the unknown on return from three-month lay-off

Scots hurdler eyes European Championsh­ips as she competes in Anniversar­y Games

- MARK WOODS By

Eilidh Doyle is accustomed to jumping and adjustment­s on the fly. This afternoon in London, the Olympic medalist will take a leap into the unknown. Sidelined for three months with a strain in her calf that swiped 40 per cent of the power from her left leg, she will return to action over 400 metres hurdles at the Muller Anniversar­y Games in the belief that she can speedily regain her prime form with the European Championsh­ips in Berlin now less than three weeks away.

The injury, sustained prior to a Commonweal­th Games in which the 31-year-old claimed silver and then exacerbate­d while prepping for the summer, stalled a potent trajectory. A bronze medalist over 400m at March’s world indoor championsh­ips in Birmingham, she had rarely looked quicker.

“It hadn’t healed properly by the time I got to Commonweal­ths so we were managing it there,” she revealed. “And then I over-compensate­d so the other side got torn. It didn’t feel too painful.

“I know when Katarina Johnson-thompson had the exact same thing, she couldn’t walk. It varies a lot. I just kept cramping every time I tried to step up my training.”

Hence there has been diligent, if dull, rehabilita­tion in Loughborou­gh and Bath rather than joining her rivals on the Diamond League circuit. Doyle withdrew from the stop in Rome at two days’ notice. “The tickets were already booked,” she rues. “My bag was packed and I should have been on the start line.”

The London Stadium will not ease her gently back into the fray with the USA’S champion Dalilah Muhammad and Jamaica’s Janieve Russell, pic- tured, who claimed Commonweal­th gold, in the field. With the British squad for the Europeans to be picked on Monday, Doyle will be obliged to prove her readiness for Germany.

“Normally I’d have raced a few times so I’d know what shape I’m in but this time, I have no idea what I’ll do,” she acknowledg­ed. “So this will be a tester to see where I sit going forward and especially what I need to do between now and Europeans. Is there something I need to work on or do I need to go away and look at something? It’s almost an informatio­n-gathering opportunit­y, two weeks out from Berlin. Hopefully there’s enough there.” The two-day London meeting will provide Laura Muir with an intensive pre-berlin tune-up tomorrow when she makes an attempt on Zola Budd’s British mile record of 4:17.57 that has stood unbroken for 33 years. While her fellow Scots Neil Gourley and Josh Kerr have one more opportunit­y to press their case for the single discretion­ary pick for the Europeans in the men’s 1,500m.

Chris O’hare slashed 1.5 seconds off his own Scottish 1500 metres record at last night’s Diamond League meeting in Monaco. The 27-year-old, who set his previous best on the same track 12 months ago, finished ninth in 3:32.11 to move into sixth place in the UK’S alltime rankings.

Edinburgh clubmate Jake Wightman lowered his personal best to 3:33.96 to also move inside the domestic top ten.

Beatrice Chepkoech of Kenya slashed eight seconds off the world 3000m steeplecha­se record in 8:44.32.

 ??  ?? Eilidh Doyle faces a tough return to competitio­n with Dalilah Muhammad and Janieve Russell also in the 400m hurdles line-up.
Eilidh Doyle faces a tough return to competitio­n with Dalilah Muhammad and Janieve Russell also in the 400m hurdles line-up.
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