Daily Camera (Boulder)

Camacho-quinn cherishes Olympic gold

Win in the 100-meter hurdles Tokyo was a first for Puerto Rico in the sport

- By Pat Graham The Associated Press

EUGENE, ORE. » This was what winning an Olympic gold medal for Puerto Rico looked like for hurdler Jasmine Camacho-quinn: Billboards around San Juan featuring only her first name. A festive, flagwaving parade just for her. Meeting some of the country’s biggest dignitarie­s.

Now, along with all of that, comes pressure — pressure to replicate that 100-meter hurdles gold medal at world championsh­ips and beyond.

Despite being the best hurdler all last season, she viewed herself as an underdog in Tokyo, where she captured her nation’s first Olympic track and field gold. These days, that sort of role doesn’t apply. That medal placed a lot of extra weight on her shoulders, which she’s learning to deal with as she begins the first round of the hurdles at worlds on Saturday in Eugene, Oregon.

“The pressure that’s on you, it can stress you out a little bit,” said Camachoqui­nn, who is from South Carolina and chose to represent Puerto Rico as an homage to her mom’s heritage. “You’re trying to be perfect at everything. You’re trying to have the same year, or something similar as you did the year before.

“I’m actually handling it a lot better now, so that’s a good thing. I’m not supernervo­us going into world championsh­ips.”

On December 31, 2020, at 9:15 p.m., Camacho-quinn took out her phone and in the notes folder wrote a few New Year’s resolution­s: — Buy a new house. — Get a new car.

— Win an Olympic medal.

Check, check and check. To think, she was initially mad after crossing the line that day in Tokyo. Mad that she clipped the ninth hurdle. Mad that she didn’t set a world record.

“And then I just had to remind myself that I just won an Olympic gold medal,” Camacho-quinn said with a laugh. “I snapped out of it.”

It was quite a contrast to the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics, where she hit the eighth hurdle in her semifinal heat, stumbled over the ninth and crashed into the 10th. She crossed the finish line, dropped to her knees on the track and buried her head in her hands. The tears flowed.

Out of it, a promise — this wouldn’t happen again. She studied that race and what went wrong. Her trail leg was lagging a little bit. She cleaned up her form. She trained even harder.

In Tokyo, she dominated the race and celebrated for a country where her mom is from. Camacho-quinn was raised in South Carolina, but always had Puerto Rican influences around the house thanks to mom — music, food, celebratio­ns.

 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Jasmine Camacho-quinn, of Puerto Rico, celebrates after winning the women’s 100-meter hurdles final at the 2020Summer Olympics, Monday, Aug. 2, 2021, in Tokyo.
MATTHIAS SCHRADER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Jasmine Camacho-quinn, of Puerto Rico, celebrates after winning the women’s 100-meter hurdles final at the 2020Summer Olympics, Monday, Aug. 2, 2021, in Tokyo.

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