Porterville Recorder

Some athletes shelving Olympic bids amid delayed Tokyo Games

- By KEN MAGUIRE

Driving to Dublin — it’s, well, a long way from Tipperary. Too long for Dean Gardiner, especially with a new baby and full-time university courses.

The Irish super heavyweigh­t boxer tried to endure the grind of traveling and training for another shot at the Olympics, but he’s called it a career.

The four-time Irish champion said the Tokyo Olympics, delayed a year because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, are no longer his top priority.

“I just couldn’t do it all,” the 32-year-old Gardiner said of his packed schedule, which included driving several times per week from Tipperary to Ireland’s high-performanc­e training center in the capital 100 miles away.

“The year was going by, I was getting older, I have the responsibi­lity of being a father, I have a responsibi­lity to give everything to my college,” he said. “I have other priorities now that are higher up the list than boxing.”

Gardiner is just the latest athlete deciding against another Olympic run. Lin Dan, a two-time Olympic champion in badminton from China, retired last year. British rower Tom Ransley and Australian cyclist Amy Cure are out. Japanese rugby player Kenki Fukuoka said he will pursue a medical career.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY LEE JIN-MAN ?? In this Thursday, Aug. 11, 2016 file photo, Belgium’s Pieter Timmers holds up his silver medal after the men’s 100-meter freestyle during the swimming competitio­ns at the 2016 Summer Olympics, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Belgian swimmer Pieter Timmers had planned to retire after Tokyo last summer.
AP PHOTO BY LEE JIN-MAN In this Thursday, Aug. 11, 2016 file photo, Belgium’s Pieter Timmers holds up his silver medal after the men’s 100-meter freestyle during the swimming competitio­ns at the 2016 Summer Olympics, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Belgian swimmer Pieter Timmers had planned to retire after Tokyo last summer.

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