The Borneo Post

New era of Olympic champions eye Tokyo glory

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TOKYO: When the flame is finally lit at the Tokyo Olympics on Friday, a new era of athletes have a chance to make history in the absence of a host of establishe­d stars.

So much has changed in the Olympic landscape in the five years since the Rio Games -- threetime double sprint champion Usain Bolt is now making music and building a family in Jamaica, while 28-medal winner Michael Phelps has retired from the pool.

In Tokyo, Caeleb Dressel is the most likely successor to Phelps in the medal-gathering stakes.

The 24-year-old American is aiming to become just the fourth swimmer in history to win seven medals in a single Games.

Dressel is no rookie, having already won two relay golds at the 2016 Rio Games, but now his focus is firmly on individual glory.

Bolt le a gaping hole in the world of athletics when he retired in 2017, but a new generation of stars is emerging.

Charismati­c Norwegian 400 metres hurdler Karsten Warholm smashed one of the longest-standing men’s track world records this month and Sydney McLaughlin overhauled the women’s record in the same event at the US trials.

Athletics-watchers looking for a sprint gold medallist of the future will be keeping a close eye on 17-year-old Erriyon Knighton.

The fleet-footed American erased the 200m world age-group records set by Bolt this year, running a dazzling 19.84sec in the US trials to secure his place at the Olympics.

In the field, Sweden’s Armand Duplantis is the undisputed new king of the pole vault aged just 21.

Ethiopia’s Letesenbet Gidey’s ba le with Dutch runner Sifan Hassan is also keenly awaited a er each broke the 10,000m world record within two days. Gidey, 23, now holds the marks at that distance and 5,000m.

Sky Brown will be just 13 years and 11 days old when the Briton, who was born in Japan, competes in the skateboard­ing in Tokyo.

A strong performanc­e by the teenager who gained fame in the US in 2018 by winning the reality

TV show “Dancing with the Stars: Juniors” would be the perfect way to launch skateboard­ing on its Olympic debut.

American golfer Collin Morikawa could cap a heady few weeks by winning an Olympic gold to add to the British Open title that the 24-year-old scooped last weekend.

Viktor Hovland, the Norwegian who is one year younger, could also be in with a shout.

While the new names will shine, Simone Biles will be one of the few returning superstars from Rio, leading a team considerab­ly younger than the 24-year-old.

Biles, arguably the greatest gymnast in history, has a strong chance of equalling Larisa Latynina’s record of nine Olympic gold medals.

In essence, the biggest challenger to Biles is herself as she has not lost an all-around competitio­n since 2013, redefining her sport along the way.

Frustratin­gly for any young challenger­s, Biles has suggested she could be persuaded to continue until the 2024 Paris

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Brown will be just 13 years and 11 days old when the Briton competes in the skateboard­ing in Tokyo.
— AFP photo Brown will be just 13 years and 11 days old when the Briton competes in the skateboard­ing in Tokyo.
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Dressel is the most likely successor to swimming legend Phelps.
— AFP photo Dressel is the most likely successor to swimming legend Phelps.
 ??  ?? Karsten Warholm
Karsten Warholm

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