The Star Malaysia

Shakes-Drayton: New mixed relay just what athletics needs

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KAWASAKI: The new mixed 4x400m relay is just what athletics needs to inject more fun and excitement into competitio­n, according to British star Perri Shakes-Drayton, although it has also thrown up some unforeseen difficulti­es.

The new race, with teams of two men and two women, is poised to make its Olympic debut at Tokyo 2020 as part of a drive by organisers to make the sport more inclusive.

And Shakes-Drayton, who won silver for Britain in the 4x400m World Championsh­ips on home soil in London in 2017, said the idea initially took some getting used to.

“When I saw it was listed on the programme, I thought ‘Mixed? A mixed relay?’ It took me by surprise,” the 30-year-old said yesterday.

“But it will be interestin­g and fun. I think that’s what the sport needs.

“Something different and exciting,” she enthused, as the British team trained for this weekend’s World Relays in Yokohama near Tokyo.

She said one of the challenges had come in passing the baton between tall male athletes and their shorter female counterpar­ts and hinted that a man would be more likely to run the anchor leg for this reason.

When the first trials took place at the Asian Games in Jakarta, teams which ran in the order man-womanwoman-man appeared to do the best.

However, China’s Yang Lei described the event at the time as “chaos” after a gridlock emerged at the final baton handover.

British 400m runner Rabah Yousif, a double Bronze-medal winner at World Championsh­ips in 2015 and 2017, said the onus would still be down to the individual to run a strong leg.

“You have to perform on your leg because you can’t be doing all four legs. When you do your best as an individual, it will help the team ... it’s still a 400m. It’s just with other guys running or two girls and two guys,” he said.

“I like the idea of a mixed relay because it’s more fun and more excitement.”

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