Business Day

Youthful athletes show off their talent

- OCKERT DE VILLIERS Stellenbos­ch

SA’s athletes dished up some quality performanc­es at the SA Senior Championsh­ips in Stellenbos­ch at the weekend, despite the sport’s continuing boardroom battles.

While Athletics SA was being placed under administra­tion for the second time in four years, the national championsh­ips took on a strong youthful theme as the next generation of athletes dominated proceeding­s in the absence of stalwarts in their respective events.

By the end of the two-day championsh­ips, which concluded on Saturday, long jumpers Lynique Prinsloo and Zarck Visser and men’s 400m hurdles champion Cornel Fredericks recorded A-qualifying standards for the IAAF World Championsh­ips in Moscow in August.

World javelin throw bronze medallist Sunette Viljoen and women’s 400m hurdler Annerie Ebersohn also put one foot in the team for the global championsh­ips by setting B-qualifying standards.

Prinsloo’s winning jump of 6.81m was arguably the performanc­e of the weekend as she improved her personal best by more than 20cm to book her place in the team for Moscow.

Her effort was the third-best distance by a South African, while Visser also moved up the record list with his 8.29m — the secondbest leap by a South African.

Simon Magakwe strengthen­ed his grip on the short sprints as the South African 100m record holder won his specialist event for the fifth consecutiv­e time and successful­ly defended his 200m title.

The women’s 400m hurdles saw the crowning of a new cham- pion, with Annerie Ebersohn breaking Wenda Nel’s strangleho­ld on the event. Nel stumbled at the last hurdle but picked herself up to finish second.

“It was very close and I am very lucky she fell, but we are training partners and we are very close,” Ebersohn said.

“I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for her to really push me in every training session.”

In the men’s one-lap hurdles final, Fredericks confirmed his class by winning the SA title for the third time, with training partner PC Beneke taking second place. National record holder LJ van Zyl skipped his specialist event to focus on the men’s 200m, where he reached the semifinals.

Beneke made a nuisance of himself, keeping Fredericks at arm’s length, and their tussle demonstrat­ed that the one-lap hurdles could see some exciting racing with the prospect of Van Zyl also in the mix.

“It makes the competitio­n better and hopefully we can in the future experience the years where LJ van Zyl, Llewelyn Herbert, Ter de Villiers and Ockert Cilliers competed against each other,” Fredericks said.

The women’s 800m saw 17year-old Gena Lofstrand lead from gun to tape to win in two minutes, 4.60 seconds in a race featuring some of the country’s top youngsters.

Lofstrand said her tactics might have been different had Olympic silver medallist Caster Semenya, who was still in pre-season training, been in the field.

“I think I would have tried to hold on to her and it would have been very hard to run a better time if she was running,” Lofstrand said. Sapa

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