Business Day

Desperatel­y seeking world stars

- David Isaacson

The last time the SA athletics championsh­ips went to Potchefstr­oom, in 2017, the sport was in rude health, boasting four Olympic medals from the previous year as well as a muchhyped sprint revolution of youngsters.

But when the 2023 edition kicks off at the McArthur Stadium on Thursday, it will be under a cloud of desperatio­n, having not won a major senior medal since the 2017 world championsh­ips.

It’s the longest drought in local athletics since readmissio­n in the 1990s; the barren years have stretched across the 2019 world championsh­ips in Doha, the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and the 2022 world championsh­ips in Eugene, Oregon.

The focus shifts to the world championsh­ips in Budapest in August and even the Paris Games next year, and the likely medal hopes for those showpieces will be in action over the next three days.

Wayde van Niekerk, the only survivor of the four medallists at Rio 2016, wants to put the cherry on his lengthy injury comeback with more world championsh­ip and Olympic silverware.

Of the other three medallists, middle-distance star Caster Semenya has effectivel­y been barred from competitio­n through the World Athletics gender eligibilit­y rules, javelin queen Sunette Viljoen has retired and long-jumper Luvo Manyonga is serving a doping ban.

Akani Simbine is still seeking his maiden major medal, having finished either fifth or fourth at the past two Olympics and three world championsh­ips.

Both Van Niekerk and Simbine are in action on Thursday. The 100m final will be staged at 5.50pm, while Van Niekerk will compete in the 400m heats at 3.10pm, although his final is set for Saturday.

Luxolo Adams, who set a 19.82sec personal best in the 200m last season, will be the favourite in the half-lap, with the heats on Friday and the final on Saturday.

Those three were the country’s only individual finalists in Eugene last year.

Then there are a handful of athletes who possess the potential to do damage on the world stage in the future.

Prudence Sekgodiso last year became only the second SA woman after Semenya to break 2min in the 800m, and if she can find another two to three seconds, she could be in medal contention.

Zeney van der Walt, the former double age-group 400m hurdles world champion, finally made her presence felt in senior competitio­n in 2022, winning a Commonweal­th Games bronze.

Shot-putter Kyle Blignaut, who finished sixth in Tokyo in 2021, had a below-average season by his own standards last year, but he is eager to extend his personal best into more competitiv­e territory.

Marioné Fourie showed glimpses last year that she could threaten the national 100m hurdles record.*

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