Loughborough Echo

‘I’d like more bling next year’

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KEELY Hodgkinson is determined not to rest on her laurels after one of the most impressive seasons of any British athlete in 2021.

The Loughborou­gh College alumna won an Olympic 800m silver medal in Tokyo on her senior major championsh­ip debut and smashed Dame Kelly Holmes’ British record in the process.

Now the ambitious 19-year-old is preparing for a jam-packed 2022 and the chance to add to her medal haul.

“I’d like some more bling to look at and some under23 records,” Hodgkinson told BBC Sport.

“This year’s a blank page again. I’ll look back on 2021 when I’m retired but I have to focus now on the new year to go again.”

First up will be the World Indoor Championsh­ips in Belgrade in March, followed by three big summer events crammed into as many weeks.

The outdoor World Championsh­ips take place in Eugene, Oregon, in July, the Commonweal­th Games start less than a week later in Birmingham and the European Championsh­ips get under way the following week in Munich.

Starting this year with a world under-20 record in Austria in January, Hodgkinson capped her indoor campaign with the European crown four days after her 19th birthday to become the event’s youngest winner.

But it was an eyeopening national championsh­ip victory over Scottish duo Laura Muir and Jemma Reekie which really catapulted Hodgkinson into the limelight.

Becoming European junior of all time set the scene for the Tokyo Olympics, where the young star improved her personal best by two seconds to capture the silver medal in a phenomenal display of brave, confident running.

Rewarded with a British record of one minute 55.88 seconds, Hodgkinson’s run was almost six seconds faster than her pre2021 best.

It also cemented her as the world’s second fastest junior of all time – behind American Athing

Mu, also 19, who sped to Olympic glory with a mesmerisin­g run.

The final icing on the cake arrived with victory in Zurich five weeks later when she sealed the Diamond League crown.

“Because I was always on the move after Tokyo, the silver medal only hit me about a month ago,” revealed Hodgkinson.

“My breakthrou­gh in January feels like a lifetime ago, and I’ve had so many life experience­s this year it’s weird.

“It’s been really enjoyable but I’m still trying to process it.”

With the Tokyo Games postponed by a year because of the Covid19 pandemic, having an extra 12 months to prepare was a blessing in disguise for such a young athlete.

“Jumping from race to race was hard and learning about living on the race circuit was an eye-opener,” she said.

“The travelling was really tiring and my body doesn’t cope well with long flights. I kept picking up niggles.

“But it was great to get used to regularly competing against the best in the world and it was a lot of fun.”

Among Hodgkinson’s ambitions is to stake a claim for a place in the British 4x400m relay team – but it is the forthcomin­g battles with Mu that bring the greatest motivation.

“It’s good to be on the same journey as Athing and at the same age, and good to have that rivalry,” she said.

“We’ve had the same personal bests every year since we were 14 so it’s going to be very interestin­g to see how the next few years go.”

 ?? ?? SHINING STAR: Keely Hodgkinson celebrates winning the Diamond League title
SHINING STAR: Keely Hodgkinson celebrates winning the Diamond League title

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