The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Jonnie will be going all out to do his own Bolt

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Double Paralympic champion Jonnie Peacock has vowed to “lay it all down on that track” in his quest for a hat-trick of 100m golds.

Peacock, a poster boy of the Games, blew away the competitio­n at London 2012 and Rio 2016 but emulating the Olympic exploits of sprinting great Usain Bolt is far from assured.

The 28-year-old took time away from the sport following Brazil for a mental break, while reclassifi­cation has placed him among a formidable field of rivals.

He also underwent surgery on a serious knee injury in late 2019, with his recovery coming just before the coronaviru­s pandemic took hold. Then a hamstring issue caused additional trouble earlier this year.

Neverthele­ss, the Cambridge-born star is in Tokyo for further glory and will attempt to make a statement of intent when he lines up for today’s T64 heats, ahead of Monday’s final.

“If it was scheduled for last year, I knew it was going to be tough and I might not have been in the best form and maybe not actually able to get up to where I needed to get,” he said.

“But, at the end of the day, this event is the pinnacle of our sport, I can’t sit these races out.

“This is what we train for, we’ve been training for five years now for this one moment.

“I trained for five years for really 10, 11 seconds – or I guess 22 seconds, if you count the two races up, the heat and the final.

“This is what we’re here for, you’ve got to lay it all down on that track.

“There’s two lines separating me and the competitio­n, all I can do is focus on my race and do my thing and what will be will be.

“For me, I’ve been excited for this Games ever since the closing ceremony in Rio.”

Peacock described potential comparison­s to Jamaican runner Bolt – who won three successive 100m golds in Beijing, London and Rio – as “pretty cool” but insisted his greater priority is raising the profile of Para sport.

“Every year it gets harder. The guys have really stepped up in my class over the last few years,” said Peacock, who had his right leg amputated below the knee aged five after contractin­g meningitis.

“I think we’re likely to see incredibly fast races. I’m feeling good so far.

“I think if you’ve won a gold medal, that’s what you want to get, you don’t want to go in there looking for second.

“That’s what we’re aiming for but it’s not going to be easy.”

 ??  ?? Jonnie Peacock
Jonnie Peacock

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