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Saturday, April 20, 2024 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Sport

Qatar’s high hump star Mutaz Barshim addresses a news conference in Xiamen, China, on Friday.

Barshim begins season with an eye on fourth Olympic medal

Doha: Global high jump superstar Mutaz Barshim feels fit ahead of the new season’s opening competition today but the 32-year-old has his eyes fixed on another gold medal at this year’s Paris Olympic Games.The tall Qatari, who famously shared the high jump gold with Italian Gianmarco Tamberi at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, today faces world indoor champion Hamish Kerr in the men’s high jump in Chinese city of Xiamen.In a candid chat with the international media ahead of the opening round of the 2024 Wanda Diamond League, the three-time world high jump champion on Friday confidently said he can’t wait for the new season to commence.Excerpts from a Q&A session with Barshim:Q: It’s been six months since we last saw you compete. You were at the 2023 Asian Games in Guangzhou, China. How has it been for you since your last competition?A: As you said my last competition was the (2023) Asian Games here in China. It was an amazing atmosphere then. It was a great competition. I really loved it. I am really happy to be back in China, competing again. It is a very important season. It is the Olympics season. The last six months were more of a relaxing time, to be honest. I was doing my recovery. I had plans to compete indoors but then I had some (injury) issues so we decided not to risk it. Now I am feeling healthy again. My training has been going well. I am happy where I am at the moment. But it’s my first meet of the season and I want to go out there and see what I can do. I am excited to compete.Q: Is there a certain height you would be happy with in the new season?A: It’s still April so I don’t know. I will be very happy if I win (in Xiamen). I want to push myself. I want to jump high. How high? I don’t know (smiles). I will go tomorrow (today) and see. I want to go and put on a good show.Q: Paris will be your fourth Olympics. Does it feel different or is it just another Olympics for you?A: My fourth Olympics, wow! It’s crazy. Definitely (it) feels different. For me, (competing at) Olympics was a dream, you know. I remember watching the Olympics on TV. I wanted to be there (competing) so bad. I told myself one day I will be there. Here I am - I have been to three Olympics. One silver, one gold and going for my fourth Olympics. You still get that tingle ‘it is an Olympics year’. So, it definitely feels different. I am just going to prepare myself to be ready to fight and hopefully be on the podium.Q: Did you enjoy the Asian Games last year?A: Yes, I definitely enjoyed the Asian Games last year. It was really amazing competing in China. The crowds were packed at the venue. The fans were really supportive, I loved it. Everything was really top-notch. Since then I have been having my break. It was like an off-season break with my family. Then I started my training again. I didn’t do the indoors because I had some minor injuries. I have overcome everything. So yeah, I feel good and feel healthy. When I feel good, I can jump. In terms of training. Because of injuries, I couldn’t do my regular training. I know I have a lot of work coming. I am really excited. The training is going how I want it to go. I had a lower back pain and a hip injury. They were not big injuries. I didn’t want to risk it. I am a smart athlete now. If I have a small niggle, I know I have to take care of it. I don’t want to miss three four months of action because of injuries that I didn’t take care of. I am older, wiser (laughs).Q: Your good friend Gianmarco Tamberi, the high jumper, could be the flag-bearer for Italy at the Paris Olympics. How do you see that?A: Oh yes, why not? He’s a great athlete. He is the Olympic champion. That would be really nice to see (smiles).

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Kenenisa Bekele

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Ethiopia’s Kenenisa Bekele said Kelvin Kiptum will always have a special place at the London Marathon after the Kenyan’s tragic death.Bekele, a three-time Olympic track champion, is gearing up for tomorrow’s latest edition of the race in the English capital. But the event will be overshadowed by the absence of long-distance runner Kiptum, who won last year’s London Marathon for the third time before dying in a car accident in February.Kiptum set a new London Marathon record time of two hours, one minute and 25 seconds last year and he was also the first man to run the marathon under two hours and one minute in Chicago. The 24-year-old’s death sent shockwaves through the sport and he will be remembered before Sunday’s race with 30 seconds of applause.Bekele, who won Olympic gold in both the 5,000 metres and 10,000 metres at the 2008 Games in Beijing, has run the London Marathon five times, finishing as runner-up in 2017. The 41-year-old, who also has five World Championship titles on the track, is in no doubt of the lasting impact made by Kiptum.“Kelvin of course, all of us miss him. Even within his short time, he has been setting an amazing history,” Bekele said. “The course record is also under his name and we are all remembering him. We put him in a special place in our heart because in a really short time he has done a lot for our sport.”Bekele believes a lot of factors will come into play if Kiptum’s course record is to be challenged this weekend. “Most of the time in London, maybe the first half is a very fast start because of pacing, but with me it can depend,” he said. “I can read my body, listening to my feelings and of course the circumstances - like with the weather.”Ethiopia’s Tamirat Tola comes into London as the reigning New York Marathon champion, which followed on from his victory at the 2022 World Championship in Eugene. Tola, who claimed 10,000m bronze at the 2016 Rio Olympics, feels in good shape heading into Sunday’s showpiece race.“I have been working hard to prepare my body for the marathon in London,” he said. “My training is OK and my body is okay, so we will see (what happens) on Sunday.”Selection for this year’s Olympics in Paris could also be secured this weekend, but Tola said he will not let that distract his focus.

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