CONCENTRATING NOT ON the Jamaican to her outside, or the Dutch on her inside, Sophie Becker had eyes only for the purple rubber of the Stade de France track and her 4x400m teammate Phil Healy.
She stunned off the blocks this morning, storming through her first 300 metres to emerge from the last bend of the relay first leg in pole position.
She was running blind, not knowing if Jamaica were ‘having a really good run or a really bad one’, and it suited her.
Becker’s 50.88 split – the second fastest opening leg from the two stacked heats – gave the baton to Cork’s Healy before any of Ireland’s competitors released their cylinders.
We were breathing rare air in Saint-Denis.
If the ever-dependable Healy and Olympic debutante Kelly McGrory could put in strong shifts having been handed the lead, Sharlene Mawdsley would be in a position to take the team home in the top three – an all-important automatic qualification spot.
Healy, a 200m specialist, had the imposing Lieke Klaver in her leg but kept an astonishing distance between them through the stagger unwinding and beyond. She would have only felt the Dutch woman’s breath on her neck in the final 50m, at which point her job was complete.
McGrory then had the luxury of being on the extreme inside for the baton handover. Ireland were still in first place.
“I knew even at 300m where Sophie was, she was miles ahead of everyone else. So I knew I had to use that 200m speed; I’d say I ran a 200m PB out there in the first half,” Healy told David Gillick after the heat.
There was a lot of running still to do but this Ireland team were in the midst of a moment.
McGrory, who had waited until the third-last day of the Games to be able to call herself an Olympian, took over the baton to repeat Healy’s feats.
“I knew I had to work hard at the start, like we got the baton changed over at just about the same time as the Dutch,” she recalls after the race. “I just wanted to be in front and especially at the 200 mark when we’re getting lined up for Sharlene.”
In fact, McGrory stretched Ireland’s lead out over the first bend and back straight, elongating the distance between her and Myrte van der Schoot of the Netherlands.
It was only as the final bend was navigated and pressure came on from Jamaica’s Charokee Young that McGrory’s placing started to slip.
Tying up, she was overtaken by the Dutch and Canadian runners but her championship legs fended off the challenge from the Italians.
Mawdsley, now known across Ireland as an anchor leg magician, received the baton in fourth position in the inside lane.
Nail-biting stuff for the green jerseys in the stand, the best fuel for the Tipperary woman.
“I trust myself so much in that last 100 metres in a relay and I just charged for home.”
A tactical race, she said that while she always looks in control, making the decision about when ‘to go’ is a constant question mark.
This morning, Kyra Constantine from Canada was her barometer. Hugging the inside of the track, form perfect, she was – she says – uncharacteristically patient. The brave move was to wait. It wasn’t until the final bend of the final leg was behind her that she moved to the outside of Constantine, telling her in two quick strides that she was just toying with her all along.
The Jamaicans were clear but the 26-year-old made sure the Dutch, in second, would fear them ahead of tomorrow evening’s final, even if she didn’t catch Lisanne de Witt before the line today.
Her 49.74 split was the second fastest of the morning, beaten only by Shamier Little’s second leg 49.22 for the Americans in heat one.
“I do think we could have come probably first or second to be honest, you know, but we have a little bit in our legs for tomorrow,” she tells The 42 and other journalists in the back rooms of Stade de France as they make their way back to the village, excitement across the quartet still palpable.
“I’m so proud of that performance. We wanted to come top three and that’s exactly what we did.”
There had been some chatter across athletics commentators that Mawdsley and Becker should have sat out their repechages in the individual 400m to give this team a better chance at qualification for the final.
“I think honestly, the repechage kind of helped,” Becker says – before even being asked, a hint of some likely, extra motivation for that 50.88. “I felt really good after my race a few days ago and I was like, ‘I’m just dying to go again.’ So yeah, it speaks for itself.”
But was it nice to prove the point?
“I don’t think we need to say anymore – like we both have their races of our lives. So yeah, repechage was a good idea.”
Later, Healy picks up the narrative baton.
“This is their fourth run. Obviously they had a tough campaign doing the mixed, two rounds of the repechage but as Sophie says, how can you deny anybody of their individual event? It’s so so hard to qualify for an individual event in an Olympic Games so the girls did everyone proud – themselves and everyone back home, so it’s a credit to them and then to come out again with us on the relay with not so fresh legs.”
Tonight, they return to the village to recover and recharge – and await the final of their teammate Rhasidat Adeleke.
“It’ll probably be a waiting game to see what happens there but we’re all guns blazing, and we’re ready to go all ready for tomorrow,” Mawdsley says. The ideal play would be for Adeleke to be able to return to the track tomorrow with a trio of her, Becker and Healy.
But selection isn’t on their minds right now. “I think if you put us back out right now we’d probably run faster because we’re all so happy. The support we have back home, the support we have in this stadium – like how could we not come away Olympic finalists? It was amazing.”
Ireland’s 4x400m women’s relay team is awaiting the result of the final of the 400m women’s individual event to see who will line up in an Olympic final tomorrow.
Two sprint finals in two days at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.
Rare air, rare times, indeed.
But if nobody comes out, how will it ever change?
What a fu***ng as***le!
Apt choice of words there Dave….
Italy is a very patriarchal chauvinistic society, it is no great surprise that an italian man would say this.
i think all italian men need to come out of the closet, no straight men dress that well!
I think italian might close u in the closet waffler… Grow up boy!!!
yep, italians have no sense of humour
I saw his photo and honestly read that as ‘gay Italian footballer comes out of closet’.
You too? LOL
Showering / changing beside a gay man. What’s the problem. Most people are lucky enough to have 2 arms, legs, head, “privates”. We are all much the same basically. What’s the big deal if a gay man sees another naked. So what.
And hooks for hands, and a big pair of F**kn wings!
What’s the point in coming out, sure isn’t it more craic for them to be at it in closets, r so I’m led to believe from the metaphor
We need to encourage people in sport to come out, the younger generation needs to see that their sporting heroes can also be openly gay.
Homophobic dickhead…
Typical arrogance from a footballer. They assume that all the women they see want to have sex with them so why not gay men too.
gay men in football, like in every other situation, world rather have sex with someone who wants them?
Truth
FUCK HIM
literally or figuratively?
Pass on the F.ck, I think he’s gay!
Joan. You were told yesterday.
Berlusconi probably has gays and lesbians at his Bunga Bunga parties.
After all, it was The Romans who invented orgies.
Pete…..Greeks, it was the Greeks!
How are they gonna get fit in there?
Wasn’t there an open gay referee who did well in the sport?
The Rugby Union referee, Nigel Owens “came out” a few years back. I vaguely remember a Turkish football referee publicly admitted to being gay and was sacked a few hours later.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5UkFfcGQrs&feature=fvsr
Pretty funny stuff
To be fair, he’s only telling gay players that their career would be harmed and they would suffer abuse from the louts in the stands if they were brave enough, or reckless enough depending on how seriously you take the threats, physically and psychologically, to come out openly. It’s a chicken and egg argument that things have to change, of course they do but someone has to break the taboo and teh first ones will pay dearly for it. Justin Fashinou killed himself in 1998 not long after coming out, probably due in some measure to the disgusting abuse he suffered for his honesty and bravery. There was an article in the independent on Sunday (UK) from that publicist guy Max Clifford saying he’d advised several gay premier league players to keep the head down for the sake of their career. It’s wrong on all sorts of levels but it takes a brave man to come out knowing what’s coming…
No time like now for courage. Truth does not like hiding.
Surely Paul you are not advocating giving in to bullies.
Of course it’s time for change but it’s easy to say that gay players should have courage to change the culture of the game. Not so easy if you’re all of a sudden faced with massive discrimination. People who belong to ethnic or other minorities are born into families who are the same as them, they have a support network from birth. Gay people don’t have that, they go through years of self hatred and denial before finally accepting who they are. Then they have to get others to accept them too, not easy considering the journey they’ve already taken through hatred. It’s hard to face that again, especially when your career is at stake as well. The Italian guy was being called all sorts. I don’t think he’s being homophobic just telling players what he believes is in their professional best interests. If they want to get political they should also be strategic, come out together or something
Well said paul, whatever about coming out, but to endure abuse from the stand or terraces week in,week out would be tough, frightening and very personal, hurtful. It would have a huge strain on your mental health.who is to say that some players already fear the fans in the crowds, their chants, taunts,and then give them ammo to single you out. Very tough skin to do this
Ok Gis, it was the Greeks.
We Northern Europeans just don’t know how to have a proper party.
I think it’s strange that whenever someone declares their opinion in this manner, people are quick to simply brand them homophobic, and completely ignore the main point. Perhaps being openly gay isn’t the best idea if you are a professional footballer?
Yeah like the case of Justin Fashnu. Specifically told by Brian Clough to stay in the closet. How did that work out in the end? Can’t be easy living a lie.
tommasi – wat a gay
If you do Daniel, don’t kiss & tell :)
It’s like: “we are macho footballers that must stay in the closet” and every weekend they kiss each other and slap each other’s bottoms right in front of the cameras :) But seriously if all the gay footballers came out, it would desensitise the whole issue, it would become the norm after a while.
That reminds me a video from The Telegraph news, of Iran players who put his hand too far in the bottom of the other player while celebrating.
He is cute tho….hope he’s not gay.
Niamh, are you mad? He looks like Cher circa 1989 with a beard! Yuk!
Hee hee…if he had a haircut….I bet ya he scrubs up well. But after his comment I wouldn’t touch him wit a barge pole…in his dreams :)
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/8865105/Iran-footballers-could-face-lash-for-goal-celebration.html