VOI047
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THE AVIVA London GrandPrix, taking place on August13 and 14 at Crystal PalaceStadium, is an event fit forall the family and with somany of our British athletesjuggling family and theircareer on the track, we spoketo 110m hurdler WilliamSharman on all things athlet-ics and family.
“Sport has always been abig part of my family, myuncle was a PE teacher andmy dad played second row forNorthampton Saints which ispretty cool. As he playedbefore I was born the details Ihave about his time there arepretty hazy but when we werein Northampton recently wewent to look up the newspaperarchives in the local libraryand sure enough there was hisname - mentioned on aweekly basis on the sportspages in the local newspapers!
“Although my dad playedrugby I never did although Ireally wanted to and so didmy brother, we were reallykeen on getting involved. Butmy dad always said “wait tillnext year’’ and the next yearwould come and again hewould say “wait till nextyear’’; I think he just wantedus to get a little bit bigger anda little bit stronger before hewould let us play. But ofcourse, in the mean time, wewould do other sports while
we waited for ‘next year’ suchas athletics - and ‘next year’never came! It was all a ploy!Although my dad is verysporty my mum isn’t reallyalthough I reckon she’s gotpotential. She’s one of the firstpeople I raced against – to the
front door of my nurserywhen I was little!
WORLD-CLASSATHLETE
“My brother is also a world-class athlete and is the brake-man for the GB Bobsleigh
Team. He does a lot of sprinttraining as part of his trainingschedule and, as a bobsleigher,he’s pretty quick over 30m onthe track, not as quick as methough. I’m too competitiveto let him have that vic-tory! We both do a lot of
power based training withweights and some of our trackwork is similar but we don’tusually have the chance totrain together as he lives on a
military base at the otherend of the country. On
occasion he has
come down to Loughboroughand joined in with a trainingsession. He joined in on asprint session recently andbecause he is used to doingsprint work over very shortdistances, say 30m or 40m, hedidn’t cope too well with the150m sprints we were doingthat day. He came home andjust needed to go to bed!
“As my brother competes insuch far off places such asSwitzerland and Lake Placid,it’s very difficult for me totravel out and support him atthe competitions so I supporthim through Eurosport whenhe’s on the telly! He comes towatch me when I’m competingin Britain and it’s really niceto have him there.
“I’ve got a little boy who is11-months-old now who isalready very strong and fast atcrawling. He first learned towalk at 10 months and canmanage five steps now! Whoknows what he’ll end up doingor whether he’ll end up beingan athlete. Whatever he choosesto do I’ll support him but I’lldefinitely encourage him to getinvolved in a sport of somedescription. If he did want to dotrack and field I’d make sure toget him down to his local clubto make lots of friends as it’s avery social sport. The mostimportant thing in the begin-ning is to have lots of fun –that’s what it’s all about!
CARMELITA JETER may not beeither the World or OlympicChampion but following her periodof competing in the UK last summershe went on to run the secondquickest time in history.
America’s Florence Griffith-Joynerset the current World Record in 1988and remarkably, until last year, thefive fastest all-time records were setbefore the turn of the century. Butbuoyed by the news that Jeterbelieves she is in the form of her life,she admits she is as excited as herfans to see what damage she can doto that long-standing record.
“You know what I’m hoping to seesomething special from myself. Mytraining has been going so well andI’m not usually a person that getscaught up in how well you trainbecause sometimes you can go to ameet and just flop, but my training hasbeen going so well that I’ve never hadtraining sessions where John Smith(her coach) is just looking at me withnothing to say,” said the 30-year-old.
“He’s just honestly been looking atme speechless because he’s got noth-ing to say to me right now which iskind of scary because I’m like ‘saysomething’ and he’s all ‘wellwhat do you want me to sayto this, I can’t say anything’.So, I want to know what theclock is going to say, I’m a littleexited myself to see what the clock isgoing to say.
“I love the Aviva meets because Ialways run so well at your guys’meets. Every meet I’ve been con-tracted to run in Britain I’ve alwaysrun well.”
“I love racing against my mainrivals, I love the challenge. I love toline up with the best and you know,they might come one day with theirA-game and I’m always going tocome with my A-game. I’m lovingthe rivalry that we’re having, whichis a friendly rivalry.
“It’s good for the sport and it’sgood for women’s sprints because wehear a lot about the Asafa’s and
Tyson Gay’s and the Bolt’s, but its’about time for the Jeter’s and theVeronica Campbell’s to have the bigimpact on the sport.
“I like to see that we have a littlelimelight on the meet because youknow, you have to have the women’s100m! We bring something to thecrowd also so I’m definitely likinghow the Diamond League is puttinginterest on us as well and put us inthe spotlight as well.”
Jeter has put in impressive per-
formances throughout the SamsungDiamond League, most recently atthe Monaco meet where she took firstplace, cementing her position at thetop of the women’s 100 metres tableand being marked as the first personthroughout the new league to wintheir Diamond Race in their respec-tive discipline.
If the American runs as fast as shethinks she is capable of then thelimelight will undoubtedly comeshining, just in time for the London
Olympics, for which she has highaspirations.
“I’ve been fortunate to win everytime I’ve been to London - me com-ing to London now for 2012 is defi-nitely given me that ‘grrr’, to knowthat the Olympics is there. I missedout on the team in 2008 so me com-ing to London now is actually a bigdeal for me because I want to bethere for 2012 so this is pretty muchmy role for going to London becauseI’m not missing out on 2012!”
August 2 - 8, 2010 | 47Aviva London Grand Prix athletics special
Sharman’s sporting historyFAMILY MAN: Sharman (left)
with U.S hurdler David Payne
CARMELITAJETTING INTO LONDON
EXCITED: Jeter