Hurdler
Merritt to have kidney transplant after worlds
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[August 26, 2015]
By Nick Mulvenney
BEIJING (Reuters) - Olympic champion and
high hurdles world record holder Aries Merritt will have a kidney
transplant next week after competing in the world athletics
championships in Beijing, the 30-year-old American said on Wednesday.
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Merritt, who was told he would never run again after being diagnosed
with kidney disease in 2013, set the second fastest time behind
compatriot David Oliver in the heats of the 110 meters hurdles on
Wednesday.
The disease, caused by a rare genetic disorder found predominantly
in African Americans, has damaged his organ to such an extent that
he will receive one of his sister's kidneys in Arizona on Sept. 1.
"I'm here for mental sanity more than anything," he told reporters.
"I don't want to be sitting in my house awaiting surgery, I'd rather
be out enjoying life to the fullest.
"Who knows? This could potentially be my last championship if things
don't go well. But I'm optimistic that I'll be back and able to
train for the Rio Olympics."
Merritt had a brilliant 2012, winning gold at the London Olympics
and shattering the world record with a time of 12.80 seconds at the
Brussels Diamond League meeting the following month.
It was after he finished sixth at the 2013 world championships that
his illness was diagnosed.
"When they told me I'd never run again, my whole world ended in my
mind," he added.
"That I am here again running shows me that I'm a fighter and that I
can overcome anything if I stay with a positive mind.
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"For this championships, I'm going to take it one race at a time."
Merritt ran 13.25 seconds to win his heat on Wednesday morning to
qualify for Thursday's semi-finals and said he was glad to have the
news about the transplant out in the open.
"Just to be keeping that secret, it felt like a weight had been
lifted when I was able to share it," he said.
"The positive outreach has been amazing. I love running, I love
competing, this is my life and here I am."
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
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