Fired-up hosts look to dominate Gold Coast
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[April 02, 2018]
By Ian Ransom
GOLD COAST, Australia (Reuters) - The
Commonwealth Games has become a multi-sports party that struggles to
pull high-profile guests but enthusiastic host Australia has
promised a beach-side bash on the Gold Coast to reaffirm the event's
place in the global landscape.
More than 6,600 athletes and team officials from 71 Commonwealth
nations and territories will flock to the glitzy resort strip and
other cities in sun-drenched Queensland to compete in 18 sports
ranging from athletics to lawn bowls.
No other nation brings quite the same fervor to the quadrennial
Games as Australia, and the hosts will have a full stable of stars
in their record 473-athlete delegation when the event opens on
Wednesday.
Outside the country, however, the Games lacks the same pulling power
and recent editions have been almost as notable for their absentees
as their confirmed starters.
Barring a token appearance for Jamaica in the relays at Glasgow,
athletics' most bankable drawcard Usain Bolt steered clear of the
showpiece during his brilliant career.
A host of track and field's biggest names will similarly dodge the
Gold Coast, including Olympic 800 meters champion David Rudisha and
fellow Kenyan Asbel Kiprop, the three-times world champion in the
1,500m.
Canadian triple Olympic sprint medalist Andre De Grasse withdrew to
focus on the outdoor season, while South Africa's Olympic and world
400m champion Wayde van Niekerk is sidelined with injury.
There will still be enough quality on show, however, to draw crowds
to Carrara Stadium, where Jamaica's latest sensation Elaine
Thompson, the reigning Olympic 100 and 200m champion, will headline
the women's sprints.
Her team mate Yohan Blake, a former 100m world champion, will also
highlight the men's event and hope to step out of the shadow of his
former training partner Bolt.
"Usain Bolt has left his legacy for us to carry on and that's what
we want to do," Blake, runner-up behind Bolt in the 100 and 200m at
the London Olympics, told local media after landing in Australia.
"That's what I want, to start with the Commonwealths, to take over
the dominance of the sprinting world."
REDEMPTION IN THE POOL?
South Africa's double Olympic champion Caster Semenya will run in
the 800 and 1,500m, while the burden of home expectations will fall
on Gold Coast local Sally Pearson, who will bid for a third
consecutive gold in the 100m hurdles.
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Athletes participate in a training session at the venue for the
upcoming Commonwealth Games Beach Volleyball, located on Coolangatta
Beach on the Gold Coast, Australia April 2, 2018. REUTERS/David Gray
The Games' chief ambassador, Pearson won a new legion of fans last
year when she claimed a second 100m hurdles world title in London,
putting four injury-blighted years behind her.
Locals will also pack the terraces at the Optus Aquatic Centre where
Australia's formidable swim team will be expected to dominate.
A number of their top swimmers skipped last year's world
championships in Hungary to focus on the Gold Coast and some will be
hugely motivated for success after flopping at the Rio Olympics.
Former 100m world record holder Cate Campbell, who finished sixth at
Rio after being the raging favorite for gold, has returned to form
after a year-long sabbatical.
Men's Olympic 100m champion Kyle Chalmers may face his stiffest test
against another Australian in Cameron McEvoy, who owns the fastest
time in a textile swimsuit (47.04 seconds).
The track cycling events promise to be hard-fought between strong
English and Australian teams in a Games that also boasts complete
gender parity across all events for the first time.
Still riding high from the London Olympics, England topped the table
at Glasgow with 174 medals, including 58 golds, dislodging Australia
for the first time since 1986.
Australia will be determined to restore their dynasty on home soil.
(Editing by John O'Brien)
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