Athletics: Hawkins blanked out after collapsing at Games marathon
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[April 26, 2018]
(Reuters) - Scottish runner
Callum Hawkins said he could not remember attempting to carry on
after collapsing during the men's marathon at this month's
Commonwealth Games.
Hawkins held an almost two-minute lead in the marathon after two
hours of running in the blazing temperatures on the Gold Coast
before collapsing on the road. He then got back up to run a short
distance and collapsed again.
The 25-year-old was released from hospital the day after his
collapse.
"I remember thinking 'If I can just get up and finish, I'll probably
get a medal but if three people go past then I'll throw the towel
in'," Hawkins told BBC Scotland. "But I don't remember getting up
and actually running those extra meters.
"I remember falling off the side of the road and trying my best to
get back up but my legs were like jelly. Next thing I remember is
being in an ambulance."
Hawkins said he regained consciousness in the ambulance and asked
the staff if he had won the race.
[to top of second column] |
Scotland's Callum Hawkins lies on the ground as Australia's Michael
Shelley runs past during the Men's Marathon Final at the
Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast in Australia, April 15, 2018.
AAP/Tracey Nearmy/via REUTERS
"I knew the answer before I asked, but I remember asking 'Did I
win?'" he added. "I thought there might have been a chance I went on
auto-pilot and finished it but nobody answered and I knew
straightaway, 'that's a no'."
Hawkins' collapse drew widespread criticism from former athletes and
fans on social media, who expressed their dissatisfaction with the
delay in medical attention provided to the runner.
(Reporting by Aditi Prakash in Bengaluru; editing by Sudipto
Ganguly)
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