Injury forces former Olympic
champion Pearson to retire
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[August 06, 2019]
By Nick Mulvenney
SYDNEY (Reuters) - World and former
Olympic champion high hurdler Sally Pearson, the most successful
Australian track athlete of her generation, gave up on her dream of
a swansong at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and retired on Tuesday.
The 32-year-old Queenslander, who won Olympic 100 meters hurdles
gold at the 2012 London Games and the world title in 2011 and 2017,
said she had been forced into the decision by a string of injuries.
"After 16 years of being on the Australian team it's time to hang up
the spikes," Pearson told a news conference in Sydney.
"Every time I want to go fast the body doesn't want to. So I don't
think I could take anymore injuries and I have huge doubts for the
next year for me to be able to continue at the level that I expect
of myself ...
"I'm proud of my career and what I've achieved and hopefully
inspired our next generation of athletes coming through ..."
Pearson grew up on the Gold Coast and was initially an international
prospect under her maiden name Sally McLellan in both the hurdles
and the flat 100 meters sprint.
She got her big breakthrough with the hurdles silver medal at the
2008 Olympics and was named IAAF female athlete of the year after
securing her first world title at Daegu in 2011.
She dominated the 100 meters hurdles in the year running up to the
London Olympics and swept to victory in 12.37 seconds to firmly
establish herself among the world's elite.
One of a trio of American challengers to her supremacy, Brianna
Rollins, kept her to a silver at the 2013 worlds and a horrific
injury sustained at the Rome Diamond League meeting in 2015
prevented her from competing to get it back.
'BONE EXPLOSION'
After the fall in Rome, Pearson feared she might have to have her
lower arm amputated with doctors describing the injury as a "bone
explosion" in her wrist.
[to top of second column] |
Australia's Olympic hurdles champion Sally Pearson reacts during a
media conference in Sydney, Australia, August 5, 2015. REUTERS/David
Gray
She battled back from that injury but was bedevilled by calf and
Achilles problems and ultimately prevented from defending her
Olympic title in Rio by a torn hamstring.
In a testimony to her mental toughness, she was back on the big
stage at the 2017 world championships in London, where she reclaimed
the hurdles title in 12.59 seconds.
"I would like to say that the Olympic Games in 2012 was my most
favorite memory but I must say 2017 world championships for me was
something that I proved to myself that I could still do it," she
added.
"Even through the hard slog that I went through, I was still able to
come back and be the victor at a major world championships.
"For me, that was my most proudest moment, for me as an athlete and
coach because I was coaching myself. The London Olympics, though
will always take my heart."
More injuries followed, though, with an Achilles issue cruelly
robbing her of the chance to race at the 2018 Commonwealth Games in
her home city.
Another hamstring injury put in doubt her world title defense in
Doha later this year and it was the return of the Achilles problem
that finally convinced her to give up on her dream of running at the
Tokyo Olympics next year.
"I started hurdling again and the Achilles started to flare up and
that was it," she added. "I just hit boiling point. Because of last
year and 2018 I wasn't going through that pain again. That was too
much to take."
(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, Editing by Rory Carroll and Sudipto
Ganguly)
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