Olympics: World champion Barber hoping javelin will sing through chorus
of cheers
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[April 28, 2021]
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Javelin world
champion Kelsey-Lee Barber is shutting out the COVID-19 "noise" in
the lead up to the Olympics, but the Australian hopes desperately to
hear the rumble of fans when she gets set to launch in Tokyo.
As a big-stage performer, Barber said she missed the rush of crowds
through the pandemic-hit 2020, and would draw energy from fans at
National Stadium during the Games.
"This is going to be a big factor for the Olympics this year. I’m
sure I’m not the only one that feels this way," the South
Africa-born 29-year-old told Reuters in an interview. "I do use the
crowd, I love the crowd and I love to perform. It’s just going to be
different this year."
Foreign fans will not be allowed at the Games this year. And
authorities recently banned crowds at sporting events in Tokyo and
other cities as part of a state of emergency that will last until
May 11 to combat a spike in COVID-19 infections.
Organisers might decide it's not worth the risk to have any fans at
all at Olympics, which run from July 23 to Aug. 8.
"There are ways you can practise for that and to channel energy in a
different way," she said. "I might have to tap into the (energy of
the) actual competition, the girls around me and the numbers, and
play that game a bit more than normally, if that’s what will fire me
up."
Barber, who stayed in Australia last year because of the pandemic,
has struggled to get back into the swing of things this year,
throwing well below her career-best of 67.70 metres in 2019, when
she was world champion.
However, in front of a proper crowd at Australia's recent national
athletics championships, she threw above 60m for the first time
since 2019.
Her best of 61.09m at Sydney's Olympic Park was second to
Commonwealth Games champion Kathryn Mitchell (63.34m), but it was
enough for local media to declare Barber had rediscovered her "mojo".
"I’d love to say, like the headlines, that 'I am back'. But I feel
like I’m not quite there 100% yet," Barber said. "I did feel more
like myself on the runway than I have in the past couple of months."
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Javelin world champion Kelsey-Lee Barber
trains for the postponed Tokyo Olympic Games with coach and husband
Mike Barber, utilising limited facilities access under the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions at the Australian
Institute of Sport (AIS), in Canberra, Australia, April 21, 2020.
Picture taken April 21, 2020. REUTERS/Loren Elliott/File Photo
Her coach, Mike Barber, is also her husband. The Canberra-based
couple are always careful about separating sport from home life,
even with the Olympics looming.
"This year has been tough. When things are going great and Kelsey’s
throwing well, it’s really easy to balance both," Mike Barber told
Reuters. "It’s been a different challenge this year with Kelsey
struggling with her form a little bit and struggling with her
confidence.
"But it’s like anything in life, you find ways to manage the
emotional side of it."
Managing the emotions for Kelsey-Lee Barber has meant staying
focused on Tokyo, even as health experts call for the
already-postponed Games to be put off again.
Barber would like to get to Europe to compete before the Games but
concedes they may settle for training in Australia's tropical north
to prepare for Japan's summer heat.
If at all possible, the Olympics must go on, Barber said.
"It’s something that can bring nations around the world together and
that’s what we need at the moment," she said.
(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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