Not as easy as it looks: By Len Johnson
The act of doing something well often belies the difficulty of doing it at all.
Not always: Emil Zatopek never made running look easy, but he made it a darned side harder for those lumbering in his wake. But think of a Federer backhand, a Bekele surge, Tendulkar batting – part of the art is that all of them look simple.So it was for a Steve Hooker pole vault for the magic years from 2006 to 2010. As he won the Commonwealth Games, the World Cup, the Olympic Games, the world championships and the world indoor championships, he built up an air of invincibility.
Why, it was all so easy he could do it off one leg, as Hooker memorably did in winning the Berlin 2009 world championships despite a strained quadriceps muscle restricting him to just three jumps – one in qualifying, two in the final.
That apparent ease masked the reality that vaulting is difficult – and dangerous. So difficult, in Hooker’s case, that he went for a year virtually unable to jump a bar early in his career. Those demons have returned to haunt him now, at pretty much the worst possible time in his Olympic preparation.
“The confidence I require to stand at the end of the runway and then charge down, land my pole and soar almost six metres into the air has left me for the time being,” Hooker said this week.
The good news is that Hooker got through ‘the yips’ one time and he can get through them again. Despite an ordinary year last year, he has the Olympic B-standard so, other than the unlikely event of someone else getting the B (or, even less likely) the A-standard, he can be picked for London provided he is on the right track.
It hasn’t been a good few months at the sharp end of Australian athletics. Sally Pearson remains a shining light – though even she had an injury scare in a ‘pro’ race on a grass track just before Christmas.
Jared Tallent is going alright, too, but almost everyone else who has shown out in recent years has a query against them right at the minute.
Mitch Watt hasn’t been jumping due to a calf injury. (A report this week said that he and his support team were “on top of his calf”, which must make it even more uncomfortable.)
Our other top jumper, world indoor champion Fabrice Lapierre, has been struggling too, though he will resume competition in Perth this weekend. Last time he competed there, Lapierre cleared a wind-aided 8.78 metres. Let’s hope it is an omen.
Dani Samuels, 2009 world champion in the discus, has not shown anything like that form since, our 400 men are struggling to get anywhere near individual qualifying times (when they won a bronze medal in the Berlin 4x400, three of them were individual semi-finalists).
Javelinists Kim Mickle and Jarrod Bannister are off the scene, the former injured, the latter suspended for part of the season.
Then dual 400 hurdles world champion Jana Pittman has had an injection for plantar fasciitis, a potentially debilitating foot injury which, like Hooker’s problems, could hardly have come with worse timing.
Finally, there has been the storm that has erupted over the marathon qualifying standards – or, rather, Athletics Australia’s adjustment of the IAAF standard, the only event for which it has done so – which is likely to see anything up to half-a-dozen IAAF A-qualified athletes told that no, in fact they have not qualified.
With all the bullets flying around this week, the last thing you need is to come under ‘friendly fire’.
Back in the lead-up to Sydney 2000, team manager Peter Brukner and head coach Chris Wardlaw had regular media briefings at which, among other things, they ran through the injury list. Many wondered if it was worth it, as the downside was an inevitable negative story on injuries.
Better, the counterview then was, not to have the briefings unless you had something positive to say. And that has been the approach since. It works a treat, too, until you get swept away by an avalanche of bad news, as happened this week.
No doubt everyone is fervently hoping Perth marks the reversal of this trend.

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‘And all that I knew was the hole in my shoe which

As an athletics nut, all I could see was regardless of whether Carl Lewis, Sebastian Coe and Steve Ovett _ to name but a few _ turned up, over 400 of the world’s best athletes were coming. Australia had been starved of world athletic talent on this scale since the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games. Whoever came, it would be a feast..gif)



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In the shorter history of the women’s AOY only three Australians have made top 10. First, and most prolific, is Cathy Freeman, who was voted fourth overall in 1997, the year of her first world championship gold medal in the 400, seventh in 1999 (when she retained the title), and third in 2000, when she won at the Sydney Olympic Games and made the final in the 200.
year too.
First up on the second main session of the Championships was the womens 100m second round. Particularly impressive was Kerron Stewart from Jamaica who ran 10.92, and Carmelita Jeter from America, who ran 10.94. Both looked very relaxed and in control, and still ran some very quick times. Everyone you would expect to get through did just that. The semis and final will be stacked!
Tristan Thomas and Brendan Cole lined up in the semis of the mens 400m hurdles (Cole after being reinatated after being disqualified on a technicality last night). Both Thomas and Cole didn't hit their stride, with Cole hitting the fifth hurdle when he was hoping for a big PB. Thomas ran 49.76 and Cole ran 49.92. But 14th and 15th respectively is certainly something the Aussie duo can be proud of. Meanwhile in the field Alwyn Jones battled hard in the qualifying rounds of the triple jump, and just missed qualification by 40 centimetres. 
Day Three had only one session in the evening, which had a couple of big finals. First up was the Womens pole vault; where the biggest upset imaginable happened. The impenetrable force of Russia's Elena Isinbaeva didn't come to the party tonight. Isinbaeva failed to clear a height after passing up to 4.75m. She had one attempt at that height, which didn't even reach the bar. She then passed to 4.80m, which she had two failed attempts at. Which means that Isinbaeva comes away without even a medal. The gold went to Poland's Anna Rogowska, who was the only one to successfully clear 4.75m.
Smenya: "It's my first time on the international stage and I will try to do my best. The tactic was to go in front first, then slow down and let the other go and accelerate again closer to the finish. I used to play football as a left back. Running is just a game for me. Even next year, I can stop running if I want."
Dathan Ritzenhein ran a blinder of a race, coming through the field in the last few kilometres, to take sixth place in a personal best of 27:22.28. Rupp was eight in 27:37.99. Collis Birmingham, who decided to line up in both the 5000m and the 10000m, was in the mix for the first half of the race, but then slowly dropped as the pace picked up. After running in no mans land for a long time, he pulled out with four laps to go. Hopefully he will bounce back for the 5000m. Dave McNeill had an incredibly gutsy World Championships debut, coming 24th in 29:18.59. McNeill gave it his all, and worked off everyone he could, never giving an inch. His last 100m was pure agony, as the jelly legs kicked in, and the Aussie could barely stand after crossing the line, and was carried off the track with hypothermia and dehydration. A gallent effort, and McNeill should be very proud of his debut.
"Early on [in the final] I thought that there was no way I was going to jump, it was quite sore during my warm up. I went in and got some treatment from the doctor, when the boys were jumping 5.65m, and as that kicked in, I thought I was more and more of a chance of jumping."
"I think I've proven something to myself by this working out the way it has. I've got a lot more in me, and I know that if I can do jumps like this under these circumstances, then when I'm healthy, when I've got good conditions, massive jumps are not out of the question, and I'm looking forward to seeing what I can do next year."
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