‘Joyful to be on top’ - Thompson Herah beaming after winning World Athletics’ Female Athlete of the Year award

December 02, 2021
Elaine Thompson Herah (left), the World Athletics Female Athlete of the Year, and Norway’s Karsten Warholm, the Male Athlete of the Year pose with their awards yesterday.
Elaine Thompson Herah (left), the World Athletics Female Athlete of the Year, and Norway’s Karsten Warholm, the Male Athlete of the Year pose with their awards yesterday.
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OVERWHELMED WITH pride, Jamaica's sprinter Elaine Thompson-Herah expressed happiness at being on top of the world after being crowned as World Athletics' Female Athlete of the Year.

Thompson-Herah, who won both the 100 and 200 metres at the Tokyo Olympics, was crowned yesterday in a ceremony presented online by the sports' world governing body.

Especially good in the second half of the 2021 season, the 29-year-old Thompson-Herah joined Merlene Ottey and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce as winners of the prestigious award.

She outstripped four other women who won gold medals at the Olympic Games in Tokyo -- triple jumper Yulimar Rojas of Venezuela, Kenya's 1500-metre runner Faith Kipyegon, Dutch distance ace Sifan Hassan, and American 400-metre hurdler Sydney McLaughlin.

Thompson-Herah, who brought the world 100 and 200-metre records of 10.49 and 21.34 seconds into reach with her Tokyo times of 10.61 and 21.53 seconds, was delighted to win the award.

Even though she is no longer with MVP coaching maestro Stephen Francis, she hopes to continue in the same vein next season.

"I just take it year by year," she told World Athletics.

'ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE'

After Tokyo, she lowered her 100-metre best to 10.54 seconds, just 0.05 away from the record.

Mindful of the small margin, Thompson-Herah noted: "I went very close to the world record, so you know, anything is possible.

"Joyful to be on top after finishing as a finalist in the Athlete of the Year vote in both 2016 and 2020," she added. "No spikes hanging up any time soon!"

Rojas and McLaughlin both set world records in Tokyo, with the American storming home in 51.46 seconds and Rojas bounding 15.67 metres.

Thompson-Herah marches forward as the only woman to win the Olympic sprint double twice.

Norway's Karsten Warholm was selected as Male Athlete of the Year by the same process, after a campaign where he broke the 400-metre hurdles world record twice.

In front of his roaring compatriots in Oslo on July 1, Warholm cut Kevin Young's 1992 mark of 46.78 seconds down to 46.70 in his first 400m hurdles race of the season. Then the undefeated Norwegian produced a run for the ages in Tokyo, clocking 45.94 to become the first man to pierce the 46-second barrier.

"I'm so happy for this," said Warholm. "First, when I saw the time (in Tokyo), I was like: 'This must be a mistake', because I didn't see that one coming. And I didn't see the victory coming before crossing the finish line.

"It was a very intense race, I knew the American and the Brazilian and all the other guys were really chasing me. I always go out hard, and I never know what is going on behind me. I was just fighting all the way to the finish line. When I realised 45.94 was the reality, I was thinking: 'This is not too bad. I'll take it!'"

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