‘Paris was better’ - Coach Walcott compares Fraser-Pryce’s world-leading performances

June 21, 2022
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (centre) wins the women’s 100m flanked by Marie-Josée Ta Lou of The Ivory Coast (right), and Switzerland’s Ajla Del Ponte during the Wanda Diamond League meeting at Charlety Stadium in Paris, France on Saturday.
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce (centre) wins the women’s 100m flanked by Marie-Josée Ta Lou of The Ivory Coast (right), and Switzerland’s Ajla Del Ponte during the Wanda Diamond League meeting at Charlety Stadium in Paris, France on Saturday.
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The time was the same as in her last race, but coach Reynaldo Walcott reckons the Paris meet record by Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce on Saturday was better than her 10.67 in Nairobi, Kenya on May 7.

Walcott, who coached Fraser-Pryce to the Olympic 100m silver and personal bests of 10.60 and 21.79 seconds in the 100m and 200m, respectively, said that her technical execution in Paris was impressive.

"I saw focus," Walcott said. "I saw relaxation, but of a different kind because I think she was relaxed in focusing on what she had to do. But I would agree that there is still room to improve."

Walcott was responding to a suggestion that the four-time World 100m champion could have relaxed a little more at the end of the Paris race.

"Ironically, the time is exactly the same," he said. "Sometime, time doesn't tell it all, but I think that race was an improvement over the first one in terms of what she did. But, you know, you can do your best execution but what you can't control is how much power your legs are going to produce today, because, if you try your hardest, how fast are your arms going to swing today? But, in terms of the stuff that she could control, for example, 'Did I swing my hands all the way through?', 'Was my knee all the way up for all the sections where it should have been?', those things you can control, she did a better job of that."

Nairobi is 1600m above sea level, with the thinner air aiding sprinters. By comparison, Paris is essentially at sea level.

In any case, Fraser-Pryce heads the world and national performance list, with compatriot double-double Olympic champion Elaine Thompson Herah second at 10.79 seconds. Olympic bronze medallist Shericka Jackson, Kevona Davis, Natalliah Whyte, Kemba Nelson, and Olympic relay gold medallist Briana Williams have all broken 11 seconds this year.

Walcott and Fraser-Pryce will tinker with technical aspects of her Paris performance in pursuit of even better races.

"So there's some other stuff now that we can take back and say, 'Okay, you need to be working at this', but at least they are what I consider to be smaller stuff versus what we worked on from the last race to this one."

Jackson leads the Jamaica performance list in the 200m at 21.91 seconds.

As the winner of the 100m at the 2019 World Championships, Fraser-Pryce doesn't need to run that event at the National Trials this weekend, as that victory earned her the defending champion's wild card. However, when Walcott was asked about her competitive schedule for this week, he said, "She definitely will double this weekend."

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