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Kiwi sprinter eyes Olympics after breaking 30yo record

Author
NZ Herald ,
Publish Date
Mon, 27 Jan 2025, 10:20am

Kiwi sprinter eyes Olympics after breaking 30yo record

Author
NZ Herald ,
Publish Date
Mon, 27 Jan 2025, 10:20am

Tiaan Whelpton had a feeling the 60m finalists at the ACT Championships in Canberra were set to post 鈥渟ome pretty crazy times鈥.

The Kiwi sprinter鈥檚 hunch proved correct.

Whelpton smashed a 30-year-old New Zealand record over the distance by crossing in 6.50s, achieving automatic qualification for the world indoor championships in China in March.

The 24-year-old went well under the previous national mark of 6.59, set by Gus Nketia in 1995, and finished second to Australian runner Lachlan Kennedy (6.43) in Saturday night鈥檚 final.

Whelpton earlier recorded a 6.52 in the heats but that time was discounted due to an illegal level of wind. He knew that if the conditions played their part, a fast track meant that time could be matched in the final.

鈥淢e and all the boys were just sitting there behind the line saying, 鈥楶lease just give us a legal wind, because we know we鈥檒l put on some crazy times鈥,鈥 Whelpton told 九一星空无限talk ZB. 鈥淎nd man, oh man, did we.

鈥淲hen I heard [Kennedy] dropped a 6.43 and I wasn鈥檛 too far behind, I knew the times would be pretty quick. But in my mind, I was like, well, if you ran that quick, it must have been windy.

鈥淏ut to my surprise, the wind was only +1.6, so everything was totally legal. So I was over the moon. I was super stoked.鈥

Whelpton鈥檚 main aim in the meet was to book a spot at the world indoors, targeting an automatic-qualifying time of 6.55. He knew he would have another chance to crack that mark this weekend in Sydney but headed to Canberra quietly confident the additional event would be unnecessary.

鈥淚n the back of my head, I think I believed it, because I never even booked accommodation for Sydney,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o at least now I don鈥檛 have to cancel a hotel room. Now I can just fly home.鈥

Whelpton, born and raised in South Africa before moving to Christchurch in 2019, credited his record-breaking run to new coach Angus Ross, whom he described as 鈥渙ne of the top sprint biomechanists and strength-and-conditioning coaches in the world鈥.

Working in the gym alongside shot-putters Tom Walsh and Nick Palmer, Whelpton had been racking up weightlifting personal-bests and translating that power to the track.

鈥淲e鈥檙e still figuring things out and the training I鈥檓 doing with this coach is very different to what I was doing in South Africa 鈥 what I was doing in South Africa ended up not working for me,鈥 he said.

鈥淭o gym with those boys is pretty inspiring because they鈥檙e freakishly strong and they鈥檙e always there helping me push the boat out a little bit. I gotta give them a shout out for helping me get here too.鈥

With the boost received by this run, Whelpton has his sights firmly set on joining Walsh in the New Zealand athletics team at the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028. When setting a 100m personal best of 10.14 in 2023, Whelpton came through the 60m mark at around 6.59, whereas his 6.50 time would translate to a sub-10 run in the glamour event.

鈥淲e鈥檝e definitely been hyper-focused on this 60m,鈥 he said. 鈥淟ong-term, four-year plan, we鈥檙e thinking 2028 Olympics. And so this year was only really supposed to be a 鈥榣et鈥檚 find our feet鈥 kind of year. Let鈥檚 try some stuff out. We weren鈥檛 expecting to shoot up this quickly, so it鈥檚 definitely a welcome surprise.

鈥淚f I can just hold my speed for as long as I can, I should be coming through in some pretty crazy 100m times.鈥

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