Golding-Clarke said: “In 2019 before we travelled to Doha (for the World Championships), I sort of had an inclination that she may come close, but that she might run in the 12.2s.”
Ex-athlete and Jamaican International, Lacena Golding-Clarke, has said Tobi Amusan’s world record run at the World Athletics Championships in Oregon, USA in July ‘was something that had been brewing for a while.’
Golding-Clarke, an Olympian and 2002 Commonwealth Games champion is the coach of reigning World 100m hurdles champion, Amusan.
A former sprint hurdler herself who represented Jamaica at three Olympic Games and five World Championships says she knew the 25-year-old Nigerian would break the world record and actually expected her to be close at the World Athletics Championships in Doha, Qatar in 2019.
“In 2019, before we travelled to Doha (for the World Championships), I sort of had an inclination that she may come close, but that she might run in the 12.2s,” she said in a World Athletics’ gender leadership podcast.
“In 2020, during the pandemic, we trained so hard. I had a feeling then that she could, but I did not expect that the world record could be broken by such a time. I was thinking she could go on 12.19 or 12.18, but I am just happy that I was a part of it. Hoping for a world record every year, but this year it all just happened at once.”
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Amusan has been under the watchful eye of Golding-Clarke since 2016 and her days at the University of Texas at El Paso, where the Jamaican helped to take her from a 13.11 athlete to a 12.12 athlete.
Initially, “she had it in her” but it was the technical work that needed attention, so the two slowly built Amusan’s general strength, followed by her mental focus, to ensure she was equipped to overcome all 10 barriers. The focus for 2022 was to work on speed, to be able to hold the hurdle rhythm all the way through to the finish line