Semenya to chase 1000m, 1500m records at upcoming races

Caster Semenya lifts the South African flag after winning the 800 metres at the 2017 IAAF World Championships. Photo: EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON

Caster Semenya lifts the South African flag after winning the 800 metres at the 2017 IAAF World Championships. Photo: EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON

Published Feb 13, 2018

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JOHANNESBURG - South Africa’s double Olympic and Triple World Champion, Caster Semenya will toe the line in the 1000m, a rarely run event on the track, at Tuks Stadium in March in the second of three Athletix Grand Prix Meetings.

Semenya has never raced the two and a half lap distance. This will be a unique experience both for her and the crowd. The 27-year- old double Olympic champion has hinted that if she feels good on the day, she may very well chase the South African record which stands at 2:37.2, set by Ilse de Kock Wicksell in 1983.

“My training is going very well. I am fit, I am confident and if the conditions are right, I may just see how close I can get to the record. It does depend on the pace of the race. If the time is on, I will try and chase it,” said Semenya.

She has good reason to feel good after running a 51sec 400m at the fourth Athletics Gauteng North League Meeting at Tuks on Saturday. Semenya is a wily campaigner, with over 10 years of racing behind her. She is well aware that although there is no World Championships or Olympic Games in 2018, it is still a long year for the athlete.

“The Athletix Grand Prix Series fits perfectly into my plans. I can see where I am right now in terms of my training," Semenya said.

"That will give me a good idea of what I can do in Europe later this year. Remember there are the African Senior Championships in August (Nigeria) and also the Continental and World Cups’ later this year. So even though there are no Olympics, or Worlds, this is still a long and big year for me.”

Semenya is targeting the 1000m in Tshwane on 8 March before looking to defend her national title a week later and finally tackling the 1500m at Dal Josaphat Stadium, Paarl on 22 March.

If the pace allows it she may very well end up hunting down the women’s SA 1500m record of 4:01.81 which stands behind the name of Zola Budd Pieterse.

Semenya’s best is 4:01.99 which she ran in Durban in 2016, not far off the national record. If the pace is right she has hinted that she may well try and claim the 1500m record too.

Athletics South Africa

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