May 4, 2024
OPINION | Load management unavoidable for most track and field athletes on road to worlds | CBC Sports

OPINION | Load management unavoidable for most track and field athletes on road to worlds | CBC Sports

This is a column by Morgan Campbell, who writes opinion for CBC Sports. For more information about CBC’s Opinion section, please see the FAQ.

Last Sunday morning in Silesia, Poland, Sha’Carri Richardson, the American sprint sensation, strode past Jamaican star Shericka Jackson to win the women’s 100 metres at last week’s Diamond League event.

Jackson ran 10.78 seconds, a stride-and-a-half slower than the world-leading 10.65 she ran to at the Jamaican national championships in early July, but still fast enough to win most high-level races. Except Richardson, fresh off a U.S. championships that saw her qualify for worlds in two events — the 100 and the 200 — refused to let Jackson’s blazing speed rattle her. Richardson gave ground early, then calmly walked Jackson down over the race’s final stages to win in 10.76.

WATCH | Richardson takes down Jackson for 2nd time this year | Athletics North:

Sha’Carri Richardson takes down Shericka Jackson for 2nd time this year | Athletics North

Richardson remains undefeated in the 100m this season after defeating Jackson in the marquee event of the Diamond League Silesia meet on July 16.

As co-headliners, Richardson and Jackson delivered — but wasn’t this race supposed to be a three-way showdown that included Marie Josee Ta Lou of the Ivory Coast?

Yes, initially. But Ta Lou, whose 10.75 season’s best ranks third in the world this season, withdrew from the race.

Similar story on the men’s side, where Akani Simbine of South Africa upset American standout Fred Kerley to win a 100-metre dash that was originally scheduled to include Christian Coleman, the 2019 world champion. It was an entertaining race — with Simbine grabbing a lead and holding off a hard-charging Kerley — but not the one most ticket-buyers paid to see.

Strategic withdrawals

Here, it helps to remember that all of these athletes are professionals, and to assume they have valid reasons to miss races. Travel, training and competing all ask a lot of an athlete’s body. For most of us, a pulled hamstring is something we read about while choosing our fantasy football teams. For a professional sprinter, it’s a job hazard.

A costly one. 

Blow out a muscle now and you miss the rest of the season. Sometimes the best race is the one you don’t run.

But if the reality involves strategic withdrawals from big races, a question arises:

Does track and field have a load-management problem?

Not quite.

The one-and-done false start rule is a problem. It got Devon Allen DQ’d at world championships last summer. Allen, a practice-squad wide receiver with the Philadelphia Eagles last season, could have won a world medal in the hurdles and an NFC championship within a five-month span. Instead, he left worlds empty-handed, because the sensors in his starting blocks said he reacted to the one one-thousandth of a second too quickly.

WATCH | Devon Allen speaks on disqualification from World Athletics Championships:

Devon Allen speaks on disqualification from World Athletics Championships 110m final

CBC’s Scott Russell caught up with the Philadelphia Eagles’ wide receiver following his false start and subsequent disqualification from the men’s 100-metre hurdles finals at the World Athletics Championships in Eugene, Ore.

And the sport always has money problems. Maybe not meet promoters and federations, but the cost of staying competitive, and the scarcity of guaranteed money, has the sport’s dwindling middle class feeling squeezed.

Load management is less a problem than a dilemma that arises when the sport and the business of track and field collide.

At this point in the summer, with the World Athletics Championships roughly a month away, top level athletes can try to cash in on appearance fees and prize money by racing often, or they can peak for Budapest by competing selectively. Keeping those two goals aligned is possible, but can become complicated.

And for fans, who spend money and block out time to watch specific matchups, it can grow frustrating.

Earlier this season, the prospect of a couple of 100-metre showdowns between Kerley and Lamont Jacobs, the most recent Olympic champion, had all of us marking our calendars. Two super elite sprinters with Texas roots and gold medals at the world level, each of them confident, and neither of them shy about social media trash talk — what’s not to like?

Injuries. That’s what.

A bad back forced Jacobs to withdraw, leaving Kerley as the undisputed main star in those early season meets.

A disappointment, for sure. But it’s also nearly unavoidable in a sport full of independent contractors who have to compete and earn a living, even as the physical strain of sprinting threatens their health, and poor performances can drain their earning power. 

Most mainstream North American sports have unions, and collective agreements that spell out what’s expected from players. The NBA’s newest contract sets its threshold for individual awards at 65 games. You can load-manage your way to a 60-game regular season, or you can win an MVP trophy, but you can’t do both.

Track and field lacks those stakeholders and guidelines. Instead, it has shoe deals and other sponsors, which are the closest thing most athletes have to job security, and which are more lucrative if you can leverage a world or Olympic medal. So if you’re a podium contender forced to choose between competing a lot in July or performing at your best in August, the decision isn’t that difficult.

WATCH | Canada’s Aaron Brown on how to improve pay structure of track and field:

Olympic sprinter Aaron Brown on how to improve the pay structure of track and field

Host Morgan Campbell chats with two-time Olympic medallist Aaron Brown about how a change to the structure of track and field could help athletes receive more money.

For example, we haven’t seen Andre De Grasse in competition since late June, when he placed sixth in the 200 metres at Diamond League Lausanne. After a slow start to his season, he and his team clearly decided that a solid block of training would serve him better than a crowded competition schedule would.

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone is one of the sport’s top performers — her 50.68-second clocking in the 400-metre hurdles should last decades as a world record — and one of its most recognizable faces. Before U.S. nationals in early July, she had only raced twice outdoors this year. Her stablemate Athing Mu, the world and Olympic champion at 800 metres, competed just once before the U.S. championships.

Going against the trend

Two superstars going against the trend toward load management?

Richardson and Jackson, who followed Diamond League Silesia by racing in Hungary two days later, and will also compete at the Diamond League event in London this Sunday. 

Jackson won her 200-metre race in Hungary, while Richardson lost to NCAA champion Julien Alfred in the 100. The result was a mild upset — only mild because Alfred is a phenom who holds the NCAA’s 60-metre record, and has run 10.83 in the 100 this year. But it also highlights a pitfall of packing your schedule with high-level races.

Alfred won that race in 10.89 seconds. Richardson finished in 10.97, a quarter behind the personal best she ran at U.S. nationals, but a foreseeable regression given her recent workload — two events and two personal bests, over six rounds in four days at U.S. trials, then two races in three days this week.

Staying sharp all season long is one task. Peaking for the biggest competition of the year is a different challenge. Rare athletes can do both. Most have to plan carefully — train, race, and load-manage. 

Is it disappointing?

As a fan… yes it is, at times.

But if you have realistic expectations, it’s not a problem.

Just a reality.

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