Road to Rio: Long jumper Lapierre spurred on by crowd

Long jumper Fabrice Lapierre says he went to a dark place after missing out on the London Olympics. But a new training regime and a fresh turn of mind have seen him qualify for the Rio Games.

Australia's Fabrice Lapierre

Australia will be represented by a team of at least 42 at the future world athletics championships. (AAP) Source: AAP

There is a world of expectation on the shoulders of Australia's top men's long jumper Fabrice Lapierre. 

"There's a million things going through my mind. A million things," he says. "I'm thinking I want to jump far, I'm thinking about things I've done in the past, I'm thinking about growing up, what I did when I was young," he says.

"I think about everything. It's kind of an emotional rollercoaster."
Lapierre, like many long jumpers, urges crowds to clap him in as he prepares for his jumps at athletics meets.

He says the energy created by the cheering audience and the wind in his hair as he flies down the runway are what spur him on.

"The best feeling is those last few strides when you're at your top speed and you're about to take off. That feeling is awesome. And when you take off you already know when it's going to be a big jump."

Lapierre dominated the Australian Athletics Championships meet earlier this year to qualify for the Rio Games - jumping 8.27 metres.
That would have been enough to win silver at the London Olympics.

But it hasn't all been smooth sailing for the 32-year-old Mauritian-born athlete.

Injury marred Lapierre's performance at the Beijing Olympics where he finished 16th, and he missed out on the team for London altogether.

He says he even came close to giving up long jumping.

"A couple of years ago I didn't care about the sport. I didn't not train, but I honestly didn't care. You could almost say I didn't want to be there. I had no care in the world about athletics," Lapierre says.

But family support, a new coach and new training base in the United States proved the difference.

"I talked to my new coach and he told me the same thing: 'you've got great potential you've just got to change your life up, and make huge changes and if you do that, you've still got a shot'," he says.
Australia's chef de mission for the Rio Games, Kitty Chiller, has paid tribute to Lapierre's resilience in the face of injury and disappointment.

"It's special when we select anyone onto an Olympic team or when someone qualifies for an Olympic team but more especially so when it's someone that's had a lot of challenges in their career, injuries and other challenges," Ms Chiller says.

"To see someone like Fabrice do so outstandingly well that he has this season, a silver medal at the world indoors just a couple of weeks ago and now coming out here and winning the national championship in another Rio qualifier, it's fantastic."

Lapierre says he's now jumping with a renewed passion after a strong 12 months in the sandpit and has firmed as one of Australia's brightest Olympic medal hopes.

"Hopefully by Rio I'm in peak form and jumping the medal winning distances, like 8.50 metres, something like that. So that's what I'm going to be aiming for, just steadily each meet: 8.30, 8.40, just keep going."


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By Darren Mara


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