De Klerk glad Horn set a new SA 100m-record
Local star athlete Carina Horn made history at the South African Championships this weekend when she broke the national 100m record for women, which stood for nearly three decades.
South Africa’s former “First Lady of Speed”, Evette de Klerk, said that after 28 years it was high time that her South African record in the 100 metres should go.
Another Pretorian, Carina Horn, raced to a time of 11.03s this weekend in the colors of Gauteng North at the South African Championships in the Tuks Athletics Stadium, improving De Klerk’s record set on 20 April 1990 by 0.03s.
“To be honest, I am a bit nostalgic knowing that my record is gone, but then again I did not expect it to be part of the statistics for so long. It was getting to be worrisome. Athletics records are there to be broken as it means the sport is healthy. I am glad that it was Carina that got the record because I understand she had put in long hard hours to be able to do so,” said the popular former athlete.
De Klerk said from personal experience, she can vouch how difficult it is in sprints, especially the 100m, to shave off those hundredths of seconds.
“It has taken me a long time from running 11.14s to be able to run a time of 11.06s eventually,” she explained.
There is indeed truth in what De Klerk is saying. Horn equalled De Klerk’s record in 2015, and it took her another three years to improve by just 0.03s.
The South African record in the 200m, which De Klerk set 8 April 1989 running 22.06s still stands.
“Don’t get me wrong because I don’t want to sound arrogant but I think it will be awhile before anyone come close to improving on the 200m record. Our local sprinters are still battling just to break 23 seconds. I think one of the problems is that we currently got individuals in every event that is trying to lift the standard of racing. The day I ran 22.06s in Pietersburg there were five of us dipping under 23 seconds, including Myrtle Bothma,” said De Klerk.
According to the former sprint queen during her career there was never such a thing as an easy race in the 100m sprint, as she was pushed by the likes of Elinda Vorster, Marcel Winkler, Mari-Lise Coetzer and others.
“If you did not give it your all every time, you raced there was a realistic chance that you would lose,” De Klerk concluded.
Horn’s Austrian coach, Rainer Schopf, was quite emotional moments after she had set a new record.
“At long last, we achieved what we set out to do. The last few years were not easy as we made some mistakes. Luckily we can learn from it. The most important thing we have learned is the importance of indoor racing for Carina. Last year she did not do so at all. It led to her having quite an average season as a sprinter. In 2015 when she equalled the South African record running 11.06s, she also improved had improved her indoor time in the 60 metres to 7.19s. Earlier this season she twice improved the South African indoor-record setting times of 7.10s and 7.09s, and now she ran 11.03s in the 100m,” said Schopf.
He confidently predicts it is now only a question of time before the local star will dip under 11 seconds in the 100 metres.
For free breaking and community news, visit Rekord’s websites:
For more news and interesting articles, like Rekord on Facebook, follow us on Twitter or Instagram.

