Van Vuuren is only the 4th SA long jumper to medal at the Commonwealth Games
After disappointment at the recent world athletics championships, a local long jump athlete finally showed his potential when he won the bronze medal at the Commonwealth Games.
Jovan van Vuuren did something last week in Birmingham that few other South African long jumpers have been able to do – winning a medal at a Commonwealth Games.
The local upcoming star from TuksAthletics won bronze, jumping 8.03 metres. LaQuan Nairn from the Bahamas won gold with an 8.08-metre effort. India’s Murali Sreeshankar finished second on a countdown jumping the same distance.
Van Vuuren jumped 8.06 metres with his second attempt. For a few minutes, he was a gold medal contender. But then Nairn jumped 8.08 metres with his very next jump. Sreeshankar did so with his fifth attempt.
The Tuks Masters student did not allowed himself to be disappointed.
“It is the beauty of long jumping. You could be in the lead, but it means nothing until the last jump. You could lose the gold or any medal in the dying seconds. It makes my sport so exciting and is why I am passionate about what I do,” he explained after the event.
According to Van Vuuren, his hamstring started to act up midway through the competition, but there was no way that he was not going to go down without a fight. With his last attempts, it was a case of grin and bore it.
“To win bronze at the Commonwealth Games is the breakthrough I have hoped for. I know now that I can hold my own against the world’s best if I remain calm and only focus on what needs to be done. What makes this memorable is that it was the first time I competed at the Commonwealth Games,” he remarked.
It is only the third time since 1994 that a South African long jumper has medalled at the Commonwealth Games. In 2014 in Glasgow, Zarck Visser won silver and Rushwahl Samaai bronze. Four years later, at the Gold Coast Games, Luvo Manyonga was victorious, with Samaai again finishing third.
Van Vuuren describes his season as a “roller coaster”.
“‘I did some excellent jumps. Being able to consistently jump further than eight metres has done wonders for my confidence,” he said.
The Tuks athlete has done so every time he competed locally. A definite highlight was his 8.16-metre effort during the Gauteng North Champs. It ranks him seventh on South Africa’s all-time list for best performances. Internationally his 8.16 metres ranks as one of the 15th best distances for the season. Van Vuuren went on to win the South African title as well.
Van Vuuren credits his World Championships debut in Oregon, the USA, as the eye-opener he needed.
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