Champion Rudisha exudes confidence, ready to respond to London calling

Source: Xinhua| 2017-07-28 17:17:43|Editor: Xiang Bo
Video PlayerClose

NAIROBI, July 28 (Xinhua) -- Five years ago, David Rudisha of Kenya arrived in London expectant of delivering something special at the Olympic Games. He left not only with a gold medal, but also a world record, which he still savours to date.

The 28 year-old Rudisha will Monday be among the first batch of Kenyan athletes heading to London for the World Championships and he hopes he will be able to weather the storm from a group of upcoming runners to retain his title.

To his critics, Rudisha's star has deemed with time and he is not the mercurial cut above athlete that he was five years ago when he cruised to a world record time of 1:40.91.

But a focused Rudisha has remained adamant saying he is satisfied with his final preparations for the World Championships.

This will be Rudisha's fourth appearance this season having lost in all the previous three appearances in Shanghai (China), Kingstone (Jamaica) and Ostrava (Czech Republic)

"My preparations are going on well. I'm happy with the training. I have been working on endurance, speed and some good track sessions just to make sure that I have everything balanced. There should be no fear about my preparedness," he said.

Indeed in 2015 at the Beijing World Championships, Rudisha had a very poor record coming to the competition. He had just recovered from a knee injury, which required surgery to rectify and had not strength to speed in the final straight. But he held his nerves and demolished his competitors to win the championships.

Kenya's men's 800m team will have Rudisha riding on wild card selection as Olympic and world champion, US-based Emmanuel Korir, Kipyegon Bett and Ferguson Rotich.

"I have a history that people tend to forget fast. Ever since I got injured in 2013 I have slowed down. Like last year I was in that kind of a form, just peaking, getting to the top slowly and now it's about making sure that by August I'm in my top form," said Rudisha.

"There is no need to panic. In my problems, I always have a way to find a solution. I will bounce back."

The London championships will tell if the reign of 800m King is over.

TOP STORIES
EDITOR’S CHOICE
MOST VIEWED
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011100001364807711