Michael Johnson sees where the gains can be made by Rhasidat ...

3 Aug 2024

He has walked in their shoes, climbed to the top step of the Olympic rostrum. He’s set world records, won a slew of world titles and, in his athletic afterlife, reinvented himself as the sport’s most sought-after pundit.

Rhasidat Adeleke - Figure 1
Photo Irish Examiner

In short, Michael Johnson knows of what he speaks.

Over the next eight days he’ll be studying, analysing, commenting on the action in the Stade de France for the BBC, his technical knowledge dripping with unrivalled insights. Given his knowledge of the world’s best sprinters, he’s long tracked the rise of Rhasidat Adeleke. What does he think of her chances?

“What I’d say to the Irish fans, who I know are super excited about Rhasidat, is that she could win the Olympic gold medal here, that’s a possibility,” he says. “She could medal here, that’s a possibility, and she could be out of the medals. All three of those are all real possibilities.” 

Johnson has known Adeleke’s coach, Edrick Floreal, since their days competing in the NCAA and says he’s a “fantastic coach”. In March last year, Johnson tweeted a video of Adeleke at the NCAA Indoors and wrote: “Look out when she learns to use those arms. She’s carrying them instead using them to drive the legs. The difference is significant over 400. Helps increase speed and reduce fatigue.” 

Look out when she learns to use those arms. She’s carrying them instead using them to drive the legs. The difference is significant over 400. Helps increase speed and reduce fatigue. https://t.co/9iGfp6XXRn

— Michael Johnson (@MJGold) March 11, 2023

What does he make of her technique now?

“She’s certainly improved,” he says. “I’ve read some of what coach Flo has said. He’s the coach for a reason and I’m not a coach for a reason, so I wouldn’t be able to say how close she is to the finished product. It sounds like she’s still not where he wants her to be, which is good because she’s a young athlete. That’s another reason why there’s a bright future ahead.” 

One area Adeleke and Floreal have sometimes disagreed is how fast she should run the first half of the 400m, with Floreal asking her to reach 200m in 23.0 in the European final in June but Adeleke well off that with a split of 23.69. She nonetheless smashed the Irish record, finishing in 49.07 to win silver. What does Johnson feel is Adeleke’s optimal race strategy?

“I’d absolutely agree with Edrick: she’s gotta get out quicker. When you have that kind of speed, when speed is your weapon, you have to use it because you’re not going to be able to match them from a strength standpoint.” 

The athletes he’s speaking about are the three he thinks Adeleke has to beat: Nickisha Pryce of Jamaica, Natalia Kaczmarek of Poland and Marileidy Paulino of Dominican Republic. Adeleke has better 100m and 200m speed than all of them but an inferior personal best over 400m.

“The other three are all strength runners and you’ve got to use your weapon and for Rhasidat, that’s speed,” says Johnson. “There’s a few different ways you can run 23 seconds in the 200m. You can run it hard or run it relaxed, but when you have her kind of speed you can run it relaxed. That’s much easier said than done because relaxed doesn’t mean slow.

USE YOUR WEAPON: Michael Johnson believes Rhasidat Adeleke has the talent to win gold but needs to harness her speed which is her weapon. Picture: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile

“You’ve gotta get out quickly, get up to race pace as quickly as possible and then get into your relaxation. Once you get up to a speed, it doesn’t take that much to maintain that speed, but if you’re taking a very long time to build up to that speed, it’s taking more and more out of you.

Rhasidat Adeleke - Figure 2
Photo Irish Examiner

“That’s where the issue lies for her not running the first 200 quite as fast as Edrick wants her to. She feels like, ‘If I run that fast, it’s going to take a lot out of me and that’s going to take a toll on the back end.’ Every 400m runner knows that and you don’t want that. The key is to be able to run that fast without it taking a toll because you’re not running it tight; you’re running it relaxed.” 

Johnson competed at three Olympics, his medal chance scuppered in Barcelona 1992 by a bout of food poisoning. At the 1996 Games in Atlanta, he went in one of the Games’ poster boys with immense pressure to deliver gold in the 200m and 400m. He did, blasting a world record of 19.32 over 200m which stood for 12 years until Usain Bolt broke it at the Beijing Games. In the 400m he was equally peerless, setting an Olympic record of 43.49.

Read More

An Olympic final heaps nauseating pressure on participants, particularly in sprints where the margin for error is non-existent. What’s the key to handling that heat?

“You have to spend just as much time as an athlete figuring out how you manage pressure best so when you get to an event like this, where you are under this immense pressure, it’s not a surprise to you,” he says.

“The biggest mistake athletes make when they find themselves in a high-pressure situation (is) never having thought about how to deal with that pressure,” he says. “If they haven’t worked on it the tendency then is to try ignore it and pretend it’s not there, but it is. 

"It will remind you at every corner. This is the Olympic Games, the thing you dreamed about as a kid, the thing you want most. It’s here and you are either going to succeed or fail.” 

That high-risk, high-reward setup is what makes it such riveting entertainment. But Johnson has long felt the singular focus on major championships each summer is leading to a declining fanbase in athletics given few casual sports fans tune into the Diamond.

And so he decided to do something about it.

Earlier this year he launched Grand Slam Track, a professional league that will start in April next year, featuring four meetings, each three days long, where the focus is on pitting the best against the best. The prize money is far above that of the Diamond League, with Johnson securing $30 million in investment to get it off the ground. In recent months he announced the first two of 48 contracted athletes who will compete at every event: US superstar Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone and 1500m world champion Josh Kerr.

What fuelled him to start the league?

“Put simply, you’ll see millions of people watching Paris, great track and field, the best of the best competing head to head,” he says. “High stakes and it’s not about times. It’s not about this being a stepping stone to something else. It’s just about winning.

“People enjoy that and that’s why they watch but we don’t get to see this on a regular basis. It’s something like 2.5 billion people around the world who either watch track or are running and there’s nothing really for them. 

"If you ask those people: ‘Hey, if this was available to you, what you just saw at the Paris Olympics, on a regular basis, would you watch?’ And they would say yeah. And then you say, ‘Well, did you know that it actually does exist?’ And they say, ‘No, where would I find that?’ And they’re not finding it because you don’t have the best of the best athletes competing against each other on a regular basis. You can’t build a fanbase with one significant competition a year but outside that, you’ve got nothing.” 

The investment in Grand Slam Track has been substantial, but is it sustainable?

“It’s a great question,” he says. “Look, I’ve been an investor and entrepreneur since I finished my career as an athlete and I’ve been very fortunate to have a few successful ventures. None of those have ever been successful or profitable in year one.

“Investors don’t invest to make a 10 per cent profit in year one or two. We invest to get a 4-X, 5-X, 10-X return in 10, 15 years. UFC took 20 years to become what it is. For the first 15 years they were losing money so you’d have to ask yourself: How does an organisation that’s losing money continue to operate and lose money for 15 years? It’s because investors continue to put money into that organisation. Why does the investor put money into a company that’s losing money? Because that company or organisation is growing their customer base.

“For us, the most important thing is not to make money in the first few years. We’re going to continue to pour money into this sport. The most important thing we have to do is grow the fanbase and as long as we do that, we’re on track to be successful.” 

Turning the focus back to Paris, Johnson is most looking forward to the men’s 100m.

“It’s always known historically as the most popular event in track and field but I haven’t said it’s the event I’m most looking forward to for 16 years,” he says. “The standard wasn’t very high at the last Olympics. The women’s 100m was way better. The three before that I always knew who was going to win – the Bolt era. This 100m, there’s 10 people who could win medals and six have a chance to win gold.” 

So, who takes it?

“No,” he laughs. “Typically, I can give you an answer and I’d be right 60 per cent of the time. This time I can’t even give you an answer. It’s that open, and at a high level.” 

HAS WHAT IT TAKES: Michael Johnson believes Rhasidat Adeleke will win gold whether it be in Paris or the future. Picture: Jewel SAMAD / AFP/ Getty Images

And as for the women’s 400m? “The best thing about that race is I can’t tell you what we’re going to see,” he says. “You’ve got four or five people there, if not six, who can win it.” 

When it comes to Adeleke, Johnson believes her time will come. But given the strength and depth in her event, he can’t say if that’ll be in Paris.

“The one thing that is likely is that sometime over these next three years: she’s going to win a gold medal,” he says. “If it doesn’t happen here, it’ll probably happen at some point. She has that kind of talent.”

Read More
Read more
Similar news