Hamburger Anzeiger - Norman looks to Worlds after another impressive 400m at trials

NYSE - LSE
RBGPF 4.03% 63.35 $
RIO 0.35% 66.582 $
SCS -2.2% 12.75 $
AZN -0.75% 76.93 $
CMSD 0.44% 24.788 $
NGG 0.46% 65.93 $
CMSC 0.24% 24.58 $
BTI -0.05% 35.461 $
GSK -1.67% 39.58 $
RYCEF 0% 6.9 $
RELX -0.59% 46.435 $
BCC -1.16% 140.76 $
BCE -0.35% 33.195 $
JRI 0.08% 13.23 $
VOD 0.11% 9.741 $
BP 0.68% 32.2 $
Norman looks to Worlds after another impressive 400m at trials
Norman looks to Worlds after another impressive 400m at trials / Photo: Steph Chambers - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

Norman looks to Worlds after another impressive 400m at trials

Michael Norman fired another World Championships warning shot on Saturday, posting a world-leading 43.56sec to win the 400m at the US trials and put Tokyo disappointment further behind him.

Text size:

Almost two months after winning the 400m at the Eugene Diamond League meeting in a meet record of 43.60, Norman returned to Hayward Field -- venue for next months World Championships -- and ran even faster.

"I'm kind of looking forward to going back to LA and fine-tuning this race and being even more prepared when Worlds comes around," the 24-year-old warned.

Norman insisted that his defeat at the Tokyo Games, where he went in as a gold medal favorite and faded to finish fifth with a time nearly a second outside his career best, was no longer a motivator for him even though it was devastating at the time.

"I'm just not really focusing on the past, more just moving forward and focusing on what I can control this year," he said.

Regrouping has meant going "back to the basics" he said, starting the 2022 season "with a very straightforward, straight-line mindset."

He's had a setback or two, including a back injury that cost him some training time.

But he's still been making steady progress on the track, his time in May shattering Michael Johnson's 22-year-old meet record.

Now he's gone faster, but Norman said the time was immaterial.

"It's just a number," he said. "It doesn't matter until world championships comes around the corner."

That may be so, but it's perhaps no coincidence that he's turned in two outstanding performances at Hayward Field, a beloved athletics venue in the United States which will see America host the outdoor Worlds for the first time.

It's another reason for Norman's rivals to beware.

"I guess I have a pretty good history at Eugene," he said. "I think I'll have a slight advantage."

P.Meier--HHA