Athletics News

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone has fashioned a way to bend athletics to suit herself, and it’s working!

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone has fashioned a way to bend athletics to suit herself, and it’s working!

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone has fashioned a way to bend athletics to suit herself, and it’s working!

 

Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone last ran in the women’s 400m Hurdles on August 8th, 2022. Almost two years later, the world record holder in the event decided she was going to break the duck by running her first race in her signature event at a meet in downtown Atlanta—The HBCU Classic at the Edwin Moses Track. In between two Diamond League meets in Oslo and Stockholm, she chose to meet the Olympic Standard at a track at Morehouse College.

 That in itself tells you all you need to know about McLaughlin-Levrone. Quality over quantity. Maybe a large chunk of the decision on where she races is up to her coach- Bobby Kersee, but you can’t help but see the strategy behind every time she competes. On and off the track, she finds a way to control the crowd, and here wasn’t different. Morehouse College isn’t used to this kind of numbers in the stands, but people churned out in their droves just to see this maverick of a human race. Her race was the main course on the menu.

Sydney McLaughlin and her family,
USATF Outdoor Track and Field Championships held at Hayward Field, University of Oregon, June 23-26, 2022, photo by Kevin Morris

It’s already a fact that McLaughlin-Levrone is a phenomenon. The athletics world is in thrall to her. Quiet and unassuming, her superstar status exudes the fact that she doesn’t even compete in a blue riband event, yet people will pay top dollar to watch her race. Her allure and demeanor as a person and an athlete can be rarely matched on the grid and, no doubt, she will be the star attraction in Paris.

Here in Atlanta, though, McLaughlin-Levrone was long gone after the second hurdle, and as she has been used to for most of her career, running alone can even be more of a difficult task in front of a crowd who is used to cheering her on from the get-go. “I’m used to the expectation and the pressure; I just try to use it to motivate me and get me to run fast.”

Sydney McLaughlin, 400m hurdles, just prior to the final, photo by Kevin Morris

As she approached the home straight, a wider lead had built up. It was her against the clock. The cheers got louder, and a standing ovation had already begun to grow. It was as if the clock stood still while all this was happening. Regardless, she returned a time of 52.70s to take the win. This is the fastest time in the world, a full second better than the next-best runner, Russell Clayton,…

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