Athletics News

Andrew Pozzi has retired… – runblogrun

Andrew Pozzi has retired... - runblogrun

Andrew Pozzi

Aged 32, Andrew Pozzi has announced his retirement from the sport.  In 2018, he was the world indoor champion at 60m (having previously finished 4th twice). In 2017, he won the European Indoor title.  In 2020, he won all seven indoor races – 17 indoor and outdoor races, 14 wins, and was second in two others – but COVID led to the cancellation of the World Indoors and the postponement of the Olympics. He was seventh in the Tokyo Olympics, his third Olympics, and took bronze in the 2022 Commonwealth Games. His PR was 13.14 and 7.43 indoors. Sadly, his was a career blighted by injuries.

Andrew Pozzi, Rio 2016, photo by Team GB

In announcing his retirement, he said: “After missing the 2023 season with a serious injury, I have battled exceptionally hard to return to the world stage and earn my place at what would have been my 4th Olympic Games. In difficult circumstances, I’m extremely proud of the progress that I’ve made this season. Unfortunately, as I continued to build and improve upon my 13.23, it gave way in training with another serious ankle fracture. Injury has always been my greatest competitor over the last 17 years. While my history has been littered with serious difficulty, I am most proud of the resilience I have shown and the achievements I have amassed following such heartbreaks. I’ve decided that now is the right time to retire from professional athletics. It has been my greatest honor to live out the dreams of my 10-year-old self”.

Andrew Pozzi, Tokyo 2024, photo by Team GB

 

I saw him win the European Indoor title in Belgrade in 2017 and spoke to him afterward as he talked about winning his first major medal:  “Before I even took my first stride, I saw that everyone had got out ahead, so my heart stopped, but my head kicked into overdrive. I fought all the way – it wasn’t pretty and messy, but from a poor start, I thought I fought through quite well.”

“Winning is everything – it’s just been so long. Obviously, my first senior team was in 2012, so it’s five years now, and I haven’t really moved on from that because I just couldn’t put the work in; I’ve always come to championships with really minimal work and knowing that I needed to find something when I got there – this is the first time I’ve come into one having done all of the work.”

2022 British Champs, photo by Getty for British Athletics

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