Athletics News

Georgia Bell: “I’ve got nothing to lose in the sport”

Georgia Bell: “I’ve got nothing to lose in the sport”

The Brit’s 2024 season included a national 1500m record and Olympic bronze medal in Paris

Georgia Bell started off her year sending emails to meet directors, in the hope she’d be able to showcase her value in a fast field.

By the end of it – her 27th race of the season – she completed the 800m/1500m double at the Diamond League final in Brussels.

Over the course of the campaign Bell became UK indoor and outdoor 1500m champion, secured a European silver medal and then claimed Olympic bronze in a British record of 3:52.61.

Now an established runner in both the 800m and 1500m – Bell is also fourth on the UK all-time list over two laps – it wasn’t a surprise to see the Brit double up in her final event of the season in the Belgian capital.

The 30-year-old clocked 1:57.94 in the 800m to finish second behind world champion Mary Moraa and then ran 3:58.95 a day later in the 1500m.

Speaking to AW at Memorial Van Damme, Bell couldn’t quite believe the season she had.

Georgia Bell in 2008 (Mark Shearman)

“It’s just been absolutely crazy,” she said. I’m so proud of the season and there’s so much work to get to this point. It’s not even about the results but just getting into Diamond Leagues. I didn’t even have an agent or brand that was sponsoring me. What looks like an overnight success has been years in the making and that includes the political business of hustling to get into meets.

“With every step that I’ve taken the goalposts have changed. You always get told that your best years of being an athlete are in your young 20s. So I thought that getting back into it later in lie would mean that it’d be impossible to run faster, especially over the shorter distances like the 800m. Now I’m in it I don’t think that is true.”

Her tale is one of extraordinary perseverance, self-belief and trusting those who believe in the bigger picture.

A prodigious youngster, Bell was English Schools 800m champion in 2008 and the future looked bright.

However, injuries during her time at the University of California caused her to lose passion for the sport.

Inspired by the Tokyo Olympics, she decided to give running another chance and a 16:14 parkrun two years ago proved to Bell that she had unfinished business within the sport.

As a result, she phoned up her old coach Trevor Painter and the rest is history.

Georgia Bell (Getty)

Painter coaches the M11 Track Club alongside wife Jenny Meadows and the pair helped Keely Hodgkinson become Olympic 800m champion, Bell claim the…

CLICK HERE to Read the Full Original Article at AW…