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Scintillating athletics meet to take place at Germiston Stadium

Champions in the making will compete at the Sizwe Medical Fund and 3SixtyLife ASA Senior Track and Field and Combined Events Championships.

Germiston Stadium will play host to the Sizwe Medical Fund and 3SixtyLife Athletics South Africa (ASA) Senior Track and Field and Combined Events Championships from April 25 to 27.

This year the national championships have a particular meaning, as any athlete who wants to represent the country at the IAAF World Athletics Championships in Doha, Qatar, from September 28 to October 6, needs to be at the national showpiece.

The Sizwe Medical Fund and 3SixtyLife ASA Senior Track and Field and Combined Events Championships have a history of delivering scintillating duels from the heydays of Hezekiel Sepeng, Hendrick Ramaala and Llewellyn Herbert in the late ’90s to the more recent match-ups of Akani Simbine, Wayde van Niekerk and Clarence Munyai in the sprints.

Not forgetting the regal and majestic striding of Caster Semenya and the tussle of long jumpers Luvo Manyonga and Ruswahl Samaai.

The event is also expected to be the final time South Africans will be able to witness these stars in action on home soil.

The current crop of athletes love to put on a show, so audiences can expect to be wowed.

Sepeng started his journey to stardom at the 1996 SA Championships in Cape Town when he won the national 800m.

He would go on that year to win the silver medal at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta.

Three years later, in one of the closest finishes in an 800m race, Sepeng was out dipped on the line by then world record holder Wilson Kipketer.

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“When I won that title in 1996, it set me on my international career,” said Sepeng, who is now the ASA high-performance manager.

“That is why the Sizwe Medical Fund and 3SixtyLife ASA Senior Track and Field and Combined Events Championships will always be important to me.

“The national championships are important, not only as a statement of intent by our athletes about their goals for Doha, but also because this is where we show the country how strong South Africa is as an athletics nation.

“This is also where the next generation gets to compete against our current stars, which will hopefully inspire them to achieve great things.”

In 1997 Marius Corbett was crowned World Javelin Champion.

He secured his selection to the team at the national championships, where he won his first national title.

Corbett would go on to win the world title in 1997 and the Commonwealth title in 1998.

Athletes are set to wow audiences at the Sizwe Medical Fund and 3SixtyLife ASA Senior Track and Field and Combined Events Championships from April 25 to 27. Photo: Tobias Ginsberg

Semenya shot to fame after securing her place on the team that went to the African Championships and then the World Championships in 2009 after winning the national title.

This was also the year Semenya won her first world title.

Van Niekerk won his first national 400m title in 2013 and showed glimpses of the incredible talent he was to become by going on to win the world student title that year.

In 2015 he became world champion and a year later Olympic champion and world-record holder.

Simbine won his first national 100m title in 2015, a year later he would make history and finish fifth in the Olympic 100m final.

Few will forget the first time they saw Manyonga put his incredible leaping talents on display.

A World Junior Champion in 2010, in 2016 Manyonga brought home the silver medal from the Olympic Games in Rio.

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The examples of South Africa’s best athletes starting their careers at the national championships are endless and with the 2019 World Athletics Championships in Doha the big target for the athletes, the upcoming championships in Germiston will take on significant weight as this will be an important part of their team selection.

“All athletes who want to compete at the IAAF World Championships in Doha this year have to compete at the national championships.

“It is part of the selection policy of ASA,” said Aleck Skhosana, ASA president.

Sporting codes to be expected over the three-day event include, hurdles, shot put, pole vault, javelin throw, high jump, long jump, hammer throw, triple jump, decathlon, 1 500m, 100m, 200m, 400m, 5 000m, 10 000m, 800m, 3 000m steeplechase, 20km walk, 4 x 100m relay and 4 x 400m relay.

For the full programme of events visit the ASA website at www.athletics.org.za.

 

Have a story?

Contact the newsroom by emailing: Melissa Hart (Editor) germistoncitynews@caxton.co.za or Leigh Hodgson (News Editor) leighh@caxton.co.za or Kgotsofalang Mashilo (journalist) kgotsofalangm@caxton.co.za

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