De Grasse, who’s recovering from COVID-19, upstart women’s throwers among 10 to watch
Canadian sprint star Andre De Grasse has climbed the medal podium in every one of his individual Olympic and world championship races, but the 27-year-old from Markham, Ont., faces one of his stiffest challenges in Eugene, Ore. At the other end of the spectrum, Sarah Mitton (shot put) and Camryn Rogers (hammer throw) could become Canada’s first women to win world medals in their events.
Canada has 59 athletes, who’ve won 15 Olympic medals, at the world track and field championships which open Friday in the city known as “TrackTown USA.” The team’s goal is to top the six medals won at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Canada came home with five from the 2019 worlds in Doha, Qatar, and none in 2017 in London when a nasty norovirus ripped through the team.
Here are 10 athletes to watch:
Andre De Grasse (100, 200, 4×100-metre relay): De Grasse is a big-game player, producing podium results in all seven of his 100 and 200 races over two Olympics and two world championships. But he was slowed by a foot injury in the early season before finally rounding into form in early June, racing 10.05 to win in Oslo. Days later he contracted COVID-19 and hasn’t raced since.