Modern Athlete Magazine Issue 121, August 2019 | Page 40

OUT OF THE By BOX Norrie Williamson BUILDINGS WITH ATHLETIC ATTITUDE A recent trip to Dubai brought to mind the attitude of a successful athlete, and it was inspired by the world’s tallest buildings! to be at competitions that would take him a step towards the next goal. Like a spiral, there was no eventual goal, simply an ambition to keep climbing until energy, age or talent was exceeded. Each step was a planned progression towards improving the current ability, and testing the way to touch the unachievable… Perfection! That is an ever-increasing standard, just as the 100m World Record will always remain an ever decreasing time! Planning and Focus Meanwhile, developers in nearby Saudi Arabia are well on the way to knocking the Burj (828m) off its pedestal as the tallest building with their Jeddah Tower, which is due to open in 2020. Originally planned to stand a mile (1610m) high, it has subsequently been announced that it will be the first building that will pass (at least) the 1000m mark. The battle lines have been drawn, and it is no surprise that the Dubai Creek Tower is planned to be even taller than the Jeddah Tower. Interestingly, the exact height of this new Tower is yet to be announced, and will likely be a well-guarded secret until the Jeddah Tower is completed. Only then, I presume, will The Tower, as the new Dubai pinnacle is to be known, secure its final additional metres to maintain the record and title in Dubai! Building for Success What has this to do with athletics attitude? Everything, because this is actually a magnificent example of the requirements for athletic success. Buildings take years to plan and construct. The foundation of The Tower was laid by Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum at Dubai Creek Harbour in October 2016, and will take at least another year to complete. Similarly, athletes cannot expect to achieve greatness overnight, nor indeed in just a year. Performance is developed and evolved over the years, and built on strong foundations that allow the athlete to reach the highest potential peak. As with any construction, more time has to be spent on creating and planning the foundation, and when that is complete, the structure above tends to go up considerably faster. That said, it is the size of the foundation that determines how high the performance/structure can be. Although in public terms, Usain Bolt came to prominence at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, some already saw the initial indications of greatness in 2002 at the World Youth Championships, when he was aged 15. However, even that was founded on his talent in cricket and soccer at high school. His Beijing Olympics came out of the experience of a silver medal in the 2007 World Championships, and those Beijing records provided the lessons for the records at the Berlin World Championships in 2009. Each level became the platform for the next level, and another, and another. At no stage, even when the best (tallest) in the world, was that enough for Bolt. The Jamaican always strove to be even better. There were many challengers, but each time he focused on what was important to maintain being the best. Focus was key: It was not a case of doing events or competitions that sounded good, but more a case of planning and negotiating ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Norrie has represented Scotland, Great Britain and South Africa in ultra-distance running and triathlon, and he is an IAAF-accredited coach and course measurer. You can read more from him at www.coachnorrie.co.za. 40 ISSUE 121 AUGUST 2019 / www.modernathlete.co.za The competition to be tallest also reminds us that when we are going for a win, the target can move, and what you require for success one day may be different and harder the next. Therefore, plans need to remain flexible enough to be changed or redirected as we proceed. But that is not all: As we build there are always unforeseen complications and challenges. Sometimes these make it impossible to do as initially planned, and another solution or target is required. The same is true of the athlete who sustains an injury - something that Bolt experienced, but it never deterred him. Hard as it may be, the focus must remain on the goal... it’s just that the method or speed of progress may be slower. W alking through the Dubai Mall, in the shadow of the world’s (current) tallest building, the Burj Khalifa, I came across a massive model of the Dubai Creek Tower, whose initial foundation construction has been done. The model literally touches the roof, and people were taking photos and videos of what is currently only a vision, but whose upper structure is on its way to reality. Seeing that Dubai Creek model, and the awe and interest of those in the mall, reminded me that as athletes and coaches, we need to plan and prepare if we want to get there! The model reminds us that greatness commences as a thought, begins on paper with a calculated plan, becomes an image whose detail increases in a structured and logical progression, slowly converts into something tangible (such as a model), and then takes time to be turned into a reality, building from the foundation up.