ZAGREB, Croatia -- After her winning two-meter leap at
yesterday's
Zagreb
Grand Prix, two-time World high jump champion Hestrie Cloete was
visibly
thrilled."It's a season's best for me, so I,m very pleased," said Cloete, who
scaled
1.98 in both Ostrava and Bergen earlier this month, winning the latter,
and
finishing second in the former. Here, she avenged a loss to two-time
World
Junior champion Blanka Vlasic on the Croatian's home turf. It was a
massive
clearance, perhaps worth 2.04, an estimate confirmed by the South
African's
coach.
"My coach told me my two-meter jump was very good. It felt quite
good."
Two of her three attempts at 2.02 were solid as well, boding well as her
Olympic campaign begins in earnest. But she's in no hurry to go higher.
"For higher heights, we can wait until later in the season. I want to be at
my top at the Olympic Games."
At the 2000 games in Sydney, she captured the silver medal behind
Yelena
Yelesina of Russia. Both cleared 2.01, but Cloete had a costly miss at
1.96.
Cloete has suggested in the past that this year may be her last, but
yesterday, the 25-year-old remained noncommittal. "That's a decision I
will
make in Monaco after the World Athletics Final," she said.
Cloete, last year's female IAAF-Athlete-Of-The-Year, earned more than
$323,000 in prize money alone in 2003, second only to Maria Mutola,
the sole
winner of the 2003 $1 million jackpot. On Friday, Cloete will compete in
the
Golden Gala Golden League meet in Rome, one of just six winners from
the
kick-off meet in Bergen, Norway competing who are eligible for the
jackpot
in 2004. Also competing will be another Russian, Yelena Slesarenko,
who has
a 2.04 outdoor season-pacing effort under her belt already. Slesarenko,
just 22, won the World Indoor championships title at Budapest in March.