After a four-leg flight and a pair of three-hour layovers that took 22
hours, one could forgive Bershawn Jackson for losing track of time after
his race at the Golden Spike Grand Prix in Ostrava, Czech Republic last
week. "I just competed yesterday at the Prefontaine in Eugene, so I just wanted
to get the best performance I could," the 400m hurdles world champion
said on Tuesday night after his 48.76 win in the eastern Czech city's
evening chill. The Prefontaine Classic was of course the previous
Sunday afternoon, but the only time that ultimately mattered was his 21/
100s of a second victory margin over Commonwealth champion Louis
Van Zyl.
Whenever one speaks with the affable 23-year-old, he'll speak plainly
about his simple but time-tested belief that hard work pays off. His
journey from Eugene that took him to airports in San Francisco, Munich
and Vienna before he reached Ostrava where a bath and masseuse
were awaiting him, just seems par for the course for the athlete now
poised to become the event's dominant force.
"It inspired me to do it because people said I couldn't do it," said
Jackson of his Ostrava itinerary. "People kept telling me it was 'Mission
Impossible,' but I feel like nothing's impossible when you put your mind
to it." He was the only athlete competing in Eugene who kept his
appointment in Ostrava.
"I was very tired before the race, and it was very cold, and it was cold in
Eugene. I just wanted to stay close to everybody and have a strong kick
coming home. And that's what I basically did. I'm very pleased. I didn't
think I was going to run that good. I though I was going to run 49 high, or
50 point. But I'm very determined."
In late April, the Miami native opened his season with a dominating
48.34 win at the Kansas Relays, his quickest season's debut ever. He
followed up with a 47.60 win in Osaka on May 6, still the fastest
performance of the year. He admitted the performance was a surprise.
"I didn't think I could [break 48 seconds] so early. I knew I was in shape
and I knew I was ready for it, but didn't think it would come so early."
He followed up with wins in Doha, Eugene and Ostrava, and again last
night in Turin (48.73) to remain undefeated in six races this spring while
extending his unbeaten streak to 13 finals. His last loss came at last
year's national championships, when he finished runner-up to Kerron
Clement's 47.24, last year's fastest performance. Jackson, who
produced his personal best of 47.30 to claim the world title on a rain-
soaked track in Helsinki last summer, will now return home to prepare
for the upcoming U.S. championships.
His stated goals for the rest of the season are as seemingly simple as
his work ethic: "Just to stay consistent and keep winning, and keep
proving to the world that I'm one of the best hurdlers in the world."
Not particularly complicated too is the method with which he
approaches his discipline. The world's best full-lap hurdlers strive to
achieve and perfect a certain stride pattern between hurdles. Jackson
admits that he doesn't even know what his pattern is.
"In training we work on keeping consistent and keeping our rhythm
going. I've got a pretty good rhythm," he explains. "I just go out and
compete, go out and run, and whatever happens, happens. I've done
well at doing it so far, so I'm not going to change it."