#IOLYMPICS - Tannie Ans - the woman behind Wayde’s success

Wayde Van Niekerk's and his coach Ans Botha during the 2016 Rio Olympic Games Athletics Events media briefing at the Athletes Village Plaza in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on 15 August 2016 ©Gavin Barker/BackpagePix

Wayde Van Niekerk's and his coach Ans Botha during the 2016 Rio Olympic Games Athletics Events media briefing at the Athletes Village Plaza in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on 15 August 2016 ©Gavin Barker/BackpagePix

Published Aug 16, 2016

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Wayde van Niekerk was a superstar of athletics even before he broke Michael Johnson’s 400 metres world record in a jaw dropping 43.03 seconds on Sunday.

He was already the first man to go sub-10sec for 100m, sub-20sec for 200m and sub-44sec for 400m, a feat he completed in March.

But drawn in lane eight after a poor semi-final, the odds were stacked against the South African. Not since 1924 and Eric Liddell — immortalised in the film Chariots of Fire — had anyone won an Olympic 400m title from that position. Perhaps it should not have been such a surprise.

Van Niekerk has been defying expectations since he was born, 11 weeks prematurely, a bag of skin and bone weighing less than a bag of sugar and barely breathing.

Doctors at Cape Town’s Groote Schuur hospital warned his mother, Odessa, he could be disabled. He spent several weeks in an incubator but grew into an ordinary little boy with exceptional sprinting talent.

Now, aged 24, not much about him yells top athlete. Slender and softly spoken, he is coached by Ans Botha, a 74-year-old with four great grandchildren, who has been coaching since the 1960s.

Silver haired and bespectacled, Botha may look like a school headmistress but she has proved herself to be something of a genius, helping Van Niekerk drop his personal best by an incredible four seconds since she became his coach in 2012.

‘I have such a big responsibility to get this athlete to develop to his full potential,’ she said. ‘Also, I need to try my best not to do something that might break him.’

After breaking Johnson’s record, which had stood since August 1999, Van Niekerk paid tribute to Botha, or Tannie (Auntie) Ans, as she is affectionally known. At home in South Africa, his former primary school teacher Ashley Field could not believe what he had witnessed.

‘I knew he had a big run in him but no idea he was about to blow the whole world away,’ said Field, who coached Van Niekerk from the age of six to 12. ‘It’s mind-boggling to think he’s broken Michael Johnson’s record.

‘I knew he was special when he was schools champion at 10 but never imagined he’d be world, Olympic champion and world record holder.

Van Niekerk’s mother, Odessa Swarts, was a brilliant sprinter but as a black woman in apartheid South Africa chose to compete in non-racial, anti-apartheid sport for the South African Council on Sport.

‘They did sport as a protest,’ Field told Sportsmail. ‘She was never allowed to compete internationally and they weren’t given any recognition from the government. But she was a superb runner and her son is doing her and the whole country very proud now.’ – Daily Mail

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