Twenty athletes set to light up the Tokyo 2020 Olympics
Dina Asher-Smith
Great Britain
Athletics, 100m, 200m, 4x100m
Seb Coe, who knows a thing or two about winning Olympic titles, believes Asher-Smith will be Team GB’s “poster girl” in Tokyo. Given her seamless upward trajectory and personality it would take a brave person to argue with his lordship. Last autumn the 24-year-old won three world championship medals, including the 200m title, making her the greatest British female sprinter in history. Next year she will have live chances of Olympic gold in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay – although Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, Shaunae Miller-Uibo and the USA 4x100m team will have a thing or two (or three) to say about that. Sean Ingle
Kelsey-Lee Barber
Australia
Athletics, Javelin
Barber’s seasonal best chart over the past decade shows almost linear improvement. The 28-year-old javelin thrower finished 20th at the 2015 world championships, 10th two years later and upset a talented field last September to clinch gold. Barber is no stranger to high-pressure competition, having won medals at consecutive Commonwealth Games and competed in Rio, but Tokyo will be her first outing as the athlete to beat. Following several retirements, Barber and the high-jumper Brandon Starc are Australia’s only established medal hopes in track and field. Kieran Pender
Simone Biles
USA
Gymnastics
The 22-year-old American nonpareil, who affirmed her presumptive status as the greatest gymnast ever with four gold medals in seven days in Rio, has continued to rewrite the record books while somehow raising her level at the past two world championships. She will enter Tokyo as a runaway favourite to become the oldest woman in more than five decades to win the Olympic all-around title, the sport’s most coveted prize, and the first repeat champion since Vera Caslavska did it for the former Czechoslovakia in 1968. As ever, her only competition is herself. Bryan Armen Graham
Sky Brown
Great Britain
Skateboarding
If Brown qualifies for Tokyo – and she is almost a shoo-in – she will be only 12 years and 15 days on the opening day of skateboarding, eclipsing the swimmer Margery Hinton to become the youngest British athlete to ever compete at an Olympics. Brown, who was born in Japan to an English father and Japanese mother, is improving at such a rate it is impossible to put limits on where she might finish – in September she was third in the São Paulo Park World Championships. SI
Christian Coleman
USA
Athletics, 100m
The soft-spoken 23-year-old from Atlanta has, over the past three seasons, established himself as the warm favourite to succeed Usain Bolt as the Olympic 100m champion, most recently in September when he surged to the world title in a personal-best time of 9.76sec that made him the sixth-fastest man in history. His reputation took a hit when the US Anti-Doping Agency charged him with three whereabouts failures in a 12-month period – an offence that carries a potential two-year ban – but a defiant Coleman has kept on course for a Tokyo coronation after the case was dropped. BAG
Rohan Dennis
Australia
Road Cycling
A mercurial cyclist specialising in the race against the clock, Dennis, 29, raised eyebrows when he walked out on his WorldTour team Bahrain Merida midway through the Tour de France. While he has not ridden for them since, and is currently in a contractual dispute, that did not stop Dennis from defending his world time trial crown in September. Having recently signed with Ineos, who seem agreeable to Dennis focusing on the Olympics, the South Australian is a strong favourite for time trial gold. KP
Caeleb Dressel
USA
Swimming
The 23-year-old from Florida has been cast as the heir to Michael Phelps as the face of swimming in the US and, potentially, the world. The freestyle, breaststroke and butterfly sprint specialist equalled Phelps’s world championships record with seven gold medals in Budapest two years ago, followed by six golds and two silvers at last year’s worlds in Gwangju. Dressel has played down suggestions he would add the 4x200m free relay to his Tokyo schedule – and make a run at Phelps’s epochal eight-gold haul from Beijing 2008 – but even so seven golds remain in his sights. BAG
Janja Garnbret
Slovenia
Sport climbing
Climbing will be one of the starry new attractions at Tokyo 2020 – and Garnbret is expected to shine brightest of all. The 20-year-old has been described as a “reincarnated spider monkey” because of her ability to scale walls and in 2019 she become the first athlete to win every bouldering World Cup event in a season. She won the world titles in bouldering and combined climbing in 2018 and 2019 and is also rapidly improving in her weakest discipline, speed climbing, making her heavy favourite for Olympic gold. SI
Stephanie Gilmore
Australia
Surfing
A seven-times world champion, the surfer from Tweed Heads will represent Australia alongside her compatriot Sally Fitzgibbons in the sport’s Olympic debut. The perennially consistent Gilmore, 31, won the 2018 World Surf League and finished fourth last year. If she can overcome the likes of Fitzgibbons and the Hawaiian Carissa Moore, the natural-footer will have a real shot at gold. It would be a fitting triumph, given Gilmore and her country’s consistent surfing success over the past decade. KP
Nyjah Huston
USA
Skateboarding
Skateboarding debuts as a medal event in Tokyo and the three-times world champion from Laguna Beach is widely regarded as the gold medal favourite in men’s street. The 25-year-old is a long-established star in the skate world, having amassed more than 3.7 million Instagram followers, a signature Nike shoe and more prize money than any other skateboarder in history since making his X Games debut aged 11. Huston will headline a US team that includes another gold medal favorite in Hawaii’s Heimana Reynolds, the reigning world champion in the park discipline. BAG
Laura Kenny
Great Britain
Cycling
Kenny is already Britain’s most successful female Olympian with four gold medals across London 2012 and Rio 2016. British Cycling insiders say that three more could arrive in Tokyo in the team pursuit, omnium and, if selected, madison. Seven Olympic golds would take Kenny to the top of the Team GB medal pantheon, above her fellow track cyclists Sir Chris Hoy and her husband Jason, who both have six golds and a silver. However, with Jason also gunning for more glory in Tokyo it could yet be Kenny v Kenny for the title of the top Team GB athlete in history. SI
Mariya Lasitskene
Russia/Neutral athlete
Athletics, high jump
The extraordinary high jumper was a piping hot favourite for gold at the Rio 2016 Olympics – only to be barred from competition when the IAAF, track and field’s governing body, banned all Russians from the Games. She will go to Tokyo desperate to right that wrong, even if she ends up wearing the vest of a neutral athlete given Russia’s recent four-year ban. Don’t bet against it either, given Lasitskene has won an unprecedented three high jump world championship titles in 2015, 2017 and 2019. SI
Eliza McCartney
New Zealand
Athletics, pole vault
McCartney, 23, rose to international prominence four years ago in Rio, claiming bronze as a teenager in her first major event. Having gone one better with a silver medal at the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games in 2018, the sky appeared to be the limit for the Auckland-born vaulter. A persistent achilles injury has hampered her last year, but having recently discovered the cause – a genetic disorder – there is hope she can overcome the problem and head to Tokyo fully fit and as one of New Zealand’s genuine gold medal contenders. KP
Pat McCormack
Great Britain
Boxing
Britain have won eight boxing medals in the past two Olympics, with Anthony Joshua, Luke Campbell and Nicola Adams all making the highest step of the podium before having decorated pro careers. Many expect McCormack, a classy light-welterweight who has won Commonwealth and European Games titles, to follow in their gold-laced footsteps. Last year he reached the final of the world championships, only to lose to the Russian Andrey Zamkovoy. But with question marks over Russia’s participation, he could go off as favourite in Tokyo. SI
Kylie Masse
Canada
Swimming
The 23-year-old from Ontario has won every major 100m backstroke race she has entered since capturing a surprise bronze at the distance as a teenager in Rio, becoming the first Canadian swimmer to win back-to-back world titles in the same event. Masse, who has been tipped to become her country’s first Olympic backstroke champion since Mark Tewksbury in 1992, will headline a Canadian team including Penny Oleksiak, Maggie MacNeil, Taylor Ruck and Sydney Pickrem that will enter Tokyo with medal chances up and down the programme. BAG
Shaunae Miller-Uibo
Bahamas
Athletics
Remember Michael Johnson winning 200m and 400m gold at Atlanta? Well, 24 years on, Miller-Uibo has a live chance of repeating Johnson’s extraordinary feat. Not only is she the reigning 400m Olympic champion, she was also the fastest over 200m in 2019 – beating Dina Asher-Smith easily when they met. However, the schedule might yet thwart her in Tokyo. As things stand she would have to run a 400m heat on the morning before trying to win gold in the 200m final in the evening. Yet don’t bet against it being Miller-Uibo time in 2020. SI
Naomi Osaka
Japan
Tennis
Osaka has had an up and down 2019 but she is still the reigning Australian Open champion and ranked No 3 in the world. And crucially, her decision in October to represent the country of her birth, Japan, rather than the US – a country where she has dual citizenship – means she will be one of the stories of the Games. “It is a special feeling to aim for the Olympics as a representative of Japan,” she said recently. “I think that playing with the pride of the country will make me feel more emotional.” SI
Teddy Riner
France
Judo
Japan might have invented judo, but no one has dominated the sport more than Big Teddy Riner. The 6ft 8in and 20st Frenchman not only has two Olympic gold medals in 2012 and 2016 to his name, along with a bronze in Beijing as a teenager in 2008, but has won a record 10 world titles. The last time he was beaten? September 2010. If the Frenchman takes gold again he will join Tadahiro Nomura on three Olympic titles – and the ominous news for his rivals is that he intends he continue until Paris 2024. SI
Duncan Scott
Great Britain
Swimming
Of course Adam Peaty will be the fulcrum of Team GB in the pool, having blasted to 100m breaststroke gold – and followed it up with 4x100m medley silver – in Rio. But don’t forget Scott. Not only did he anchor Britain to 4x100m relay gold at last year’s world championships and win bronze in the 200m freestyle, he also made global headlines by refusing to shake handswith the controversial Chinese swimmer Sun Yang. If Yang survives his doping case, the rematch in Tokyo will be tasty. SI
Ariarne Titmus
Australia
Swimming
Australian swimming has been in the doldrums, but the wonderkid Titmus is determined to propel them back up the medal table in Tokyo. The teenager spectacularly beat Katie Ledecky in the 400m freestyle at the world championships in 2019, in an event in which the American superstar had been undefeated since 2012. The rematch should be thrilling, and Titmus is also a strong contender in the 200m, 800m and relays. After winning three golds and a silver at the 2018 Commonwealth Games, the Tasmanian will hope for an even more bountiful haul. KP
Farewell to the 2010s…
… will the 2020s offer more hope? This has been a turbulent decade across the world – protest, austerity, populism, mass migration. The Guardian has been in every corner of the globe, reporting with tenacity, rigour and authority on the most critical events of our lifetimes. At a time when factual information is both scarcer and more essential than ever, we believe that each of us deserves access to accurate reporting with integrity at its heart.
We have upheld our editorial independence in the face of the disintegration of traditional media – with social platforms giving rise to misinformation, the seemingly unstoppable rise of big tech and independent voices being squashed by commercial ownership. The Guardian’s independence means we have the freedom to set our own agenda and express our own opinions. Our journalism is free from commercial and political bias – never influenced by billionaire owners or shareholders. This makes us different. It means we can challenge the powerful without fear and give a voice to those who would otherwise go unheard.
None of this would have been possible without our readers’ generosity – your financial support has meant we can keep investigating, disentangling and interrogating. It has protected our independence, which has never been so critical. We are very grateful.
You've read 197 articles in the last four months. More people than ever before are reading and supporting our journalism, in more than 180 countries around the world. And this is only possible because we made a different choice: to keep our reporting open for all, regardless of where they live or what they can afford to pay.
As we end 2019 and enter a new decade, we hope you will consider offering us your support. We need this so we can keep delivering quality journalism that’s open and independent. And that is here for the long term. Every reader contribution, however big or small, is so valuable.
Comments
Post a Comment