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Walking the tightrope on the way to Tokyo

Dhe images from spring were not repeated. Carolin Schäfer seemed relaxed and relaxed when she packed her sports bag after her appearance at the Eintracht Frankfurt Summer Cup. The heptathlete had a pleasing 13.55 seconds in the hurdles sprint, 1.73 meters in the high jump and 13.64 meters in the shot put on the facility on Niederräder Hahnstrasse. It had made the European Championship third more exciting than expected. In the throwing discipline, she had only catapulted the four-kilogram metal sideways over the defined zone twice before the 29-year-old managed a valid attempt on Saturday. That did not change the fact that Schäfer passed the Olympic test before the Games in Tokyo that began this Friday.

“I’m really relieved,” said the sportswoman. Although the values ​​were correct in training, “great uncertainty” had accompanied their start. The athlete was urged not only to confirm to herself that she had the necessary form in time for her competition in the Japanese capital on August 4th and 5th to hold on to her goal: after World Championship silver in 2017 and European Championship bronze in 2018 the Fifth of Rio 2016 will also add Olympic precious metal to their collection.

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There had been doubts about it in the past few months. When the Eintracht track and field athlete entered a home competition at the beginning of May, she broke it off after two disciplines, seriously disappointed. Less than a week earlier, she had received her second vaccination against the Covid 19 pathogen. For the two-time German champion, the first felt like she had “gold injected into her veins” because she connected it with supposed security on her way to the season’s highlight, this time she felt severe aftereffects.

After a few days after the headache and body aches, the Frankfurt resident realized that she could no longer get up the stairs to her apartment on the third floor without any problems and that she was also straining other everyday routines. An exercise test on the treadmill showed high blood pressure values. In addition, her nervous system was “paralyzed”; she could no longer control her muscles as is necessary for her exercise program. Schäfer and her team of supervisors, accompanied by doctors, adapted the loads exactly to their respective daily form.

They found that it was possible to ask the body to do things like a powerful shot put from a standing position that didn’t work right away if the nerves and muscles involved were triggered beforehand. That is, activated with exercises, in this case medicine ball throwing. A tightrope walk began, which Schäfer described in retrospect as “one of the greatest challenges of my career”. She didn’t want to tick off her Tokyo dream, but neither wanted to damage her health in the long term. The training partner of decathlon world champion Niklas Kaul had to be convinced time and again by her surroundings at the Mainz location that there would be enough time. She kept in contact with the German Athletics Association to find out whether she would be proposed for an Olympic nomination at the all-round meetings in Götzis or Ratingen, despite the waiver of the required proof of performance.

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