Canada’s Lakatos lands 2nd silver medal at Para athletics worlds in Paris | CBC Sports
Canada’s Brent Lakatos is no stranger to the podium.
But even he may never have experienced a closer call than his latest silver medal, won in the men’s T54 1,500-metre wheelchair race at the Para athletics world championships in Paris on Friday.
Lakatos, who’s earned 10 career Paralympic medals, snuck into Friday’s final by one-hundredth of a second in Thursday’s heats, taking the final spot in the slower of the two qualifying races.
And so the Dorval, Que., native knew a change was necessary for the medal race. He said he had as many as nine different plans in mind.
“The plan that fell in was that I was in the pack and it was moving, so then the strategy was to attack with 500 metres to go,” he said. “And there was a headwind with 500 metres, so I thought this plan was especially good because most people aren’t going to want to get out in the headwind, so I’ll get the jump on them and I got lucky and it worked.”
WATCH | Lakatos surges to silver medal:
The mid-race decision landed Lakatos in second place, crossing the finish line in two minutes 52.07 seconds — nearly 30 ticks faster than his qualifying time.
Switzerland’s Marcel Hug won gold in a championship-record time of 2:51.32, while Thailand’s Prawat Wahoram scored bronze at 2:52.18.
Lakatos, 43, now can claim 21 career world championship medals, including 13 gold, six silver and two bronze.
WATCH | Lakatos speaks with CBC’s Athletics North:
Fellow Canadian Amanda Rummery, of Sherwood Park, Alta., placed fourth in the women’s T47 400m, missing the podium by about half a second despite her personal-best time of 59.06 seconds.
“I am over-the-moon happy with that. I mean, fourth place in the world, that’s crazy. That’s a place to be really proud of,” Rummery said.
Thomas Normandeau, the Peace River, Alta., native, placed seventh in the men’s version of the discipline with a season-best clocking of 50.25 seconds.
Morocco’s Ayoub Sadni set a world record of 46.78 seconds to win gold.
WATCH | Highlights from Day 6:
Watch live coverage of the World Para Athletics Championships on CBCSports.ca, the CBC Sports app and CBC Gem. Coverage from Paris continues Saturday at 3 a.m. ET with the Day 7 morning session.
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