Still not fully healthy, Andre De Grasse considers shutting down season

Despite Andre De Grasse's sizzling anchor leg that secured Canada a thrilling relay victory at the world track and field championships, the sprint star still isn't feeling back at full health.

Lingering foot injury, bout with COVID-19 may move sprinter's focus to next year

Despite anchoring Canada to 4x100-metre gold at the world championships, Andre De Grasse said Thursday he is considering shutting his season down amid lingering ailments. (Andy Lyons/Getty Images for World Athletics)

Despite Andre De Grasse's sizzling anchor leg that secured Canada a thrilling relay victory at the world track and field championships, the sprint star still isn't feeling back at full health.

After a few months of battling an foot injury, then contracting COVID-19 a month before the world championships, De Grasse might shut down his season now and focus on next year.

"To be honest, it's been a struggle," De Grasse said. "I don't feel like I have like 100 per cent of my energy back. I think right now I just want to rest and recover until I start feeling like myself again, and then I can kind of make that decision.

"[The foot injury] has been lingering the whole season, so I want to try to get it back to 100 per cent. . . We'll see, we'll see what happens."

De Grasse, relay teammates Aaron Brown and Jerome Blake, and world decathlon silver medallist Pierce LePage all withdrew from the Commonwealth Games, which opened Thursday in Birmingham, England. There are five Diamond League meets remaining over the next six weeks.

WATCH | De Grasse unable to reach 100m final:

Canada's Andre De Grasse fails to qualify for the men’s 100m final at the World Athletics Championships

2 years ago
Duration 0:58
Andre De Grasse of Markham, Ont., ran a 10.21 in his 100-metre semifinal, falling short of qualifying for the final.

But a big two seasons beckon. There's another world championships in August of 2023 in Budapest, and then the 2024 Paris Olympics.

"I want to get ready for next year, another worlds, and then I want to be healthy for the Olympic Games, because it could potentially be my last. So I want to be able to be great," De Grasse said.

"The stereotype is people get two or three Olympics," added De Grasse, who has competed in two, winning six medals. "But if I get a fourth one, I'll be grateful for that. I was talking to Glenroy [Gilbert, Athletics Canada's head coach] about I get a fourth Olympics, and I'm at my best, I'm at my prime, great. If not, and I'm just there to run the relay, it'd be a great moment as well.

"You just take it day by day, year by year, you don't try to think that far ahead."

De Grasse was in Toronto on Wednesday doing a round of media appearances for a sponsor promotion for Cheezmade, meatless chicken made from cheese.

Three days earlier, De Grasse salvaged a disappointing worlds with a thrilling gold — and Canadian record — in the 4x100 relay. It was Canada's first global relay victory in 25 years.

Team win

The 27-year-old from Markham, Ont., had never missed the medal podium in an individual event at a worlds or Olympics, but in Eugene, Ore., still feeling the effects of COVID-19, he missed the final of the 100 and scratched from the 200.

Earning gold with three teammates was a different kind of joy, he said.

"An individual [win] is like all your hard work has finally paid off in this moment. You can control it a little bit more, it's only you," De Grasse said. "The relay, you don't know what's going to happen until it happens."

WATCH | De Grasse anchors 4x100m victory at worlds:

Canadian men golden in 4x100m at World Championships

2 years ago
Duration 7:26
Canada's Aaron Brown, Jerome Blake, Brendon Rodney and Andre De Grasse topped the men's 4x100m podium at the 2022 World Athletics Championships.

De Grasse said he, Brown, Blake and Brandon Rodney have become friends. They know each other's parents, they know each other's kids.

"It felt really good to win gold with these guys. Because I know them on a personal level, we have that team chemistry, we've been together for so long. They're family to me . . . and we hang out together.

"It felt kind of like my basketball days, playing on a sports team. We got to hug each other, we felt the love. I guess in a sense, it kind of felt a bit different, because you got to actually share the glory with people with people that you know."

The Canadians edged the U.S. for relay gold, but De Grasse said it almost felt like a home victory. He saw numerous Canadian flags at Hayward Field, which is about an eight-hour drive south of Vancouver.

"There were a lot [of Canadians] cheering us on, it was loud," he said.

Motivated by 200m results

De Grasse ran a Canadian-record 19.62 seconds to win the Olympic 200 metres last summer in Tokyo. American Noah Lyles, who won bronze in Tokyo, captured gold at the world championships in a world-leading 19.31. He beat Kenny Bednarek of the U.S. by more than 0.4 of a second — a fair distance in sprint races.

De Grasse wasn't deflated by Lyles' fast time, but inspired.

"That's something that I feel like I'm definitely capable of," he said. "I wish I was a part of that race, to see where I would have been at 100 per cent, to see if I could have lowered my 19.6 performance from the Olympics.

"Definitely motivates me to say 'OK, I've got to get back at 100 per cent, get back on my A-game,' and there's going to be some rivalries, especially with the Americans who are running good as of now."

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.