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Commonwealth Games legacy for athletics

Commonwealth Games legacy for athletics

Scottishathletics is seeing early signs of a Commonwealth Games bounce.

Six months after the curtain came down on the track and field events at Hampden there are clear signs of a legacy impact on the sport.

The National Open at the Emirates Arena this Saturday has attracted an unprecedented entry with more than 800 athletes signed up to compete and with demand so high that races at three distances had to have numbers capped.

The physical legacy is the track surfaces from Hampden and Lesser Hampden being laid at Grangemouth and Crownpoint in Glasgow’s east end.

And there’s other, circumstantial evidence of growing participation, with big numbers at club and community races over the festive break, a Christmas Day Park Run in Pollok which drew more than 400 runners, and capped limits for events such as the Alloa Half Marathon (2200 runners) selling out weeks before they take place.

Scottishathletics chief executive Nigel Holl believes the double inspiration of London 2012 and Glasgow 2014 is sweeping through clubs.

“I am extremely confident that athletics in Scotland can and will have a better 2015 than the amazing 2014 just finished,” said Holl.

“It may lack the stunning Hampden spectacle of a home Commonwealth Games, but the buzz across the sport tells me that we will continue to see great things happen.

“As always, the impact in both participation and performance terms is driven by what happens at athletics clubs the length and breadth of the country.

“To help prove my point, it hasn’t taken long in 2015 for records to start tumbling – the entry level for the National Open being the prime example.

“We have seen this event grow in the past three years since the Emirates Arena opened. We’d 669 athletes entered in 2013 and that was a massive leap on the previous year at the old Kelvin Hall venue in Glasgow.

“That went to 700 last year and now it is jumping up again to more than 800 people and, while that naturally poses a lot of challenge to us as event organisers, it really is great news.”

He added: “We had to introduce maximum entry numbers in some popular events (60m, 200m and 800m). This is of course a difficult decision our underpinning ethos is that if an athlete wants to compete, then they should be able to compete.

“Entry caps work against that, obviously. But we had a pretty comprehensive debate to address how we might ensure and retain a quality experience for those athletes competing and lengthening an already long day was not the way to go about it.

“Let’s not forget our officials and volunteer helpers without whom events would not be possible. We thank them in advance for their patience and commitment on days like the one looming on January 17. The help should be much appreciated by every athlete, coach and parent.

“Perhaps we are also now seeing the ‘tidal wave’ of young athletes that joined clubs back in 2012 on the back of the London Olympics starting to really come through to competition. If we are, that is wonderful and a great testament to clubs and their coaches in keeping that athlete motivation high and coming back week on week.”