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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Merritt bids for golden climax to miraculous journey in London

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London: Aries Merritt thought he had run his last race two years ago as he underwent a kidney transplant, but against the odds he is a contender to add the 110-metre hurdles world title to his 2012 Olympic gold.


The 32-year-old American — who enjoyed an annus mirabilis in 2012 by taking gold in London and then breaking the world record with a time of 12.80 seconds — has shown some smart form this campaign.


He returned to winning ways, including in the London Diamond League meet on the same track where he won the Olympic title and where he will bid to win the world crown.


Victory in London might even outdo Merritt’s bronze in the 2015 world final in Beijing when he was just days away from the transplant — the kidney donated by his older sister LaToya Hubbard.


“A lot of it was because I thought it was probably going to be my last time running ever again,” Merritt told the New York Times last year, referring to the effort he put into winning bronze in Beijing.


“And so I just pulled a rabbit out of a hat, essentially.”


The slightly-built Merritt’s performance in China even had Leslie Thomas, his kidney specialist at the famed Mayo Clinic, in awe of the achievement.


“He had almost no kidney function, terribly anaemic, running against the Chinese fog or smog, and he came in third!,” Thomas told Sports Illustrated in 2016.


“Don’t you think that’s amazing- I mean, that’s, like, crazy.”


LaToya said she didn’t think twice about donating her kidney to Merritt, whose illness was a a rare congenital kidney disease called collapsing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), first diagnosed in 2013.


‘You can’t give up hope’


Indeed back then she was pregnant, with her daughter Lela, but contemplated terminating her pregnancy so as to donate her kidney — however that radical step was avoided as Merritt’s condition improved enough to delay the procedure. — AFP


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