Poland's Dawid Tomala wins gold in the men's 50km race walk

Poland's Dawid Tomala cruised to victory in the Olympic men's 50km race walk with a dominant performance. Germany's Jonathan Hilbert took the silver medal, and Canada's Evan Dunfee claimed the bronze.

Published : Aug 06, 2021 09:20 IST

Dawid Tomala, of Poland, celebrates as he crosses the finish line first in the men's 50km race walk at the 2020 Summer Olympics.
Dawid Tomala, of Poland, celebrates as he crosses the finish line first in the men's 50km race walk at the 2020 Summer Olympics.
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Dawid Tomala, of Poland, celebrates as he crosses the finish line first in the men's 50km race walk at the 2020 Summer Olympics.

Poland's Dawid Tomala cruised to victory in the Olympic men's 50km race walk with a dominant performance over the second half of the race in Sapporo on Friday, reaching the top of the podium in just his second completed race of the distance.

Germany's Jonathan Hilbert took the silver medal, and Canada's Evan Dunfee claimed the bronze.

Tomala, 31, said he switched to the 50km distance from the 20km earlier this year because he was "bored and needed new challenges," and his decision paid immediate dividends.

"This year changed everything for me because I started for the first time 50K. It's the second 50 in my life, and a gold medal is crazy, right?" he said.

 

Tomala's triumph marked the second surprise race walk gold of the Tokyo Olympics after Italy's Massimo Stano won the 20km event the previous day for his first victory in a major international race.

China's Luo Yadong was in front for most of the first third of the race until the pack, including Tomala, caught up with him at the 20km mark.

Tomala began distancing himself from the crowd around the 30km stage, progressively increasing his lead to more than three minutes at one stage. He finished in 3 hours, 50 minutes and eight seconds, coming in 36 seconds in front of Hilbert.

Tomala pushed the pace despite his large lead although he did take his foot off the gas near the end with first place assured and not wanting to jeopardise his victory.

 

"I had around 15K to the end, and I knew it is possible to lose energy because, in a 50K, anything can happen. Sometimes you walk fast, and you can't finish the race ... But I felt comfortable at that speed, so, tried to walk it as long as I could."

"But in the end, the most important was to win this medal, so I slowed down because the gold medal is the gold medal."

World record holder and 2017 world champion Yohann Diniz of France had been hoping for one last chance at Olympic glory. But he dropped out of the race before the 30km mark, citing fatigue and back pain and saying it was one competition too many for the 43-year-old.

"That will be the image of my career, the highs and the lows, and now good luck to the future generation. For me, it's finished," he said.

Friday's 50km walk might have been the last at an Olympics. The event has been dropped from the schedule for the 2024 Paris Games because there is no equivalent race for women.

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