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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
Sport
Michael Scully

Ciara Mageean now in Olympic medal class after tough times, says David Gillick

David Gillick believes Ciara Mageaan is now in Olympic medal class as she attempts to finish the season with another podium finish tonight.

Six days on from beating Laura Muir and breaking Sonia O'Sullivan's long-standing Irish 1500m record in Brussels, Mageean competes in the Diamond League final in Zurich tonight (7.59pm Irish time).

Muir will be there, and Faith Kipyegon and Gudaf Tsegay too - the gold and silver medal winners in the World Championships this summer.

READ MORE: Ciara Mageean smashes 1500m Irish National record at Diamond League event

"It's going to be stacked," said Gillick, the former European indoors gold medallist.

"Confidence is a great thing to have going into a race like that. She 100% won't fear anyone.

"She's tactically running spot on. I'd say Ciara will be thinking, 'OK, could I possibly go a little quicker' or 'could I at least back up what I did last week'.

"That would be success. But you couldn't write her off after what she did."

Gillick now interviews Ireland's elite athletes in major championships for RTE. He has spoken to Mageean on dark days in recent years as injury, grief and loss of form have hampered her progress.

Gillick says her failure to kick on after medalling in the 2016 Euros was the Portaferry athlete's "difficult phase" and she could have walked away from the sport.

Ambassador David Gillick in attendance at the launch of European Week of Sport 2022, in partnership with Sport Ireland (David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile)

Instead, her resilience is standing to her now on the back of a summer that has seen Mageean win European and Commonwealth silver behind Muir.

"Maybe you’re seeing that now at 30, all the stuff that made her tough in her early 20s," he said.

"We’re seeing her clearly now at her best. Yes, people will look and go, it’s a big jump, that four seconds from 4:00 to 3:56.

"But with Ciara, going back to 2019, (running) four minutes, then with Covid she didn’t get the opportunities to run quicker in the subsequent years.

"She targeted Tokyo, didn’t run a whole lot on the circuit then this year, she had two championships, Commonwealths and Europeans, you look at that and go, right, she’s just focusing on medals.

"I’ve interviewed her when she’s puked on me, when she finished fourth in the last Europeans - then this year she’s delighted.

"Ciara wears her heart on her sleeve and lays it all out there and she said, 'my day will come'.

"She sensed she was in great form. You could see she was getting close to the likes of Laura Muir.

"I sat down with her after Munich and I asked her what’s next. She said, 'I’m going to continue racing, I really feel there’s something in me, a good time'.

"So it’s fantastic. It’s the biggest win of her career by far, never mind medals.

"To win a Diamond League in a huge time, even from a sponsor’s perspective, gear contracts - it changes the game completely.

"With two years to Paris, who’s our best chance of a medal? That puts Ciara very much in that frame going forward."

* Ambassador David Gillick was in attendance at the launch of European Week of Sport 2022, in partnership with Sport Ireland. For more information and to find an event near you, go to - www.sportireland.ie/europeanweekofsport

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