The saviour of British athletics: KEELY HODGKINSON has ticked off European indoor 800m gold, now she wants world and Olympic glory... after a girls' holiday in Dubai to celebrate her 21st!

  • Hodgkinson has set her sights on winning the 800m world title in Budapest
  • She has broken the indoor 600m world record and beat her 800m British record
  • The 21-year-old admitted she expects herself to win but now plans to celebrate

Before she swapped the track in Istanbul for a sun lounger in Dubai, Keely Hodgkinson was asked about her aims for the outdoor season. Her reply was instant and succinct. ‘To win gold,’ she said. There was no need for a follow-up question.

For Hodgkinson’s only and obvious ambition this summer is to win the 800 metres world title in Budapest. And judging by her wonderful winter, she will have every chance of fulfilling that goal.

In the space of five weeks, she has broken the indoor 600m world record, lowered her own 800m British record and won the 800m at the European Indoors. The latter of those achievements came on Sunday night in Istanbul and it was a four-lap procession, finishing nearly two seconds clear of her nearest rival to defend her title from two years ago.

‘It’s still just as sweet because I like to win - but I guess it’s what I expect of myself now,’ she admitted in an answer which told you everything about how she has soared since that first major medal in 2021.

On Monday, Hodgkinson flew from Istanbul to Dubai for a girls’ holiday to celebrate her 21st birthday. She will return in time for the funeral of her former coach, Joe Galvin, who died last Tuesday and who she dedicated her European victory to on Sunday night.

Keely Hodgkinson has set her sights on winning the 800 metre world title later this year

Keely Hodgkinson has set her sights on winning the 800 metre world title later this year

She has enjoyed huge success this term after breaking the indoor 600m world record

She has enjoyed huge success this term after breaking the indoor 600m world record

The 21-year-old runner also recently broke her own British record for the 800 metres

The 21-year-old runner also recently broke her own British record for the 800 metres

But then it will be back to business with a training camp in South Africa, with all roads leading to Budapest in August. 

There, she is set for another showdown with 20-year-old American Athing Mu, who beat her at both the Olympics in Tokyo in 2021 and the World Championships in Eugene last year.

‘It’s nice people think it’s a rivalry,’ said Hodgkinson. ‘It’s good to have someone the same age as you out there, doing the same things. Some may see it as pressure but I like it.

‘I really like the challenge and really like thriving in those environments.. She’s a very good athlete and hopefully we can have many years of these battles.’

Hodgkinson has another fierce 800m opponent in Kenyan Mary Moraa, who won world bronze behind her last year and then beat her two weeks later at the Commonwealth Games.

But should the Leigh athlete stay injury free come next summer’s Paris Olympics, she is sure to be one of Britain’s best hopes of a track and field gold after they failed to win any in Tokyo for the first time in 25 years.

‘She’s got an outstanding chance in Paris in 2024,’ said World Athletics president Seb Coe - a man who knows a thing or two about the 800m - earlier this year. ‘I like the fact she doesn’t like losing.

‘There would be no point me going up to Keely and saying “great silver medal”. I see her in the tunnel after a race she loses and it’s no picnic.’

Hodgkinson has formed an intense rivalry with American Athing Mu in recent competitions

Hodgkinson has formed an intense rivalry with American Athing Mu in recent competitions

Sometimes, Hodgkinson does not even like winning. When she stormed to victory at a World Tour event in France last month, she failed to raise a smile as she crossed the line because she wanted a faster time. ‘Oh, I was p***** off,’ she admitted. ‘I am not very good at hiding my emotions.’

That, though, is one of the many traits which makes Hodgkinson so likeable - and why she is such a godsend to UK Athletics at a time of financial and organisational crisis.

Her gold on Sunday was one of only six medals Britain took home from Istanbul, their worst return from a European Indoor Championships since 2009. However, the mood travelling back from Turkey was one of optimism, thanks to Hodgkinson’s success, Laura Muir defending her 1500m title and Jazmin Sawyers claiming her first major gold medal in the long jump.

Some will have scoffed when Sawyers claimed after winning the British indoors in Birmingham last month that she was targeting a medal at the Paris Olympics. But her winning leap of seven metres in Istanbul was the exact distance which secured the gold for Malaika Mihambo at Tokyo 2020.

Jazmin Sawyers has claimed her first major gold medal of her career in the long jump

Jazmin Sawyers has claimed her first major gold medal of her career in the long jump

The 28-year-old is targeting a medal at the Paris 2024 Olympics, which has been scoffed at

The 28-year-old is targeting a medal at the Paris 2024 Olympics, which has been scoffed at

‘I feel like I have proved that my own self-belief wasn’t misguided,’ said the 28-year-old. ‘That me saying to myself, “You can jump seven meters, you are good enough to be winning these things” wasn’t just a pipe dream.’

On the track, it has actually been a good winter for athletics in this country. Over the weekend, Eilish McColgan broke Paula Radcliffe’s 21-year-old national 10,000m record in California. A week earlier, Dina Asher-Smith looked in fine form in lowering her British 60m record in Birmingham.

Turning to the summer, 2019 heptathlon world champion, Katarina Johnson-Thompson, will return to action, as will last year’s 1500m word gold medallist, Jake Wightman.

‘We could be on the threshold of another golden generation,’ UKA chief executive Jack Buckner said last month. And while that still seems a stretch, we are starting to see the reasons why Buckner believes there is a bright future - with Hodgkinson chief among them.