September 20, 2024

Australia’s Peter Bol comes agonisingly close to completing Olympic fairy-tale in 800m final Tokyo

Peter Bol #PeterBol

Australian runner Peter Bol has come agonisingly close to capping off his remarkable fairy tale story, coming up short in the men’s 800m final at the Tokyo Olympic Games to finish fourth.

But his emotionally-charged post-race interview showed why he has become one of Australia’s most beloved athletes.

The inspiring middle-distance runner, 27, fled war-torn Sudan with his family as a child and spent four gruelling years living as a refugee in Egypt before eventually being granted asylum in Australia.

He now proudly dons the green and gold and said he put everything he had into Wednesday’s race. 

Bol got off to a flying star as the first Aussie male to make the Olympic 800m final since Ralph Doubell won gold at the 1968 Mexico Games. 

He led the field after the first 400m but couldn’t keep up the blistering pace and faded away on the final lap despite digging in hard to push himself across the finish line.

Australian runner Peter Bol (pictured in green and gold) has come agonisingly close to capping off his remarkable fairy-tale story, coming up short in the men's 800m final at the Tokyo Olympic Games to finish fourth

Australian runner Peter Bol (pictured in green and gold) has come agonisingly close to capping off his remarkable fairy-tale story, coming up short in the men’s 800m final at the Tokyo Olympic Games to finish fourth

Bol led the field after the first 400m but faded away on the final lap to finish fourth

Bol led the field after the first 400m but faded away on the final lap to finish fourth

But his courage to hold on to fourth spot, after red-lining his body early on, earned high praise from Channel Seven commentators and won Bol a lot of hearts back home in his adopted country of Australia. 

‘This is the bit I love just as much,’ Bruce McAvaney said of Bol’s effort in the final stretch.

‘He can’t win the medal. It is Korir, Rotich and Dobek but he wants to finish fourth.

‘He wants to get the highest placing possible. That’s the pride of a champion. We saw one tonight.’

Retired Olympian Tamsyn Manou added: ‘I just hope that the whole of Australia and Peter Bol, when he reflects on this, understand how fabulous he was and we can see how much he put into that run.

‘The 800m race is so incredibly difficult and he had to do all the work. He needed it faster.

‘But he still was brave enough to make that move and to put the pace in and inject some speed into it because he knew that’s what he needed to do.’

It was a gutsy effort from Bol to hang on to fourth spot after setting such a blistering pace earlier in race

It was a gutsy effort from Bol to hang on to fourth spot after setting such a blistering pace earlier in race 

His proud family and friends back home in Australia are captured cheering him on during the race

His proud family and friends back home in Australia are captured cheering him on during the race

Bol told said in his emotional post-race interview ‘I came here to win’.

‘That’s what I did. I tried to win. We came up short in the Olympic final, but there is more to come,’ he said.

‘I put myself in every chance. The only thing I regret is the last 100m tightening up a little bit.’

Although it was an incredible Olympic campaign, Bol admitted he is disappointed with the result. 

‘I’d be lying if I said I’m happy right now. The goal was to win,’ he said.

‘At the same time, I think today, I didn’t know if I was going to win but I knew one thing for certain, that the whole of Australia was watching. That carried me on. I loved that part.

‘I’m grateful to Australia, I’m thankful to everyone in Australia, we’re human at the end of the day. We inspired the whole nation. That’s the goal.’

Bol is pictured before the 800m final in front of his adopted home county's flag, Australia

Bol is pictured before the 800m final in front of his adopted home county’s flag, Australia

Tamsyn Manou said said: 'I just hope that the whole of Australia and Peter Bol, when he reflects on this, understand how fabulous he was and we can see how much he put into that run

Tamsyn Manou said said: ‘I just hope that the whole of Australia and Peter Bol, when he reflects on this, understand how fabulous he was and we can see how much he put into that run

Earlier this week Bol touched on his own personal story and some of the misconceptions about him.

‘Despite what some people have said and written, we never lived in a refugee camp,’ he wrote in a column for The West Australian. 

‘People familiar with my story have probably heard it enough times but, as I am so proud of my journey, I will say it again.

‘My family emigrated from Sudan to Egypt when I was four and it was our home for four years. Then it was to Toowoomba and Perth, Perth to Melbourne, airport to airport and athletics venue to athletics venue.’ 

The rest of his origin story, from fleeing war to a chance discovery of his talent at a school sports carnival, is all true – and life in Egypt was far from comfortable.

‘I don’t have much memories from back home in Sudan, there was a civil war at the time and we made a move to Egypt to come through to Australia,’ he said in 2016.

‘[In] Egypt, I just remember always being with my family, it was still a bit difficult to be in, it was a bit tough over there to live. It wasn’t all good memories. 

‘We came to Australia for the obvious reason – Australia is one of the best countries in the world… I have been around a few countries and Australia is the best country to be in so my family definitely made the right choice.’

Bol is eternally grateful to his high school teacher Helen Leahy, who encouraged him to pursue a career on the track

Bol is eternally grateful to his high school teacher Helen Leahy, who encouraged him to pursue a career on the track

The Sudanese-born middle distance runner was in career-best form in the lead up the final at the Tokyo Games

The Sudanese-born middle distance runner was in career-best form in the lead up the final at the Tokyo Games

Bol before the race said he still feels that way and is eternally grateful for the support of his adopted country. 

‘I feel the support of the whole nation behind me,’ he wrote. ‘The only energy is good energy, I am ready.’  

Bol and his family arrived in Australia in 2004, settling in Queensland before moving to Perth where he took up a basketball scholarship from St Norbert College.  

The teenager just wanted to shoot hoops but his teacher Helen Leahy spotted his running talent at the sports carnival.

‘She saw a talent and provided an opportunity to a boy who had talent, but needed guidance,’ he wrote. 

Ms Leahy convinced him to join the school athletics club and promised to find him a a mentor and a coach.

‘I thought it was a pretty good deal specially because it meant I’d be fitter for basketball, so I agreed and she delivered,’ he told Athletics Australia.  

Ms Leahy’s father Brian Moore soon sponsored his training and development, and became ‘one of my greatest mentors’ who he thinks would be proud of his Olympic achievement if he was still alive. 

Bol, aged 19, won the national junior 800m title in 1:48.90 and shaved that time down to 1:45.41 within three years. 

Australian Peter Bol (pictured in yellow) qualified second fastest for the final of the 800m at the Tokyo Olympics

Bol has also clarified incorrect reports he spent time living in a refugee camp with his family after fleeing his native Sudan

Bol has also clarified incorrect reports he spent time living in a refugee camp with his family after fleeing his native Sudan

In 2015 he travelled to Europe for the first time to compete, and met an uncle in Paris he had not seen in many years, learning more about his big Sudanese family.

Another figure he considers family is fellow Australian 800m runner Joseph Deng, whom he calls his ‘brother’ and credits him with pushing him to Olympic glory.

A disappointing Rio Olympics in 2016 saw Bol place sixth in his heat, but he bounced back the next year, trimming his personal best even more – only to miss the Commonwealth Games because of a stress fracture in early 2018.

Since then, he has focused on Tokyo and becoming the fastest Australian ever over 800m, with his best result coming in Monaco last year with a time of 1:44.96.

Until Sunday night, when he ripped up the form books with his sensational semi-final run of 1:44.11 – an Australian record and second-fastest qualifying time.

It was Deng’s record that he broke, having seen his former best time eclipsed by his great friend in 2018.

‘When Joseph broke it, we agreed to keep it in the family for as long as we could. I look forward to him coming for it because that’s how we work and that’s how we push each other,’ he wrote on Wednesday.

Peter Bol, 27, is the first Australian male to reach an 800m Olympic final in 53 years

Peter Bol, 27, is the first Australian male to reach an 800m Olympic final in 53 years

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