30 year old Patrick Johnson only took
up running seven years ago. He had spent most of his life with his Irish father,
Patrick Senior, working a mackerel trawler off the North Queensland coast.
Patrick was actually born at sea; on a speedboat during a frantic dash
to take his
mother to Cairns Base hospital.
Sadly Patrick's aboriginal mother, Pearl Ella Marrott, was killed in a car accident when Patrick was just two years of age.
This led Patrick Senior to choose to raise his first-born son,
Patrick unconventionally on the fishing trawler and commit Patrick's
younger brother Ryan to the care of his aboriginal in-laws at a
community in Queensland.
Patrick Senior had emigrated from County
Carlow in Ireland in 1952. The fitter and turner was an
ex-Golden Gloves boxer and considered Patrick Junior's fishing-boat
childhood to be 'a bit tough' at times. The lifestyle included
occasional swims to shore from the 11 metre fishing boat to attend
one of about ten schools up and down the Queensland coast.
In
1989, Patrick won a scholarship to an international boarding school
- Aurora College in Moss Vale - where, amongst other studies, he learned to speak
Cantonese. Today Patrick speaks five languages fluently
and is familiar with a number of Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander dialects.
Seven years ago, while studying at University, Patrick showed some talent as a sprinter and was
selected to race at the 1996 Australian University Championships.
At the age
of 24, Johnson won the 100m in a time of 10.47, running in spikes for the first
time. This feat attracted the attention of
athletics and rugby coaches who invited him to try-outs. An offer to train under Esa Peltola at the
Australian Institute of Sport was quickly accepted by Patrick and this partnership has
continued for the six years since.
In 1997 Johnson's career looked to be off
to a promising start, running competitively against the likes of
Linford Christie and Carl Lewis in the domestic Grand Prix series,
but he suffered
from injuries in the lead up to the World University Games - his
first international selection - and could not start in either the
100m or 200m.
When Patrick resumed competition, Sydney sprinter
Matt Shirvington was emerging as a new talent over 100m and he began to dominate
men's sprinting in Australia. Shirvington reduced the national
100m to a 10.03 in 1998 and and Johnson had to settle for second place in many
important domestic races over the next few years.
In the lead up to the Sydney Olympics, Patrick's personal best times improved
and he ran 10.10 in Melbourne to set the fastest time by an
Australian in Australia. Despite this improvement, he could not impress at
major international competitions, failing to make it past the heats in
either the 2000 Olympic Games or the 2001 World Indoor
Championships.
After winning his first national championships, over 200m, in
2001, a stress fracture led to his withdrawal from the 2001 World
Championships. To compound his frustrations, Patrick was not selected for an individual berth in the
2002 Commonwealth Games team and had to settle for a bronze medal
run with the
Australian relay.
Johnson's top speed was considered to be as good as any of the top
world sprinters, but his start was regarded as a weakness and his
big race temperament sometimes seemed suspect.
Disappointed with his lack of success in
the sport, Patrick was determined to train more seriously in the 2002/03 off season
and worked hard on his overall fitness and technique as well as his start. This resolve paid off with a
fine series of times in the domestic series, topped with a wind assisted 9.88
in Perth and his first national championship, beating five time champion Matt
Shirvington. His starting showed considerable improvement as
he consistently led the field early, seemingly unperturbed by the
new IAAF 'one false start' rule.
Showing his domestic form was no fluke, Johnson further improved
during May, competing in a series of meetings in Japan.
He ran a personal best of 10.05 to win his heat of the 100m in the Mito meet and then astounded the world with a national record of 9.93 seconds to win the
final. A week later, he was just pipped on the line by world record
holder Tim Montgomery - again in fast time.
Johnson maintained his line of
the season saying that he had still not done any sharp, explosive work and he
expected further improvements closer to the World Championships. Only
time will tell if Patrick Johnson could become the first Australian man to win
a World or Olympic 100m title.