Italian Olympic champion Jacobs reconnects with US family by moving to Florida ahead of Paris Games
Italian sprinter Marcell Jacobs still feels like he has something to prove as he prepares to defend gold in the 100 meters at this year's Paris Olympics
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Your support makes all the difference.The guy who won the biggest race in the Olympics now lives in relative obscurity inside a gated community in Florida.
Hardly anybody recognizes him.
Nobody bothers him.
And that suits Marcell Jacobs just fine after dealing with the chaos that surrounded his every move back home in Italy.
Because Jacobs, the unheralded sprinter who succeeded Usain Bolt as the 100-meter champion at the Olympics, still feels like he has something to prove as he prepares to defend gold at this year's Paris Games. His new training base lets him keep the focus on the task at hand.
āNow in Paris (everyone) wants to beat me. (Everyone) wants to take my crown from my head and put it on his head ... So I canāt wait to arrive in August and try to win again,ā Jacobs told The Associated Press in a video interview from Jacksonville.
One of the few times heās been recognized came when he went to the local utility office to turn on the electricity and water in his new home and the man who helped him realized he was talking to a gold medalist.
āMy life has completely changed,ā Jacobs said. āItās another world.ā
After two injury-plagued seasons, Jacobs made the decision to leave his longtime coach, Paolo Camossi, and join an elite training group in Jacksonville led by Rana Reider.
āI was losing motivation,ā Jacobs said. āI needed a training group where I could compare myself against others every day. ā¦ It seems like starting all over again and that gives me a lot of energy and permits me to train at 100%.ā
Reiderās group, known as the Tumbleed Track Club, also includes: Andre De Grasse, the 200-meter Olympic champion and the bronze medalist in the 100 behind Jacobs in Tokyo; Trayvon Bromell, a two-time world championship bronze medalist in the 100; Jerome Blake, a member of Canadaās medal-winning 4x100 relay team with De Grasse; and Abdul Hakim Sani Brown, who won a relay bronze with Japan at worlds in 2019.
All five sprinters could qualify for the Olympic final on Aug. 4 at the Stade de France.
āI needed a coach,ā Jacobs said, āwho wasnāt afraid to have the Olympic 100-meter champion in an Olympic year.ā
AMERICAN ROOTS
Born in El Paso, Texas, to an American father and an Italian mother, Jacobs moved to Italy when he was 6 months old after his parents split. He didnāt see his dad again until a meeting was arranged when Jacobs was 13, and the relationship is still strained.
But being in Florida with his wife and two kids has allowed Jacobs to reconnect with the rest of his American family and improve his English. His grandmother, aunt and uncle live near Jacksonville, another uncle lives near Miami and at Christmas there was a visit with his brother-in-law in Texas.
āIām at home without trying to be,ā Jacobs said. āIām reviving a relationship with the American part of my family that Iāve never been able to experience.ā
GOLF AND GUNS
Being in Florida, Jacobs has also been able to feed his need for speed by attending the 24 Hours of Daytona.
āMotor sports and speed runs through my veins,ā Jacobs said. āI grew up living with my grandparents and they were big motorsport fans. Every weekend we would go see a race.ā
With a golf course in his backyard, Jacobs is also embracing a new sport.
āGolf isnāt easy because it requires a lot of patience and control, which is exactly the opposite of what we do,ā Jacobs said, āBecause (sprinting) is all about producing power, strength and speed.ā
Jacobs also found time to visit a shooting range.
āI tried shooting both pistols and rifles," he said, āfor the thrill of it.ā
ANSWERING CRITICS
Jacobs had never broken the 10-second barrier before 2021 and there were plenty of insinuating questions about his 9.80-second victory in at the Tokyo Olympics.
Despite having also won titles at world and European championships, he still faces doubters calling him āa one-race wonder.ā
āA lot of people in Italy, too, they know me from the Olympics, so theyāve never known my story behind the Olympics,ā Jacobs said. āThey donāt follow track and field so they didnāt know me. They donāt follow me for real. So they a lot of times say, āOh, you just won the Olympics and youāre finished.ā But itās not true, itās not (right).
āI focus just on myself and try to do my best, because every time you can find some people who have to tell you something and say to you, āYou do this and not this, or this and not this,'ā Jacobs said, gesticulating so much that at one point he knocked over the phone he was using for the video interview. "This is the big lesson Iāve learned in these years.ā
LYLES FAVORED
Noah Lyles, the American who swept gold in the 100, 200 and 4x100 at last yearās worlds in Budapest, was already the big favorite for Paris. A blistering 60-meter time of 6.44 seconds in Boston last weekend just reinforced his status.
āHe showed that heās in great form with a personal best,ā Jacobs said. āHeās gaining confidence. ā¦ Heās definitely going to enter (the Olympics) as the favorite. But I prefer it that way. ā¦ I prefer it when nobody thinks I can win and then going out and winning.ā
RACING SCHEDULE
Jacobs will likely return to competition in the U.S. in April before going to the World Relays in the Bahamas in early May with an Italian team that already backed up gold in Tokyo with silver at the worlds. Then he has big expectations for a home European Athletics Championships in Rome in June.
Thatās when heāll start to understand if his move to Florida paid off.
CRAZY LONG JUMPER
This isnāt the first time that Jacobs has made a major change in his career. He began as a long jumper before transitioning into sprinting full time.
His Instagram handle is still ācrazylongjumperā and Jacobs has no plans to change it.
āThatās where I started and so that will remain forever,ā Jacobs said. āBecause you should never forget where you came from.ā
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AP coverage of the Paris Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games