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War Disrupts, But Does Not Deter, Lebanese Prodigy

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  • War Disrupts, But Does Not Deter, Lebanese Prodigy

    WAR DISRUPTS, BUT DOES NOT DETER, LEBANESE PRODIGY
    by Pirate Irwin

    Agence France Presse -- English
    December 5, 2006 Tuesday 8:27 AM GMT

    Four years ago renowned American athletics coach John Smith tipped
    Lebanese sprinter Gretta Taslakian as a future star if carefully
    nurtured.

    Four years on a mixture of personal misfortune and war has prevented
    it from happening.

    She may be just 21 but the four years since Smith spotted her on the
    training track at the 2002 Busan Games have not been kind to Taslakian,
    whose descendants were Armenian and fled to Lebanon during the 1915-17
    genocide by the Turks.

    Now her generation are discovering what it is like to be bombarded
    having come through the 34-day war between Israel and Lebanon-based
    Hezbollah in July which left a huge swathe of Lebanon destroyed and
    thousands dead.

    "We were preparing for the Asian Games this summer and then the
    war started in July," said Taslakian, who is one of a five-strong
    Lebanese team here for the Asian Games athletics which gets underway
    on Thursday.

    "What happened was very dramatic in Lebanon so we were not in the
    right frame of mind to train for this big event.

    "Because of the war the Lebanese championships were cancelled so the
    Lebanese Federation sent us (with the help of governing body the IAAF)
    to Singapore where we stayed for three months and we worked on the
    technical rather than the physical areas."

    Taslakian, national recordholder in the 100, 200 and 400m,
    is realistic about her chances of success at the Games given her
    disrupted preparation.

    Her ultimate goal is for an emotional triumph next year at the Asian
    Championships in Lebanon.

    "The Asian Games would be a fantastic preparation for the Asian
    Championships in Lebanon next year," said Taslakian, whose father
    inspired her to take the sport up aged 15.

    "I cannot guess what my result will be here as I have not competed
    for a long time but I aim to beat my personal best in the 200m."

    Things looked distinctly rosier not only for Lebanon but also for
    Taslakian two years ago as she went to the Athens Olympics and was
    not disgraced while running a personal best in the 200.

    She was rewarded by the IAAF with a nine-month scholarship to train
    in Cologne, Germany, with higher class facilities than she could ever
    hope for back home. But it didn't go as planned.

    "It was originally a dream come true," she said.

    "I tried to make the most of my good fortune but I tore a calf muscle
    and couldn't do what I had in mind.

    "The good side was that when I was fit I was able to compete with
    high class athletes but on the down side I didn't get the attention
    of the coaches because they prefer to focus on the star athletes.

    "So I felt very alone without my family and friends," added Taslakian.
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