Oliver Dustin has simply completed detailing that 800m race, which came about within the setting solar of southern France in mid-June 2021: the stillness of the pre-race wind, his concern at falling “method too far again” in eighth place on the bell, the astonishing ending pace that blitzed his rivals, and the disbelief when he crossed the road in 1:43.82 to interrupt Seb Coe’s longstanding British under-23 file.
“It’s a good reminiscence,” he summarises, earlier than unexpectedly including: “However I don’t need it to be the defining level of my profession.”
Dustin’s story is one which may seem horribly acquainted from the surface; the promising expertise who started to crack the large time at a younger age, just for setbacks to start out mounting. Approaching three years in the past, he competed at his debut Olympics in Tokyo – a short-lived marketing campaign that ended when he crashed out of the 800m heats. In no small half that was attributable to a horribly disrupted build-up dominated by an odd anti-doping incident which, a lot to Dustin’s chagrin, was detailed within the nationwide media.
Since then, one a part of his physique or one other has let him down, limiting him to simply six 800m races within the two full out of doors seasons which have adopted. Final October, he was dropped from British Athletics funding. In December, he underwent surgical procedure on his nostril and sinuses in a bid to clear up a succession of points.
It has all been brutally onerous to endure. In a British middle-distance cohort that more and more warrants the customarily wrongly used description of a golden technology, Dustin is at risk of being a forgotten footnote. So it’s a nice shock to listen to nothing however contemplative positivity from the 23-year-old after what he describes as “by far the hardest couple of years of my athletics profession”.
The previous European under-20 champion says: “Till 2021 my development was linear, going by the age teams, doing properly nationally after which internationally. These final couple of years have actually, actually examined me however made me so a lot better as an athlete and an individual, bodily and mentally.
“It has undeniably been actually powerful, however it’s brought about me to look elsewhere to see how I can higher myself within the pursuit of perfection.”
Dustin’s illnesses have been a number of. There was the glandular fever that struck in early 2022 and an prolonged interval of post-viral fatigue that additionally impacted his 2023 marketing campaign. He additionally suffered a plantaris rupture final April, adopted by a few tears in his calf. When he developed a sinus an infection and respiration points throughout the summer season he determined it was time to hunt out an working desk after two years wherein his greatest 800m time was 1:48.37 – shut to 5 seconds off his private greatest.
“I work so onerous and don’t have the goal of working 1:48 or 1:50 so it’s tough,” he admits. “It actually taught me how you can take care of disappointment and failure, and that I simply have to get again up, mud myself off and go once more.
“Whenever you’re performing properly and profitable races all the things appears to fall into place fairly simply and also you don’t take into consideration the psychological facet of issues. However when issues don’t fairly click on collectively that’s whenever you actually query if what you’re doing is correct.
“That’s the place I have to think about my potential and what we are attempting to realize.”
Dustin needn’t search onerous for inspiration, with the rollercoaster summer season of 2021 nonetheless seared into his reminiscence. Entrance and centre is the race in Good that, for a short interval a few months out from the rescheduled Tokyo Video games, made him the quickest man on this planet that 12 months.
Dustin had arrived on the French Riviera with a lifetime better of 1:45.71 clocked at a BMC Grand Prix meet in Manchester a fortnight earlier. Gifted the best circumstances of a fast observe, a pacemaker, Wavelight know-how set to the Olympic qualifying commonplace and a balmy, completely nonetheless, summer season’s night, he flourished. Regardless of not passing a single athlete from the preliminary lane break till the 600m level, he rounded the sector in astonishing vogue on the ultimate bend to depart each his rivals and the blinking lights positioned within the internal rail trailing in his wake down the house straight.
“It was all a bit surreal,” he recollects. “I knew I used to be in fine condition however I wasn’t actually anticipating to run that quick. I used to be a good distance down within the pack. I sort of knew everybody was going to come back again to me, however there was a degree about 500m in the place I believed I used to be in bother.
“However everybody did come again in direction of me in a short time. At that time I simply knew I needed to end the race robust.
“Even then, it wasn’t nearly one race – I had the remainder of the season. The following day I had 12 miles to run and was very a lot targeted on the Olympic trials.”
But when that activity of securing a Tokyo spot had been efficiently navigated with a slender second-place end behind Elliot Giles, a fairly extra sudden subject arose.
Dustin was knowledgeable {that a} urine pattern he had volunteered to provide after the Good race to make sure his British under-23 file can be ratified had returned minute traces of cocaine. It’s understood the case was subsequently dropped by French anti-doping authorities attributable to cross-contamination with one other check within the laboratory. However, amid all of the upheaval, the information then emerged within the nationwide media. All of it mixed to trigger a massively disrupted build-up to the Olympics, the place Dustin may solely end sixth in his warmth and didn’t progress.
He has by no means spoken publicly concerning the episode and has no needs to be drawn on specifics, however he does admit the anti-doping errors and subsequent undesirable publicity tarnished what ought to have been the spotlight of his profession thus far.
“It was the hardest time of my life by far and I might by no means want that feeling on anybody – the place your privateness and popularity is completely disregarded,” he says. “It’s a horrible factor. I received by it on the time however it doesn’t sit properly and it by no means will.
“We had been constructing one thing actually particular and it disrupted that. It’s unfinished enterprise as a result of I used to be doing one thing actually good, however there’s no motive why I can’t do it once more.”
His exclusion from British Athletics funding for this season was anticipated – “it’s the character of a cut-throat enterprise” – however Dustin explains that his day by day programme has remained largely unchanged due to a longstanding sports activities scholarship from the College of Birmingham, the place he accomplished a chemistry undergraduate diploma and is now finding out part-time for a masters in healthcare know-how. He has additionally retained a Nike sponsorship deal that was signed simply earlier than the Tokyo Olympics.
Whereas others may need been tempted to change teaching set-up after reaching the worldwide stage, Dustin stays underneath the steering of Graeme Mason, a coach at Border Harriers in his native Cumbria, who started taking care of him aged 11. With Mason setting the coaching programme from afar, Dustin mixes solo periods with work alongside the college group in Birmingham.
“It simply works,” says Dustin. “The continuity permits us to take a look at the previous, take a look at the longer term and perceive what we need to do.
“I don’t purchase into the mentality of needing to maneuver on. If somebody has the power to get me from my first 600m race properly outdoors two minutes to 1:43 for 800m in 10 years, there’s not a lot mistaken there.
“There’s nothing about my persona or physiology that has made me assume I have to go to a global or skilled coach. It doesn’t work like that. He received me there and I’ve full religion in his potential to get me again to that.”
The hope is for that to occur this summer season. The current surgical procedure means no indoor racing, however he totally expects to be again to his greatest open air and insists qualification for the Paris Olympics is “completely real looking”, as long as he can muscle his method again right into a burgeoning pack of global-level British 800m runners headed by world bronze medallist Ben Pattison, alongside the likes of Max Burgin and Daniel Rowden.
What occurred at – and earlier than – the Tokyo Video games stays what spurs Dustin on on daily basis. “I really feel like I’ve received unfinished enterprise,” he says.
“I used to be in incredible form and some issues derailed my preparations. It’s all the time behind my thoughts and is a bit of fireside on daily basis to get me out of the door, get me to finish the final rep, to push the restrict to get again on the world stage and show what I’m able to.”
» This text first appeared within the February subject of AW journal, which you’ll be able to learn right here