The Olympic hopes of Kevin Mayer of France, the reigning Olympic silver medallist in the decathlon, are in doubt after he sustained a knee injury during the Aztec International in San Diego on Thursday. The two-time world champion withdrew from the decathlon competition after four events, raising doubts about his ability to qualify for the Paris Olympics.
Competing at the Aztec Invitational track meet in San Diego, Mayer was aiming to achieve the decathlon Olympic standard of 8,460 points, a mark he has yet to reach within the qualifying window.
Pas d’inquiétude, on se revoit rapidement sur la piste 💪🏼
Merci pour vos messages 🤍 pic.twitter.com/N4bGHIw3F2
— Kevin MAYER (@mayer_deca) March 22, 2024
The 32-year-old has been plagued with injury and has not completed a decathlon since winning his second world title at the 2022 World Championships in Eugene. While he attempted to compete at last year’s World Athletics Championships in Budapest, he was forced to withdraw after the second event, due to pain in his left Achilles tendon. Mayer told French media at the time that his primary goal was to regain full health and redirect his focus to the 2024 Olympics, to be held in his hometown.
For the past decade, Mayer has been a formidable rival of Canada’s Damian Warner; they are two of the best decathletes of this generation. Mayer boasts world indoor and outdoor titles, along with the decathlon world record of 9,126 points, yet Olympic gold is the one thing he has not accomplished. Mayer has won two Olympic silver medals, finishing behind Warner at Tokyo 2020 and behind American Ashton Eaton at Rio 2016.
While the severity of Mayer’s injury is unknown, the world record holder reassured his followers on social media, stressing his determination to return to the track soon. Time is running out; the deadline to earn Olympic qualification is June 30. As one of the golden hopefuls for Team France in Paris, Mayer’s attention shifts to getting healthy for the Götzis Hypo-Meeting, a massive annual meet for decathletes, on May 18 and 19, where he will need to meet the standard.