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Karsten Warholm: Norway’s Olympic star’s rise from street race to world record

Norway's Olympic hero Karsten Warholm has genuinely won it all and, at 28, still has plenty left in the tank. Here's his rise from street races in his hometown to the stunning world record-breaking gold in Tokyo.

Pictured is Karston Warholm.
Gold medalist, Norway's Karsten Warholm celebrates during the podium ceremony for the men's 400m hurdles during the World Athletics Championships. Photo by Ferenc ISZA / AFP

At the age of just seven, wearing jeans in a local street race in his home town of Ulsteinvik in Norway, Karsten Warholm won his first medal.

More followed and today a hundred or so adorn the childhood bedroom of the reigning European, world and Olympic 400m hurdles champion.

It is the brightest gold in a small shipyard town on the edge of the North Sea.

Warholm merits just a one-line mention on the town’s Wikipedia page and yet his exploits on the track are perhaps how future generations will remember Ulsteinvik.

The 28-year-old has genuinely won it all: three world championships, two European championships and an Olympic title in 2021 with a stunning world record time.

It all began one day in the summer of 2003.

Seven-year-old Karsten was convinced by a friend to take part in a race that the local athletics club was organising around the town hall.

“He turned up in jeans, without any sportswear, and crushed everyone. After that, he took up athletics,” his faithful friend Kristian Mork told AFP

“I also did athletics for years but because I lined up against Karsten, my list of achievements consists mainly of silver medals,” he laughs.

Treasure trove

In the family home just outside Ulsteinvik, the bedroom where seven-year-old Warholm hung his first medal has been transformed into a trophy room.

The Olympic gold from Tokyo, however, as well as one of the shoes he was wearing when he ran 45.94sec in the final to smash his own world record, are usually kept elsewhere.

That run in Tokyo which saw him become the first person to run under 46 seconds is one of the more astonishing in the history of the Games as he sliced 0.76sec off his previous world record, a stunning 1.63 percent improvement.

But there is still room for more gold from the Paris Olympics.

“We always try to leave a little space… just in case,” smiles Kristine Golin Haddal, Karsten’s mother and agent.

A close up of Karston Warholm's mother holding an Olympic gold medal.

Kristine Gølin Haddal, the mother and agent of Norwegian Olympic 400m hurdles champion Karsten Warholm, holds the gold medal he won when breaking the World Record in the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Photo by Viken Kantarci / AFP

She and Warholm’s father Mikal have been front and centre of his development as an athlete.

Kristine was a keen athlete in her youth, while Mikal played football. The result was that young Karsten kicked a ball one day and worked on his athletics the next.

Warholm made his breakthrough on the track when he was 15 at an unofficial national youth indoor championships in 2011.

In one weekend, he won five gold medals: long jump, high jump, 60m, 60m hurdles and 200m.

In the photos, he poses proudly, smiling behind his braces.

“He liked to try out different disciplines, to challenge himself, to see if he could handle this or that event,” recalls his mother.

He was a jack-of-all-trades, had an iron will and put in an enormous amount of training, both at school and in his spare time.

It was on an open-air track in the town, on the playground or along the beach that he clocked up the kilometres, in summer and winter alike.

“He trained all year round, often outside,” says his former high school sports teacher, Svein Ove Fylsvik.

“I’m not sure he always found it particularly fun but he did everything we agreed, come rain or shine.”

‘The Warholm effect’ 

Hard work pays off. In 2013, in Donetsk, Warholm won the world junior championships in the octathlon, the youth equivalent of the decathlon, a discipline he concentrated on for a long time.

“He wasn’t a big fan of the 400m. Too tiring,” says Arve Hatloy, his youth coach.

“He continued to be versatile and dabbled in everything until he was 18, 19.”

But there was a drawback with the octathlon, and in particular the decathlon, as he looked to step up.

“He struggled to really excel in the combined events because he wasn’t very good at the javelin,” said a matter-of-fact Hatloy.

It was not until he moved to Oslo in 2015 that the future world record holder really concentrated on the 400m hurdles, under the guidance of his current coach, Leif Olav Alnes.

The rest will go down in athletics history.

Meanwhile, closer to home among the 9,000 or so inhabitants of Ulsteinvik and the surrounding area, the Warholm effect is evident.

The town track that he has pounded up and down thousands of times is due to be renovated, after which it will bear the name of their most illustrious citizen.

The local club, which once had a few dozen members, now has over 200.

Among them is 20-year-old hurdles specialist Lovise Skarbovik Andresen, for whom Warholm is an inspiration.

“It shows that you can come from a small, remote place and become the best in the world,” she said.

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Norwegian police charge Olympic champion’s father for domestic violence

Norwegian police said Monday that Gjert Ingebrigtsen, father and former coach of 1,500m Olympic champion Jakob Ingebrigtsen, had been charged with domestic violence against a family member.

Norwegian police charge Olympic champion's father for domestic violence

Jakob Ingebrigtsen and two of his brothers, Henrik and Filip, who are also athletes, shocked Norway last October when they accused their father of being violent.

“We grew up with a very aggressive and authoritarian father, who used physical violence and threats as part of his upbringing,” the brothers wrote in an op-ed for newspaper VG. “We still feel a sense of discomfort and fear that we have felt since childhood,” they added.

Police opened a probe into the abuse claims and on Monday said prosecutors had decided to charge Gjert Ingebrigtsen, 58, with domestic violence against one of his children.

According to a source close to the case, the acts in question do not concern the trio of known athletes but another, younger child.

Over a period of four years, from 2018 to 2022, Gjert Ingebrigtsen allegedly manhandled, insulted, threatened and hit the child in the face with his hand or with a towel.

Responding to questions from AFP, Therese Braut Vage, who led the investigation, would not confirm this account.

Police said they had closed investigations into other events concerning the six other children in the home either due to a lack of evidence or, in one case, because the statute of limitations having expired.

Gjert, who coached Jakob until after the 2021 Olympics in Tokyo — where Jakob won the gold — has always denied the accusations against him.

“As far as the dismissed cases, we agree that there is no evidence to prove that Ingebrigtsen committed any wrongdoing,” his lawyer John Christian Elden told AFP on Monday.

“For the rest, Ingebrigtsen disputes the description of the facts on which the indictment is based — and he therefore does not admit his guilt,” he continued in an email.

Jakob Ingebrigtsen is the most successful of the three brothers, twice winning gold in the world championships 5000m in 2022 and 2023, as well as the Olympic 1500m gold.

The 23-year-old is also preparing for the Olympic Games in Paris this summer.

Henrik, 33, and Filip, 31, were European champions in the 1500m in 2012 and 2016 respectively.

After breaking with his sons, Gjert Ingebrigtsen shocked Norwegian athletics by becoming the trainer of another runner, Narve Gilje Nordas.

The Norwegian Olympic Committee has said that Gjert will not be granted accreditation for the Olympic Games in Paris this summer, as was the case at last year’s World Athletics Championships.

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