Philippine sprinter Kristina Knott will represent the country in the upcoming 2020 Tokyo Olympics, qualifying via the universality rule on June 23. The Filipino – American will compete in the 200-meter run event in the quadrennial meet.
The St. Croix, Virgin Islands born Knott earned one of the four universality places along with Najma Paveen of Pakistan, Veronica Shanti Pereira of Singapore, and Lucia Moris of South Sudan. The universality places are the last four slots reserved for athletes who failed to directly qualify via the entry standard time of 22.80 seconds.
Not even the scare of a positive Covid-19 diagnosis was enough to dampen the elation of qualifying for the biggest sporting event in the world as Knott tested positive on the same day of the announcement of her place in the meet. Knott was asymptomatic and has subsequently recovered.
It has been quite the journey for Knott to get here as she only recently started competing for the Philippines in athletics. Growing up in Florida the Filipino – American with a Filipina mother from Imus, Cavite and American father, first started competing in basketball but entered track in Middle School and High School splitting time with her first sport.
Knott herself was the one who contacted the officials of the Philippine athletics federation through her connections with her fellow Filipino – American athletes. Her primary reason for joining was to become closer to her Filipino roots.
“The reason for the switch was to get more in touch with my Filipino side and I thought what better way to do that than through sport”, Knott said.
The University of Miami alum, who only made her international debut in 2018, as she is the South East Asian 200m record holder when she broke the record twice in a span of hours in the 2019 SEA Games.
Knott secured a time of 23.07 seconds in the preliminary round of the 200m in the SEA games and subsequently broke her own record by clocking in at 23.01 in the final to secure gold, one of her four medals in the 2019 SEA Games.
Apart from holding the South East Asian record of 23.01 in the 200m, Knott also holds the Philippine record for the 100m dash when she eclipsed Lydia De Vega’s 33-year-old record at the 2020 Drake Blue Oval Showcase held in Iowa in 2020.
She finished with a time of 11.27 seconds, eclipsing the legend De Vega’s record by the slimmest of margins. Her time was one one hundredths of a second faster than De Vega’s (11.28).
Knott is certainly going to put up a fight to capture that elusive Olympic gold for the Philippines. Along with all Olympians she needs all Filipinos’ support in Tokyo and she is grateful and hopeful for even more support come the Olympic proper.
“Thank you for supporting me to become an Olympian, I hope and pray that you guys can continue to support me. Show love August 2nd when I run the 200”, Knott ended.