Book description
'Elite athletes aren't born. They're made.'
Michael Johnson
From a living icon of the Olympic Games - as both an athlete and now as
a BBC broadcaster - Gold Rush is a compelling analysis of the
fascinating combination of psychological and personal qualities, as well
as internal and external factors, that go to create an Olympic champion.
This exciting new book is based on Michael Johnson's own experiences as
an iconic four-time Olympic champion, and on the knowledge he has
gleaned as a top-class coach and motivational speaker. It also features,
uniquely, more than a dozen exclusive and insightful interviews with
Olympic legends from across several different sports who between them
have claimed more than 50 gold medals over the past 30 years.
In essence, Johnson has assembled his very own Olympic Hall of Fame in
assessing the DNA of true champions.
Gold Rush is themed around chapters in which Johnson will discuss each
of the key qualities/factors. He expertly feeds in fascinating
first-person testimonies from the Olympic legends. In the process he
builds up a definitive knowledge bank of expertise and experience from
athletes who have been on this fascinating journey, encountered the
highs and the lows, but ultimately reached the summit - an Olympic gold medal.
Johnson's interviewees include: Usain Bolt, Carl Lewis, Sally Gunnell,
Seb Coe, Daley Thompson, Cathy Freeman, Ian Thorpe, Michael Phelps,
Rebecca Adlington, Chris Hoy, Steve Redgrave, Matthew Pinsent, Lennox
Lewis and Michael Jordan. Michael Johnson, 43, is one of the most
pre-eminent athletes of all time. He has four Olympic and nine World
Championship gold medals to his name. At the 1996 Atlanta Games, he won
both the 200m and 400m (the only athlete in history to do this at the
same Games), and his world record for 200m of 19. 32 stood for 12 years
until Usain Bolt broke it at the Beijing Games of 2008. He still holds
the world record for 400m - 43. 18 seconds.
Johnson voluntarily returned his 4x400m relay gold medal from the Sydney
Games of 2000 after a team-mate admitted taking performance-enhancing
drugs earlier in his career.
Following his retirement, Johnson became a sports pundit with the BBC
and has since established himself as one of the most popular and
renowned sports broadcasters in the UK. The BBC's coverage of Olympic
Games and World and European track-and-field Championships is hinged
around his contributions.
He writes a regular column for The Times and owns his own sports
training facility, the Michael Johnson Performance Centre, in Texas.
In 2002, he was awarded the Television Pundit of the Year Award by the
Royal Television Society.
He lives in San Francisco, California.