Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Triple Olympic champion Nafi Thiam under ‘black cloud’ after withdrawal from World Championships

An underwhelming long jump left Thiam with almost no chance of a medal

Nick Mulvenney
Sunday 21 September 2025 09:14 BST
Comments
Nafi Thiam is a triple Olympic champion in heptathlon
Nafi Thiam is a triple Olympic champion in heptathlon (Getty Images)

Belgium's triple Olympic champion Nafi Thiam has pulled out of the heptathlon at the World Athletics Championships after an underwhelming long jump left her with almost no chance of a medal.

The 31-year-old, who won world titles in 2017 and 2022, failed to get over the six-metre mark with her two legal jumps on Saturday morning to stand in eighth place in the overall standings, 377 points behind competition-leader Anna Hall.

Multiple Belgian media outlets reported that Thiam, who last lost in competition at the 2019 worlds, had been withdrawn by her coach before the javelin and 800m in the evening session.

Thiam did not turn up for the start of the evening session and was listed as "Did Not Start" when the javelin competition got under way at the National Stadium.

"I've struggled with this heptathlon from the start. I tried to fight it and persevere, but it clearly didn't work," a tearful Thiam told Het Nieuwsblad after Saturday morning's session.

"I started this morning thinking I would fight until the end and not leave empty-handed because I've worked hard this year.

"I knew I could do something good here and fight for my place in the standings but that didn't happen. So I'm disappointed, yes. This championship is a real black cloud."

Thiam competed sparingly in 2025 and had a disrupted run up to the championships after a row with her national federation.

She accused the Belgian athletics body of excluding her from their pre-championships camp in a row over image rights. The federation denied the allegation.

Thiam was asked whether the row had impacted her performances in Tokyo.

"It's hard to quantify that," she told the newspaper. "Regardless of the reasons why I feel the way I do, the reality remains that I feel the way I do. So that doesn't make a difference."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in