Matt Majendie speaks to the world indoor silver medallist about having the ability to forge a brand new path within the lengthy bounce, regardless of being the daughter of two well-known athletes.
Larissa Iapichino initially did every little thing in her energy to keep away from taking place the trail she has taken. Rising up, she was the quintessential reluctant lengthy jumper. The daughter of two athletes – her mom Fiona Might was a two-time lengthy bounce world champion and father Gianni a nationwide record-holder on the pole vault – she was decided to navigate her personal, different sporting journey.
It started with gymnastics, which got here to a untimely halt when she grew too tall, in addition to being demonised by her concern of the beam. She contemplated volleyball, tennis after which. finally, athletics.
“I bear in mind pondering: ‘I don’t wish to be too critical about it, I’m not my mum, I’m not my dad’,” says the 23-year-old Italian. “However, the factor is, I went for the primary hour-and-a-half and I fell in love with the game. It began with the hurdles as I nonetheless needed one thing totally different to leaping.”
The issue was that she had a pure aptitude for leaping ft first into the lengthy bounce pit, regardless of her preliminary reluctance and that of her mom. She remembers: “My mum was determined: ‘Please preserve with the hurdles or center distance however not the lengthy bounce’. I used to be like: ‘Mum, I’m good at this, the outcomes converse for themselves’.
“Okay, possibly I’ve a bit extra strain as a result of my dad and mom had been who they had been however it was only a future already written by another person. And I stated: ‘Who cares if folks wish to put strain on me? Simply allow them to and I’ll do my very own factor’.”
It maybe appeared inevitable that each her genetics and being named after a protracted jumper, Larisa Berezhnaya, a recent of her mom’s, meant she would finally land on the lengthy bounce runway. Regardless of the pathway, it has paid off to good impact as a European Indoor champion, European silver medallist and having positioned agonisingly fourth on the final Olympic Video games in Paris. A primary ever world medal can also be now in her grasp because of the 6.87m leap that introduced silver on the World Indoor Championships final month.
Might, a British-born athlete who switched allegiance to Italy and received world titles in 1995 and 2001 together with two Olympic silver medals, stays the inspiration however her daughter has efficiently created her personal identification.
“She did wonderful issues and I by no means felt like a weight on my shoulders being my mum’s daughter,” says Iapichino. “I’m me and he or she is her. I’m doing, and he or she did, athletics in two totally different eras. We can not examine a lot. I’ve my qualities and he or she has hers. I’ve my very own path to do and comply with. Typically I have a look at movies of her and go ‘wow’ however that’s inspiring, not one thing adverse.”
One other hyperlink is their coach. Gianni, Larissa’s father, coaches her as he did Fiona Might, the couple happening to marry earlier than divorcing in 2011. Being coach and athlete, in addition to father and daughter, has its challenges however they chuckle on the typically rollercoaster nature of it.
“We now have very sturdy personalities however I even have a bit contact of my mom so it’s not that simple,” says Larissa, laughing and searching throughout to her smiling father. “We handle to place our non-public relationship – father and daughter – apart once we’re on the observe.”
In contrast to the likes of World Athletics president Seb Coe, who referred to as his dad Peter when he was teaching him, she sticks to ‘dad’ on the observe. “I feel what now we have may be very particular,” she provides.
Dad briefly butts in to clarify a bit concerning the Iapichino household attribute being a feisty, combative one which might elevate eyebrows to these witnessing it. “It’s like the connection that I had with my father,” he explains. “We had horrible fights and nonetheless do, and it seems to be horrible however in an hour it’s gone with no need to clarify issues to one another. Our relationship is a bit the identical. Typically now we have to get mad with one another however it ends there.”

Having witnessed each on the top of their careers, how do mum and daughter examine as athletes? “They’re very totally different,” he begins diplomatically. “As Larissa stated, it’s fully totally different eras. She has a physiotherapist, osteopath, a nutritionist, again then we simply had water and meals, no amino acids, protein or something like that.
“Fiona was very robust mentally. She by no means complained as soon as, even when possibly she thought it! With Larissa there’s extra suggestions and that’s a very good factor.” Larissa chimes in, “I’m very opinionated,” to which dad responds warmly, “She typically comes out with issues which might be very helpful and, anyway, I’m not a dictator.”
There have been robust moments collectively, most not too long ago the World Championships in Tokyo final yr the place Larissa had arrived within the type of her life, leaping in extra of seven metres, however then didn’t qualify for the ultimate. The rebuild has not been simple, though she bounced again with a greatest ever season-opener of 6.93m on her comeback earlier than that medal hunt in Toruń.
“It takes time to consider what occurred and you must take that point,” she says of the aftermath of Japan. “You might want to relaxation a bit bit, reset your thoughts, return on the observe and work more durable.”
One massive change has been the elimination of a sports activities psychologist, the goal being to offer her extra possession in coping with the robust moments mentally in competitors after they come up.
Dissecting Tokyo, her dad says: “Why had been there typically these blackouts? They weren’t bodily. She was in a heck of a form within the days earlier than Tokyo – she’s in all probability by no means been so sturdy in her life. So we needed to level out the actual issues that weren’t going proper, making an attempt to work on her mindset, letting her attempt to get out of the tough conditions and attempt to discover a method out. It will assist her fairly than somebody telling her learn how to coach her thoughts. As an alternative, she discovered herself in a tough state of affairs and couldn’t return to regular enterprise.”
Heading in direction of the out of doors season, each have massive ambitions and past of their fifth season as coach-athlete.Larissa speaks of the truth that: “I haven’t felt the bounce. I strongly consider that each jumper in a profession has the bounce the place you are feeling that it’s lengthy, that you simply’re flying, that every little thing simply received collectively completely. I haven’t felt that. I’m simply working laborious looking for my good bounce.”
She has simply ended her winter exams in what’s the fifth yr of her part-time authorized profession. It entails an organised balancing act and he or she likes having the 2 pursuits. The eventual goal is to navigate a profession in sports activities legislation however, first, will come the pursuit of perfection.


















