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national sports reporter David Mark

Why athletes rate Bathurst's World Athletics Cross Country Championships course 'toughest' they've seen

The course is set to be challenging for the contingent of international and local athletes competing in Bathurst. (Supplied: Wayne Larden)

They call it the toughest race in the world.

Race director for Saturday's World Athletics Cross Country Championships in Bathurst, Richard Welsh, was given an instruction when the course was designed.

"Make it difficult", World Athletics told Welsh — and he has delivered.

"The Australian athletes have had a look at the course and said it was the toughest course they've ever seen," Welsh said.

Australian mixed relay competitor Abbey Caldwell was one of those athletes who walked the two-kilometre circuit in the middle of Bathurst's famous Mount Panorama motor racing track several weeks ago.

Her assessment? 

"Grim. There is no easy part of the course," Caldwell told ABC Sport.

"You're either going up or you're going down, there's not a moment to reset and regain your momentum.

"It'll be hard and fast, and it will separate a lot of the field and that's why I use the word 'grim', because it won't be down to tactical running for anyone.

"It'll just be [get] out and run as hard as you can on a really tough course."

Welsh has mapped out a circuit that rises and falls 58 metres – including one climb with an 11 per cent pinch — and includes a mud patch and a 50-metre sand pit.

A sand pit is one of the features of the Bathurst course. (Supplied: Wayne Larden)

Much of the course is off camber and there are numerous tight turns.

"We know that we're going to get punched in the head in the first 30 seconds because the course is that tough," said well-known Australian distance coach Nic Bideau.

Bideau coaches Australia's top hope in the senior men's race, Jack Rayner, as well as Olympic 1500 metres finalist Stewart McSweyn, who will be competing in the mixed 4x2km relay.

Olympic finalist Stewart McSweyn (centre) is among the Australian contingent in Bathurst. (Getty Images: Michael Steele)

McSweyn said the presence of the mud and sand added to the challenge of the course.

"It's going to kind of be a grind circuit, where you never feel like you're never feeling that good any of the way," McSweyn said.

"You're just going to have to be tough, and tough out the whole of the race.

"But I grew up on a farm, so I'm used to running on uneven farmland in uneven conditions."

McSweyn highlighted the Australian contingent's other secret power: home-ground advantage.

"We've got the home crowd and I think that will give us a bit of an advantage and hopefully help us get around the course," he said.

"We've actually seen it, so we know what to expect."

Aussies well represented

Twenty-eight Australian athletes will compete at the World Championships over five races on Saturday afternoon.

There will be six in each of the individual races — the men's and women's senior events (both 10km) and the under 20s events (8km for men and 6km for women) — and four will take part in the mixed relay.

All up, there will be 453 athletes from 48 countries competing, including some of the best distance runners in the world.

Among them are the men's and women's world record holders in both the 5,000m and 10,000m events on the track: Uganda's Joshua Cheptegei and Ethiopian Letesenbet Gidey.

Cheptegei is the defending champion in the men's senior race at the World Athletics Cross Country Championships.

He is the reigning Olympic 5,000m gold medallist and in Bathurst will have stiff competition in the form of Kenyan Geoffrey Kamworor, who won the senior race in 2015 and 2017.

Joshua Cheptegei will defend his world title in the men's senior race. (Getty images: Bryn Lennon)

Cheptegei's countryman Jacob Kiplimo — who won gold in the 5,000m and 10,000m at last year's Birmingham Commonwealth Games — is another contender.

Kiplimo is also the men's world record holder in the half marathon.

Gidey — bronze medallist at the 2019 world cross country titles in Denmark — is expected to be challenged by Kenyan Beatrice Chebet.

Chebet won the junior race four years ago and is also the Commonwealth Games gold medallist in the 5,000m.

Letesenbet Gidey (right) claimed bronze in the senior women's race when the world titles were last held in 2019. (Getty Images: Bryn Lennon)

The presence of these world-class athletes in Australia is providing motivation for the local distance brigade.

"It's a massive coup," McSweyn said.

"The world's eyes are going to be on us for that weekend."

Caldwell said she was looking forward to competing against some of the world's best in Bathurst.

"I'm well and truly inspired by many, many athletes and I think when you're in the presence of those kind of people, it's hard to not admire what they've done, the work they put in and just the athletes they are," Caldwell said.

International athletes set to be 'shocked'

Bideau said the visiting contingent would get a surprise when they arrived in Bathurst.

"I'm tipping that a lot of those people will be shocked at how hard it is and how difficult it'll be," he said.

"They've got to overcome long-haul travel from Europe to get here. That's normally our challenge; now it's their challenge and they've got to go from cold weather to hot weather."

Bideau said Rayner was a chance for a top-10 finish in the men's senior race but he held great hope for the Australian mixed relay team.

Caldwell and McSweyn will team up with Commonwealth Games men's 1,500m gold medallist Ollie Hoare and Olympic women's 1,500m finalist Jessica Hull.

Ollie Hoare (left) returns to the international stage after his stunning win at last year's Commonwealth Games. (Getty Images: David Ramos)

"They're really mentally hard to give this a real shake and have a go, and they feel that if they all run their best, they could win it," Bideau said.

"I don't think many countries will have four runners better than us.

"We're not overconfident, but we're looking forward to the challenge and looking forward to having a good chance to win and really capitalising on having the home crowd on our side and knowing about the course bit more than the others.

"It's a rare opportunity when you have an opportunity to become a world champion in front of your home fans, your family and friends. That'll be a fantastic experience if they can pull it off."

Abbey Caldwell will help fly the Australian flag in the mixed relay race. (Getty Images/Corbis: Tim Clayton)

Caldwell said there was enormous self-belief among the Australian camp.

"It's really nice for team Australia to be hopefully able to stamp our authority and say, 'Yeah, we are the best' and we can put ourselves on the radar," Caldwell said.

"There's no reason to say why we can't [win].

"Australian distance running is just going through the roof at the moment."

The five premier events will be held on Saturday afternoon in Bathurst, but members of the public will have their chance to try their hands in a serious of 40 community runs on Friday.

These runs include golden-ticket races, where 28 talented athletes could win a chance to compete in the World Championships the following day.

The top seven men and women finishers in both the senior (6km) and under 20 categories (4km) will get the chance to line up 30 hours later to race against the world's best.

The racing begins on Friday at 8:00am AEDT, while the races on Saturday kick off at 3:30pm with the mixed relay and ends at 6:30pm with the running of the men's senior race.

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