The two-time Asian medallist clocked 1:45.65 sec in 800m at the National Inter-State Athletics Championships in Guwahati in June to shatter legendary Shri Ram Singh’s 42-year-old national record of 1:45.77 sec, set at the 1976 Montreal Olympics. In April, at the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games, Johnson clocked 3:37.86sec in 1500m to finish fifth, but still broke the 23-year-old national record by Bahadur Prasad (3:38.00sec). “Breaking the national records has boosted my morale. I’ve confidence that I’d win a medal in both races in Jakarta,” Johnson, a Naik Subedar in the army, tells Outlook from Bhutan’s capital Thimpu, where he’s training. “He’s a very mature and thinking athlete. Although he’s just 27, he thinks like a 40- or 50-year-old. He’s focused and trains sincerely. Importantly, he is away from all distractions, including girls,” says Jasvinder Singh Bhatia, the middle distance coach in charge of the preparations in Thimpu. The city’s choice as venue for the final camp before the Games could be decisive for athletes training there since May 19. The venue is 2,300 metres above sea level, at which breathing/running is difficult. But if an athlete conquers the conditions at that height, he finds it easy to compete at the sea level, like the Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium in Jakarta, the venue of the Asian Games. In India, the highest altitude where a synthetic track is laid is at 1,600 metres in Coonoor.