A YOUNG York athletics club sensation whose father is battling cancer has been competing in the finals of the national schools games.

On Friday 16-year-old Isaac Henson placed fifth in pole vault at the School Games National Finals, renowned as a launching pad for athletes with former alumni, including Commonwealth Games medallists, Adam Peaty, Katarina Johnson-Thompson and Hannah Cockroft.

As previously reported by The Press, Isaac Henson was also recently named triple Yorkshire champ in shot put, discus and 100m hurdles and Northern regional champ in javelin.

The Ripon Grammar School student, whose father Ant was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in April, celebrated after being awarded five grade 9s, three 8s and three 7s last month.

Juggling a hectic sporting schedule with his studies, Isaac took it all in his stride: “My dad being poorly really put things in perspective for me,” he says.

“And spending many hours a week training for athletics has made me determined to do my best.”

Just before sitting his exams, the 16-year-old multi-eventer competed in the Yorkshire track and field championships, where he also won silver in javelin and pole vaulting.

He went on to win his Northern regional title last month, alongside silvers in pole vault and discus, having won the U17 Yorkshire discus champion title in the past for two years’ running.

Now taking A-levels in art, biology, chemistry and maths, Isaac hopes to win a sporting scholarship to study chemistry at university in the States.

Having qualified for four national championships this year, he has also been selected for the prestigious School Games national finals at Loughborough University next week and national pole vault and octathlon championships this year.

The teenager represented Yorkshire at the national 2021 U17 octathlon championships in Bedfordshire and qualified for the U17 400m hurdle championships at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester last year.

A former North Yorkshire U15 indoor pentathlon champion – in long jump, high jump, hurdles, shot put and 800m sprint – he’s now working towards the decathlon, where he will compete in ten events.

Isaac trains with York City Athletics Club two to three times a week and attends specialist pole vaulting training in Leeds every Tuesday.

Although he only took up pole vaulting recently, he is currently placed sixth in the country in his age group.

The dedicated athlete also trains for two hours a day at home: “This can involve hanging upside down on rigs for prolonged periods so that I can hold my own body weight,” he explains.

His interest in athletics was first sparked aged 11, when he was selected to represent his school in cross country and went on to join the athletics club in York two years later.