After capturing the best life values in the 100 -meter obstacles, height jump and 200 meters to settle as a medal contender on Friday, O’Connor faced adversity on Saturday when the leap of length is surrounded.
The injury was restricted to a single practice launch before javelin.
However, she used “many positive thoughts” to overcome the pain barrier and publish a better 53.06m personal launch before securing silver with a PB or two minutes of 800 m, 9.56 seconds.
Its 6,714 points was enough to finish behind the American gold medalist Anna Hall and ahead of Katarina Johnson-Thompson and American Taliyah Brooks of Great Britain, who shared the bronze.
“Today was a really difficult day, I really hurt the duration of the knee, the length of length, so the last two events were a bit like ‘low and look what happens,” he added.
“I have a great team around me that fills me with trust and I let myself know what I have done on my legs on training day, day. Toy a practice shot before that javelin competition and I just had to believe that I could do it.
“I am a competitor. I was always going to fight until the end and I am so happy with myself that I managed to do it.”

