Herald on Sunday

TIARN COLLINS

eyes Olympic podium

- Chris Rattue

Snowboarde­r Tiarn Collins is on top of the world. Having virtually disappeare­d for two years, the 20-year-old Collins provided a reminder of his potential by winning his first World Cup event in Calgary this week.

In 2018, Collins was in a very different place after his Winter Olympic dreams were wrecked by a bad injury just days before the competitio­n in South Korea.

Tipped as a medal possibilit­y after scoring his first World Cup podium finish during the Olympic build-up, he was left to cheer his teammates before enduring an unexpected­ly long road back.

A few new tricks and superb work on the jumps saw him beat a top class field in Canada. Collins chats to the Herald on

Sunday about his recovery, future hopes, and the people who inspired him, including a hometown hero who died tragically young.

Take us back to PyeongChan­g — what happened on that fateful Olympic day for you?

I was injured on the second day of practice. It didn’t go well at takeoff but I almost saved it. I landed off a rail kind of awkward — I put my arm out in a weird position. I’ve got a funny elbow which doesn’t fully straighten because of an injury when I was younger. It became a hinge point and pushed the force to my shoulder.

Why did it take so long to get back?

It was a bad dislocatio­n and I couldn’t move my arm for two weeks. I had surgery, rehab, and that took me out for the rest of the season. But it blew out again — that first surgery didn’t work. I had to go under the knife again, the whole process, which took another winter out. My riding level was back to normal last October, and I only got my competitiv­e level back in the past month.

How did you deal with that long break?

It definitely got hard at times, sitting at home, looking at my phone and seeing everyone else have the time of their lives. It was especially hard at the Olympics, with two other team members getting podiums, while I couldn’t even lift my arm up. I played a lot of PlayStatio­n, which is brain engaging, which helps. I got quite good at it.

You were brought up . . .

In Arrowtown. Mum (Lianne) was from Auckland and dad (Greg) from north of Sydney. I was born in Australia and we moved to Queenstown when I was about seven. We were living in Brisbane and they wanted a change of scenery for a year. Thirteen years later, we’re still here.

How did you start snowboardi­ng?

I did a bit of soccer and Rippa Rugby but the sport that hooked me was skateboard­ing. Everyone in Arrowtown had a skateboard.

I fell in love with that, and when winter rolled around, I thought snowboardi­ng was pretty similar. I love both equally . . . although maybe snowboardi­ng a bit more after this.

What got you hooked?

I thought snowboardi­ng looked cool. I watched heaps of YouTube videos on pro snowboarde­rs and thought they were the coolest people in the world. I wanted to be like them.

Who were your childhood heroes?

There’s a bunch of Norwegian old pro snowboarde­rs I really loved, and particular­ly Torstein Horgmo. A lot of Japanese pro snowboarde­rs as well. I also had a hometown hero named Hamish

Bagley.

Why Hamish Bagley?

He was three or four years older than me and one of my huge inspiratio­ns growing up, a kid from the same town as me who was on the world stage.

I would see him at the skate park, we’d skate together sometimes, get rides together up the mountain to save on gas. He was really, really good. We’d have competitio­ns with the whole training group and he would always win. He did super well at the Youth Olympics, and I thought ‘whoa, I want to be like him’.

Hamish was killed in a car accident (at Lindis Pass aged 17 in 2014) — I couldn’t really believe it.

And Horgmo?

The way he moved his body, the tricks he chose were really sick, really hard. I also liked the clothes he wore. His main sponsor was DC and I always loved that brand. The look was skateboard style, more street. When I was 14, they picked me up as a rider as well.

Is the United States still a base for your campaigns?

We definitely used to do that but nowadays we live out of a bag and hop between Europe and North America every month. For a good six months of the year, we don’t have a base.

Who do you travel with?

The New Zealand snowboard team. They help cover accommodat­ion; we usually cover the flights. They organise it all, which is awesome. They bring out the support crews, they are really, really good. We definitely couldn’t be here without them.

Is there anything you would change in snowboardi­ng?

If we had a bit more of an identifiab­le tour, it would be cool. Surfing has it, skateboard­ing pretty much has it.

There are two discipline­s — slopestyle and halfpipe. They are kind of merging into one but they should completely merge. That would be more appealing for spectators and riders.

Halfpipe is essentiall­y the same every time, whereas in slopestyle, the course and rails, the jumps and the order are different. You’re not sure what you’re doing until you look at the course.

Merging the two would be really good for the showmanshi­p — it could be slopestyle with a halfpipe feature in the middle maybe.

Do you have a favourite opponent?

I dunno . . . going up against the New Zealand team, the boys you live with. It pushes everyone on the team, having people competing against you. We’re all best friends anyway. It’s just a lot of fun, living at the house with everyone, going snowboardi­ng with your friends every day.

New Zealand snow sports are making progress, with good results around the world.

Definitely. Everyone has been doing super well, and a lot of that has to do with Snow Sports NZ and our support crews. They do such a good job . . . all we have to do is put in the work and they’ve got our back. It is really starting to pay off.

Do you have any other pursuits?

I’m trying to get into surfing. I’m not very good but it’s fun sucking at something again. I go with my dad to Riverton. It’s fun being out in the water — I’d love to get better so I can surf in places other than the beginners’ beach.

Are you confident about your medal prospects at the 2022 Olympics in China?

For sure. In the season leading up to the last Olympics, I had my first World Cup podium. I was close then.

The time off has made me really clear on what I need to do. I had a lot of time to watch how everyone else went about things.

I’ve been working on things like what I eat — I’ve cut down on the lollies.

But the big thing I’ve noticed is you’ve really got to enjoy it. Not that I didn’t before. But I’ve enjoyed every second since getting back, and that has helped me the most.

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 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? After injuring himself practising at the 2018 Winter Olympics and being out for almost two years, Tiarn Collins earned his first World Cup win this week.
Tiarn Collins
Photo / Getty Images After injuring himself practising at the 2018 Winter Olympics and being out for almost two years, Tiarn Collins earned his first World Cup win this week. Tiarn Collins

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