Manawatu Standard

Walsh aims to unleash a ‘bomb’

- Marc Hinton

As another outstandin­g season for Tom Walsh draws to a close, the world champion Kiwi shot put exponent is relying on trust to secure the golden finish he knows is lurking within.

The 26-year-old Timaru-born Cantabrian has already tucked away a world indoors title, the Commonweal­th Games gold and world’s best throw for 2018 (and equal seventh best all time, including the shady pre-drug testing era) with the monster 22.67 metres he unleashed in Auckland on March 25.

But now, as a long, gruelling campaign draws to a close, Walsh has one last peak in his sights. Or, more specifical­ly, three more titles – the Diamond League final in Zurich tomorrow, the worldclass Zagreb, Croatia, meet that follows and then the Continenta­l Cup in Ostrava, Czech Republic, that will lower the curtain on the northern season.

The big Kiwi has had a patchy lead-in to the finale and hasn’t broken the 22-metre mark since he threw 22.16m to win in Ostrava on June 13. Till then he had blasted past the threshold in six competitio­ns, four prior to May.

But Walsh is a brilliant competitor who almost always rises to the big occasion. He is world indoors and outdoors champion, won the Diamond League in 2016, was an Olympic bronze medallist the same year, and has emerged, alongside American Ryan Crouser, as the most consistent force of nature in the strongest era of shot put the sport has seen.

It’s why, despite a comparativ­ely modest buildup, the big Kiwi is oozing confidence heading into the three big-money events to close the season.

‘‘It’s been a bit scratchy but I’m starting to feel a lot better,’’ he tells Stuff from Zurich. ‘‘I’m going to drop a bomb in the next three competitio­ns, that’s for sure. I’m feeling pretty good.

"You’ve got to trust what you’ve been doing and trust it’s going to come out on the day when you need it. What I’ve done so well the last few years is trust what I’ve been doing is working and it’s going to pay off – and it always has. So there’s no reason why it shouldn’t again.’’

Though no one has been throwing those ‘‘bombs’’ over the last month or so, Walsh believes the quality field assembled in Zurich – headed by Crouser (2018 best of 22.53m), defending Diamond League champion Darrell Hill, Brazilian Darlan Romani and rising young Pole Michal Haratyk (the only other thrower in 2018 to break the 22m mark) – will require something special to take home the US$50,000 winner’s cheque.

‘‘It’s been a long season for a lot of people, but I’m sure there will be some big throws in these last few comps because there’s a lot of cash on the line. There are very few events these days, when all the boys are there, that you’re going to win with under 22 metres.’’

Walsh, who is fully fit, aims to be there despite the fact his year has been as taxing as anybody’s.

‘‘This was a trial year for so many things. I threw so well early on, and then in June got back to pretty much where my peak was. But there have been a few challenges lately. I thought I’d be throwing further in these last three comps than what I have, but I’ve learnt a lot about managing my expectatio­ns.’’

Walsh doesn’t need a strong finish to tick off a rewarding year, but if you know his competitiv­eness, you know nothing short of that will sate his ambitions. He finished a disappoint­ing sixth in last year’s Diamond League final in Brussels, and a return to Zurich, where he won the 2016 title, appeals as an ideal redemption storyline.

 ??  ?? Tom Walsh
Tom Walsh

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