The Southland Times

Junior thrower to move up the ranks

- Nathan Burdon Sport Southland This article was supplied by Southlands­port.com.

Two defining moments have delivered Southlande­r Dyani Shepherd-Oates – New Zealand’s best junior hammer thrower – to the precipice of what promises to be an exciting senior athletics career.

The 19-year-old remembers her mother, a talented secondary schools hurdler in her time, bringing home a hammer for her to try on the family farm, near Mararoa School on the way to Te Anau.

‘‘At the time there were a few older girls in Southland that were throwing and I thought it looked pretty cool,’’ she recalls.

‘‘Mum jacked up a 3-kilogram hammer for me and we got out into a paddock, stood in the middle and then I swung this thing around my head a couple of times and let it go.

‘‘I don’t even know what direction it went in, but I remember thinking that I’d like to give this a go and it’s just gone from there. It was a little bit freaky, but also exhilarati­ng.’’

Shepherd-Oates had been an enthusiast­ic athletics competitor through primary school, gaining some success as a runner.

However, as she got into her early teens she found herself gravitatin­g towards the throwing events.

‘‘I have always really loved the discus and when I started throwing the hammer I found I enjoyed it even more. They are both great events,’’ she said.

‘‘I still enjoy running and swimming and other sports, but it’s throwing the hammer that I really love. I just love the movement. I get so much joy out of trying to improve my technique and attempting to make it look even easier.’’

The other defining moment came in Shepherd-Oates’ final year of competing at the New Zealand secondary schools champs, in Hastings in 2017.

Ranked in the top two throwers in the country, Shepherd-Oates was as close to a medal certainty as you can get, but she put all three of her qualifying throws into the side of the cage and didn’t even make the top eight finals.

‘‘I think that was the moment I decided I really wanted to pursue hammer throwing more seriously,’’ she said.

‘‘For some athletes, having that at the end of their school career, they might have just wanted to put it in the past and do something else. For me, I wanted to commit and do better.

‘‘Technicall­y something was just off that day and I put three into the cage.

‘‘I cried a little bit afterwards. I went away and thought my way through it.

‘‘Then, you talk to other coaches, other athletes – it happens to everyone a few times.

‘‘Yes, it hurts at the time – you’ve put so much work into your training so that you can do well, and then you don’t. It’s character building.’’

Shepherd-Oates loved the support she received from the Fiordland Athletics Club, as well as working with Invercargi­ll-based coach Chris Knight, but a move to Dunedin and renowned throwing coach Raylene Bates has seen her throwing improve exponentia­lly.

‘‘Fiordland has been absolutely amazing and I’ve loved my time at the club, and to this day they remain really supportive and I enjoy getting back to see them and compete with them,’’ she said.

‘‘But it’s just a bit too far for throwing training. Moving to Raylene’s squad has been fantastic and I’m absolutely loving it. She has such an extensive knowledge of the sport and a fantastic understand­ing of all four of the throws. She really gets different athletes.’’

Shepherd-Oates, who completed certificat­es in informatio­n technology and business management at Otago Polytechni­c in 2018 before starting a Bachelor of Commerce at the University of Otago this year, won the New Zealand track and field under-20 women’s hammer throw title in 2018 with a throw of 43 metres.

She returned in March and defended her title, this time with a throw of 49m, an impressive 6m improvemen­t in 12 months.

A silver medal at the Oceania championsh­ips was another highlight from last summer.

Shepherd-Oates turns 20 in February and will step up to the senior ranks for the New Zealand track and field championsh­ips in March.

While she’s the best under-20 thrower in the country, she will be the fifth or sixth ranked senior thrower when she graduates. ‘‘It will be a change, but I’m very excited to be a senior athlete and finally getting to compete against the other senior girls,’’ she said.

The future is an exciting prospect. ‘‘In throwing you definitely peak later in your 20s. I’d like to think I’ve got a few years left in me, but I’m excited for them,’’ she said.

‘‘I’m very much focused on personal progressio­n, working hard and just throwing further and further and I’ll just see where it all goes.

‘‘I just want to be the best athlete I can possibly be.’’

‘‘I just love the movement. I get so much joy out of trying to improve my technique and attempting to make it look even easier.’’ Southlande­r Dyani Shepherd-Oates, above and right, is New Zealand’s best under-20 hammer thrower

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