The Timaru Herald

A shadow of doubt

An American from Boring threatens to derail Tom Walsh’s bid for glory at the world athletic championsh­ips. Marc Hinton reports.

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Alarge, unmistakab­le shadow hovers over Tom Walsh ahead of next month’s world athletics championsh­ips in London.

No matter how much the burly Cantab ducks and dives, New Zealand’s leading hope for a medal in London can’t shake the omnipresen­t gloom cast by staunch rival and giant American Ryan Crouser.

Crouser, born in, would you believe, Boring, Oregon, has morphed quickly into the No 1 hurler of the silver sphere on the planet: Olympic champion, unbeaten in 2017, riding a 10-event win streak and regularly blasting past the 22-metre mark. A long, long way from Boring. Not that you’ll catch Walsh, the 25-year-old world indoor and Diamond League shot put champion, and Olympic bronze medallist, getting hung up on Crouser’s remarkable feats. The pride of Timaru, and part-time builder, has his own stuff to worry about, and is not about to let the 2.03m American live rent-free in his head.

Never mind that all four of Walsh’s defeats in 2017 have come at Crouser’s expense. The American nudged him into the runner-up spot in Christchur­ch and Auckland in New Zealand in February, and then again in Diamond League meets in Eugene and Lausanne. Each time the big fella topped the 22-metre mark.

Crouser’s consistenc­y in 2017 has been uncanny. He threw 22.05 to win in Christchur­ch; 22.15 to prevail at the Auckland Track Challenge; then 22.11 to top a meet in Kansas; an off-key 21.79 in Guadeloupe; 22.43 in Eugene; a world-leading and PB 22.65 in Sacramento; 22.39 in Lausanne; and 22.47 most recently in Rabat.

Given that Walsh’s best for 2017 is the 21.97m he tossed to finish second in Lausanne, and that only two other throwers in the world have even topped the 22-metre mark this year (Joe Kovacs and Tomas Stanek), it would be perhaps understand­able if Walsh’s mindset wandered into the silvermeda­l-best-case-scenario territory. Are you kidding. ‘‘He’s not unbeatable,’’ says Walsh ahead of his final stateside shakedown in Athens today. ‘‘He’s in a hell of a good rhythm. Guys in the past have had years like this, where they’ve been over that 22-metre line more often than not.

‘‘But you can’t have that mindset. If you go into a competitio­n thinking I’m only here for second place, then you’ve lost already. He knows that I’m coming for him, put it that way.’’

It’s not like Walsh doesn’t know what it’s like to sit Crouser on his backside. After the American’s memorable gold in Rio last year, the Kiwi exacted revenge in Paris and Zurich en route to his first Diamond League crown. Both times he was in the 22m-plus area.

‘‘You can’t get caught up in trying to throw further than him, just because he’s going so well,’’ adds Walsh. ‘‘If that sneaks into your training it can be detrimenta­l to your own work. So you’ve got to stay out of that. But a few reminders of how well he’s going doesn’t hurt things.

‘‘The competitio­ns I’ve thrown against him this year, I haven’t been in tip-top shape. That’s not making excuses: he’s been better than me on every occasion. But I’m starting to get closer and closer. I will have to do something pretty special to beat him, but I fully believe I can.’’

This is the thing about Walsh. He has figured himself out. He knows his strengths (he’s a rhythm and timing thrower) and his weaknesses (‘‘If it was a strongman contest, I’d be out the arse-end,’’ he adds, with a smile).

But he has found his best method, has refined it to something that works well for him, and has developed the competitiv­e mindset that takes you a long way in top sport.

‘‘I’m going to win it, no doubt about that,’’ says Walsh of his world champs campaign, which

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