Waikato Times

Euphoria and heartbreak

The driven life of our elite athletes

- Richard Walker reports.

The starter's gun has fired at the Birmingham Commonweal­th Games but some of our best are watching from home. What does it take to be the best?

It was a Christmas to remember. Camille Buscomb and Cameron French treated themselves to a few days away. They were in the UK, with family mostly back in New Zealand, so they headed off to indulge themselves.

Cooked breakfasts, cooked lunches, scones for afternoon tea, Christmas dinner, a few wines, a few cocktails. No harm done, Buscomb had until the end of January before racing again.

And then the call came through on the 27th. Could Buscomb compete in Madrid on New Year’s? Right after bingeing on that rich food? It was a lucrative gold label 10km road race and Buscomb said yes. She did well too, finishing fifth.

That is life for an elite athlete, track shoes in the suitcase. And Buscomb, currently New Zealand’s best woman distance runner, second fastest ever from this country over the 5k and 10k, has raced a lot. She would catch a flight from New Zealand to Japan to set the pace for the first half of a marathon and then fly home again. There weren’t many races she turned down. One was a 5k race in Monaco her manager wanted her to pace. That is Monaco in Europe. Given she was in New Zealand at the time, that one was too crazy.

Now she and partner French have a newborn, Sienna, 6 weeks old this weekend. Now, their days in Hamilton revolve around the baby, while French – New Zealand’s fastest ever hurdler over 400m, which he has scorched around in 49.33s – is also studying at Wintec.

The pregnancy was not straightfo­rward but things are easier now and Buscomb, 32, is back walking, and thinking of returning to light jogging soon.

That is in no small part because, while former teammates and training partners are competing at the Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham, she has the Paris Olympics in her sights.

She and French, 30, like plenty of other top athletes around New Zealand not competing at Birmingham, whether because of family circumstan­ces, injury or the vagaries of team selection, will be watching their peers in competitio­n on the other side of the world. Elite sport is brutal and the margins are tiny. Eddie Osei-Nketia, for instance, is New Zealand’s fastest ever sprinter but did not make the team. David Nyika, bidding for his third Commonweal­th boxing gold, had to withdraw with a hand injury.

French knows that feeling. Like Buscomb, he has been a serious competitor for the past decade, clocking up plenty of time in Europe in the search for competitio­n and training partners. In the leadup to the 2016 Rio Olympics he had been at a training camp in Canberra where he was in great shape and footing it with guys who were Olympic semifinali­sts. He came back to New Zealand raring to go. But when you are at your peak, it is a fine edge and euphoria has heartbreak on its flipside. French was doing some hurdle reps when he felt a grab in his Achilles tendon. He wonders if he had got a bit dehydrated.

The grab lingered, he had to ease off the training and he missed Olympic selection by about a third of a second. Euphoria and heartbreak. Buscomb and French sold all their stuff, rented out their Hamilton house and moved to Bath in the UK at the start of 2019 for the sake of their coaching, training and competitio­n. By late 2019, French – who had made the 2018 Commonweal­th Games but had a disappoint­ing run – was in the form of his life. The couple were happy. Both were training well, they had a plan, Buscomb had reached 12th in the world and qualified for the Tokyo Olympics, after missing out on Rio by about three seconds. French was within touching distance of qualifying for Tokyo – a couple of 49 second races would have done it and that was well within his grasp. It was as if the years of challenge were meant to be; the couple were reaping the dividends. ‘‘It was sort of like we had climbed up this little tower,’’ French says. ‘‘And then to have it kicked out from underneath you – by a pandemic.’’

Buscomb had returned to New Zealand for her sister’s wedding and French had to scramble to rejoin her in March 2020 as the UK locked down around him.

The young couple in their modest, beautifull­y renovated Fairfield house – a job they largely carried out themselves, Gibbing, plastering and painting while Buscomb was pregnant – want to emphasise the positive. They have enjoyed the travelling life, they have had huge highs in their competitiv­e careers and now there is the excitement of having their baby.

Being a couple since 2011 means they have been able to support and encourage each other through the ups and downs.

That positivity is crucial to competing. It takes years of hard training, you sacrifice a lot, you are taking a gamble. The drive is to think you can do more and better, French says. How good can you get? You don’t want to give up early because you know the tank is not empty. There is more to give, there is more to try.

Having good people around helps, including your training group. ‘‘You surround yourself with better, faster, more positive people,’’ Buscomb says.

She says that in her younger years, she used to be hard on herself but learned it is better to be grateful. ‘‘You should still be proud of every achievemen­t.

‘‘I think if you are never happy, well then you underperfo­rm every time, right?’’

The trick at the start line is to take the external pressures out, clear your head, French says. You might be financiall­y struggling, physically struggling, but you tell yourself it does not matter, I am going to do this. You have to channel. Because you need to be fired up for a race but you also need to be controlled and relaxed.

Their return to New Zealand because of Covid, was not easy, however. For Buscomb there was the uncertaint­y of the Tokyo Olympics, which ended up being shunted back a full year.

And Athletics NZ would not give French access to its elite facilities on the basis he was an overseas athlete, he says in evident surprise and frustratio­n.

It was hard to find training partners who could push him and it was not easy to hit top times in races when he was out in front by the first hurdle. Hurdling is a highly technical sport and he was far from his usual coaches.

Plus, as if to rub salt in the wound, it was a seriously windy summer. So the couple returned to the UK when they could, in May last year.

That is when something strange happened. French picked up a hamstring niggle – common enough in a sport where the strain is immense every time you land from a hurdle. He got over it.

Training was going well, he clocked a personal best over a shorter distance. But the hamstring niggle broke him. ‘‘It was that last little thing in my head that just sent me for six.’’

The first part of a race was usually his best – he would go out hard, be strong around the bend and then hold on. But he would be reaching hurdle three, watching everyone else race, tell himself to ‘‘go’’ and there was nothing. He would reach hurdle five and go to kick and again there was nothing.

‘‘It was the weirdest feeling.’’

The emotional strain of the last year was telling on both of them and French still had the pressure of needing to qualify for the Olympics. ‘‘If I had qualified, maybe I could have put it aside. But you are hunting, hunting, hunting, and you know that you are not quite physically where you need to be.’’ It sounds a bit like depression. ‘‘Without saying it, yeah. A hundred per cent.’’

Buscomb was getting ready to go to the Olympics and feeling something similar, after all the upheaval and uncertaint­y, a year of limbo, races constantly being cancelled. French turned to supporting her.

For Ben Langton Burnell, the heartache is literal. New Zealand’s top javelin thrower is sitting out the Commonweal­th Games after being hit last year by myocarditi­s, an inflammati­on around the heart. He felt a burning sensation during a gym workout which put him in hospital for a week. He was given a five-month recovery window, limiting his activity. So the man who has this country’s third best throw in competitio­n, and who had been sending it out to 85m-86m in training, had to stop. Silver lining: at the same time, he was starting up the Launch Agency marketing business – six employees have become 20 in seven months, he says – and so the Games were out of the question. He will be watching with interest but he is also back training twice a day in a punishing five or six hour schedule, starting with a session around 4.30am or 5am and finishing with another at the end of the day. He has a few kilos to lose to get back to his previous throwing weight but he is feeling good and has the experience to manage himself.

On Wednesday the blustery weather cleared enough for him to have his scheduled Porritt Stadium open-air training. It is hard to draw a straight line in the mind from this pastoral, shrub-encircled ground to the world’s top stadiums bedecked with flags but among the dozen or so here Langton Burnell, at least, has Paris in his sights.

At 29, he is a decent shot. He has done a Commonweal­th Games and the world champs. The 85m mark probably would not win him an Olympic medal but it would likely put him in the top six. In fact, he thinks he might have a couple of Olympic competitio­ns in him.

But, like French, he has been excluded from Athletics NZ’s high performanc­e facilities, including its velodrome gym, after a couple of seasons where he says he did not perform. He was given the news early in 2020, the same week he split with his coach, the year before he got myocarditi­s. Ironically, he then started throwing his best ever distances but that has not been enough to get back the gym access.

He misses the environmen­t but thinks he has proved he can do it on his own terms. ‘‘My whole goal is just to see what my limit is with my sport. It is a personal goal.’’

Like French, Langton Burnell questions New Zealand’s selection criteria. There is an Olympic standard that most countries go with; New Zealand, however, wants medal prospects only. That, Langton Burnell says, introduces a subjective element.

‘‘For track and field athletes, if you are making an Olympic standard, you should damn well be going to those Olympics.’’

There is an acceptance there are budgetary constraint­s but that does not change these top athletes’ obvious frustratio­n with the process. Buscomb recalls her unsuccessf­ul bid for the 2014 Commonweal­th Games.

She was racing and beating competitor­s in Australia who were selected but she missed out. Had she gone, she thinks she would have been all the better for the experience and would probably have performed better at the 2018 Commonweal­th Games.

French says when Buscomb missed selection in 2014, New Zealand’s standards were the hardest in the Commonweal­th. Other countries view those Games as developmen­t for bigger events, he says. You get the experience, you learn from it, you develop as an athlete.

It also helps you get into future races, he says, and that helps further build experience.

He cites Australian athletes coming into their peak in their late 20s, having had the likes of Commonweal­th Games experience when younger.

No-one goes to the Olympics not wanting a medal, French says.

But the conversati­ons with our elite athletes should be around how to support them. That does not only have to be monetary. Feeling supported also matters.

The wellbeing of athletes has been thrown into the headlines by the suspected suicide last year of Rio Olympic cyclist Olivia Podmore. A sports integrity body has been establishe­d, and just over a week ago High Performanc­e Sport NZ issued a 10-point action plan in response to a review into Cycling NZ.

‘‘I think there is a group of athletes that have not been well looked after,’’ Langton Burnell says. ‘‘And those are the ones I think the system has to be quite careful with: the ones that get kicked out of the system and they don’t know how to navigate that next part of their life, or the ones that get kicked out of the system, like me, who still have a hunger to achieve. I think those are the two categories of athletes that they have to look after . . . but I have heard that they are getting better at having stuff in place for them.’’

Buscomb knows exactly what it takes to compete at the Olympics. She was New Zealand’s only woman runner at Tokyo last year. It was 10 years in the making, ever since she cut short a US trip at the end of her school years in an unsuccessf­ul bid for the 2014 Glasgow Commonweal­th Games. When she then missed Rio as well, she took six weeks off running. She did not know how to train any harder. But the desire still burned. She contacted a coach in Australia to say she would do whatever it took to be at the next Olympics. She joined a training camp in Australia. The camps became a regular fixture and she flew everywhere to race.

It is a life on the move and income can be uncertain.

Depending on the event, she could earn varying amounts of appearance money along with prize-money, with the pace setter role also thrown into the mix. She has a sponsor providing shoes, clothes and some money. Her manager would find races where the organisers would pay the airfares. Plus she would get some funding from Athletics NZ to help with the likes of accommodat­ion.

In the buildup to the Olympics, she had a performanc­e enhancemen­t grant from High Performanc­e Sport NZ.

At Tokyo, she finished 19th in the 10,000m, recording a season’s best time of 32:10.49, and 14th in her 5000m heat with a time of 15:24.39 – well outside her personal best of 14:58.59. What most didn’t know was that she was in isolation throughout the two weeks because she was deemed a close contact of someone on the plane with Covid. She was ferried in a private car to the stadium for her events.

‘‘I was allowed to stand on the start line and then do the race and then got taken back to my room.’’

It was difficult and then, when she was at the airport waiting for her flight home, she got the news about Olivia Podmore’s death. ‘‘It was just so much sadness.’’

With racing out of the question during pregnancy and early parenthood, Buscomb is dismayed at the absence of financial support from Athletics NZ. She also thought she met the criteria for a $25,000 base grant from High Performanc­e Sport which instead has given her a $10,000 developmen­t grant, which it has agreed to repeat next year. She qualified for the government­funded six months’ maternity leave and is doing some online coaching to help make ends meet.

For Paris, she is thinking about turning to the marathon, which will better fit the couple’s new life as parents. She can do more on the treadmill at home and when it comes to competitio­n, a couple of marathons a year is all you want to do. That means she might have three chances to qualify.

So the large treadmill taking up a decent chunk of Buscomb and French’s living room is a potent signal of the future. They have been told women distance runners can come back stronger from giving birth and Buscomb has a wealth of experience to draw on.

French is set to start a new job but still eyes a return to competitio­n. He had a glitch at the start of this year when he was training to join the Games cycling sprint team.

His natural ability and strength saw him improve out of sight in three months but he didn’t quite crack the time they set him. Had he had longer, he is confident he would have done it.

The desire still burns.

‘‘I think there is a group of athletes that have not been well looked after.’’

Ben Langton Burnell

 ?? CHRISTEL YARDLEY/ STUFF ?? Camille Buscomb has her eyes set on the Paris Olympics.
CHRISTEL YARDLEY/ STUFF Camille Buscomb has her eyes set on the Paris Olympics.
 ?? KELLY HODEL/STUFF ?? Camille Buscomb with her baby daughter, Sienna.
KELLY HODEL/STUFF Camille Buscomb with her baby daughter, Sienna.
 ?? KELLY HODEL/STUFF ?? Cameron French and Camille Buscomb at home with baby daughter Sienna.
KELLY HODEL/STUFF Cameron French and Camille Buscomb at home with baby daughter Sienna.
 ?? ?? Support team: Cameron French and Camille Buscomb trackside.
Support team: Cameron French and Camille Buscomb trackside.
 ?? PHOTOSPORT ?? Cameron French competing in New Zealand in February 2021.
PHOTOSPORT Cameron French competing in New Zealand in February 2021.
 ?? PHOTOSPORT ?? Cameron French and Ben Langton Burnell in 2018.
PHOTOSPORT Cameron French and Ben Langton Burnell in 2018.
 ?? MARK TAYLOR/STUFF ?? Ben Langton Burnell: ‘‘If you are making an Olympic standard, you should damn well be going to those Olympics.’’
MARK TAYLOR/STUFF Ben Langton Burnell: ‘‘If you are making an Olympic standard, you should damn well be going to those Olympics.’’
 ?? PHOTOSPORT ?? Camille Buscomb in the 5000m at the 2018 Commonweal­th Games on the Gold Coast, Australia.
PHOTOSPORT Camille Buscomb in the 5000m at the 2018 Commonweal­th Games on the Gold Coast, Australia.
 ?? PHOTOSPORT ?? Camille Buscomb in the 5000m at the Athletics World Championsh­ips in Doha in 2019.
PHOTOSPORT Camille Buscomb in the 5000m at the Athletics World Championsh­ips in Doha in 2019.
 ?? MARK TAYLOR/STUFF ?? Javelin thrower Ben Langton-Burnell knows what it will take to get to the Paris Olympics.
MARK TAYLOR/STUFF Javelin thrower Ben Langton-Burnell knows what it will take to get to the Paris Olympics.

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