Weekend Herald

HEY, BABY!

Val’s family plan

- Dana Johannsen

Valerie Adams is considerin­g taking a break from her athletics career to start a family, but she is not ruling out a tilt at a fifth Olympic campaign in Tokyo 2020.

The double Olympic champion and Rio silver medallist has shut down any talk of retirement after arriving back in the country following the completion of her most challengin­g season to date, yesterday publicly committing through to the 2018 Commonweal­th Games.

She said another Olympic campaign could be on the cards as well, but at 31 she is now at a time in her career where it is a case of taking it season by season.

“The option is there to go through to Tokyo. It does seem so far away now and it’s not something I’m focused on right now, but I’m not ruling it out at all.

“I would love to be there, I’ve just got to see what the next four years bring,” Adams told the Weekend Herald.

She has hinted motherhood may be her next challenge, with the shot put queen keen to start a family with husband Gabriel Price sooner rather than later.

“I would love a family, it has always been a goal and I think motherhood would be fantastic,” said Adams, adding she is getting to the stage of her life where she is getting “clucky”.

“We just really need to go away now and have a break and think about things, we will know definitely what we’re going to do by December.”

After 14 seasons at the top, Adams is at the point where she has nothing left to prove in her sport. From that perspectiv­e, the challenge of returning to elite- level sport after childbirth may be a major motivating factor for her. While there are highprofil­e examples of top track and field athletes returning to the sport after taking time out to start a family, it is almost unheard of in track and field in New Zealand.

Adams said she would like to be able to pave the way for other female athletes.

“There is an opportunit­y to take a longer break and possibly have a fam- ily, but at the same time it i s quite scary because you don’t know how you’re going to bounce back.

“It’s one of those things that I could call upon and talk to other athletes that have done it and see how they have approached it. I’m not sure how my body will react, but one thing is for sure, I am going to train right through.”

Breaking barriers is nothing new for Adams. She is the only woman to win four consecutiv­e shot put world championsh­ips, set a record 56 straight victories at internatio­nal-ranked meets between August 2010 and July 2015, and was the first female thrower to be awarded the world governing body's athlete of the year title.

However, she came up short of another major goal in Rio, where she was seeking to become the first Kiwi to win gold at three consecutiv­e Olympics.

Adams bounced back from knee surgery last year — her fifth time under the knife in the space of three years — to produce her season’s best throw of 20.42m at the Rio Games.

After leading right through the competitio­n, the Kiwi star was upstaged in the final round by American Michelle Carter, who pulled out a winning throw of 20.63m.

Adams said she left Rio with no regrets.

“Reflecting back, it was a very successful campaign considerin­g everything that has happened.

“I went in there fighting and it was the best throw I have done in t wo years, so I can’t be mad at myself for how things turned out.

“What Michelle did I have actually done to a number of people as well, that’s just sport.”

I would love a family, it has always been a goal. Valerie Adams

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 ??  ?? Valerie Adams is keen to start a family with husband Gabriel Price sooner rather than later.
Valerie Adams is keen to start a family with husband Gabriel Price sooner rather than later.

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