Cape Argus

Cremona happy to be competing with cream

- OCKERT DE VILLIERS

A WEEK ago, Orazio Cremona found himself in the wilderness baffled by an apparent snub for the 2018 Commonweal­th Games team in Australia. That is, until he received an email on Tuesday informing him he would be a late inclusion.

The shot-put ace and South African sprinting queen Carina Horn, Justine Palframan and Gena Löfstrand were informed they would be selected provided they pass fitness tests.

“I received a message at about nine o’clock that I am on the team… it means a hell of a lot, it means the whole fight was not for nothing,” Cremona said.

“But I am just happy it has been rectified. I am very, very happy. All I wanted to do was go to the Commonweal­th and get a shot at a medal, that is all I wanted to do the whole year.

“I am just excited to go and represent the country.”

Cremona was left out of the initial team announced in January and when the SA Sports Confederat­ion and Olympic Committee (Sascoc) announced more additions Jaco Engelbrech­t, who ranks below him was included.

Cremona won his sixth national title in 2017 where his personal best heave of 21.12m was the best by a South African on home soil.

Although the throw ranked him fourth in the Commonweal­th it did not fall within the window period and instead, his best of 19.81m at the IAAF World Championsh­ips in London ranked him just outside the top 10.

When asked about Cremona’s apparent snub, ASA president Richard Stander suggested Sascoc selected the final team. There also seemed to have been an issue with Cremona’s athlete’s licence which initially prevented him from selection for the IAAF World Indoors in Birmingham last weekend and possibly for the Commonweal­th Games. This has since been cleared up. Cremona opened his season with a 20.66m effort in Pretoria at the end of January which is the second-best throw of his career. The 28-year-old said the performanc­e that day was his best sequence of throws ever, which bodes well for his chances of challengin­g for a medal at the Games.

“It’s basically the best competitio­n -- besides the 21.12m which is a great distance – on an average basis,” Cremona said.

“I feel in really good form, I feel in a lot better form than... the last Commonweal­th Games and even then, I was in good form.

“I feel much more stable, much more controlled, much stronger and more consistent which is what you want.”

Cremona is currently ranked fourth in the world thanks to his 20.66m, which places him third in the Commonweal­th behind Kiwi world indoor champion Tom Walsh and Darlan Romani of Jamaica, with 21.87m and 21.06m respective­ly.

 ??  ?? Orazio Cremona
Orazio Cremona

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