Sunday News

Adams blasts past 20

Double Olympic gold medallist makes the statement she wanted to in Monaco with a season-best throw, writes Marc Hinton.

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NOT quite the shot heard round the world, but it was pretty damn close for Valerie Adams as she shook off the sadness enveloping the Cote d’Azur to produce her brightest moment of the Olympic season.

The 31-year-old New Zealander made a massive pre-Games statement at the prestigiou­s Monaco Diamond League meet yesterday when she not only won a quality women’s shot put competitio­n but blasted out past the 20-metre mark to record her best throw in nearly two years.

Adams won with a season’s best 20.05m, ahead of German Christina Schwanitz (19.81m) and American world indoors champion Michelle Carter (19.58m). Schwanitz and Carter, along with China’s Lijiao Gong, who has the year’s best throw of 20.43m, are expected to be Adams’ chief rivals in Rio.

It’s the most positive sign yet that the veteran Kiwi is right on track to secure a historic hat-trick of Olympic golds at the looming Rio Games, following on from her triumphs at the 2008 Beijing and 2012 London Olympics.

Adams had said before the meet, her penultimat­e hit-out ahead of Rio, that she was looking to establish a psychologi­cal marker ahead of the Games.

Clearly Adams is in a good place as she looks to shake off nearly two years of injury frustratio­n. The towering Kiwi hadn’t broken 20m since September of 2014 when she concluded an unbeaten programme with a season’s best 20.59m in Brussels. That year she won 10 of 15 meets with throws over the 20m mark.

But now she has the confidence boost she sought just weeks out from the Olympic shot put which will be held on the opening day of the athletics competitio­n on August 12.

Adams demonstrat­ed she retains the nerve to blast out a big throw under pressure in a tight Monaco competitio­n. The Kiwi started consistent­ly, and ominously, when she threw 19.25m, 19.76m and 19.70m to head the final qualifiers before Schwanitz briefly took the lead in the penultimat­e round with 19.81m.

But Adams’ response was pure class. She steadied, and bristled, and nailed that 20.05m effort with her fifth throw, before rounding out a quality series with 19.76m. It extends her Diamond Race lead over American Tia Brooks, fourth in Monaco, to 11 points.

‘‘It’s a great feeling winning here. The distance was definitely more important than the win,’’ Adams said afterwards. ‘‘The win is a bonus. It shows I still have the competitiv­e fire in me.’’

And Adams said after the terror attack in Nice, just up the road, it had been ‘‘great to show our support to the families of the victims in our very small way. My thoughts and prayers are with them’’.

Meanwhile, 19-year-old Kiwi RICHARD HEATHCOTE/GETTY IMAGES Olympic-bound pole vaulter Eliza McCartney could not find anywhere near her best stuff in her Diamond League debut in Monaco.

McCartney finished fifth with a best vault of 4.55m 25cm less than her personal best set earlier this season. Greece’s Katerina Stefanidi (4.81m) pipped world champion Yarisley Silva of Cuba (4.71m) for the victory.

 ??  ?? Valerie Adams threw 20.05m to win the women’s shot put event at the Monaco Diamond League meet.
Valerie Adams threw 20.05m to win the women’s shot put event at the Monaco Diamond League meet.

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