The Timaru Herald

Aussie’s punt pays off

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Australian punter Mitch Wishnowsky’s journey to Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium for the Super Bowl has been long, winding and full of obstacles.

The 27-year-old from Perth could argue no player in today’s clash between his San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs or the previous 53 Super Bowls, has travelled so far.

If you Google ‘‘What city is farthest from Miami?’’ Perth, at 18,316km, is number one followed by Bandung, Indonesia.

‘‘It all started about seven years ago,’’ said Wishnowsky, looking back at how chance meetings, random phone calls, a short video and a willingnes­s to make a life gamble landed him at the 49ers.

Wishnowsky quit Perth’s Lumen Christi College at 16, became an apprentice glazier and hoped for a profession­al soccer or AFL career but injuries took their toll on his 188cm tall body.

In 2013, he signed up to a recreation­al American flag football league.

That was where Craig Wilson, one of American football’s leading figures in Australia, saw him punt a football. Word and a small video got back to John Smith and Nathan Chapman, who run the phenomenal­ly-successful Melbourne-based Prokick Australia punting academy.

The video showed that Wishnowsky was raw but loaded with NFL punting potential.

‘‘It was like watching a horse trying to kick it’s way out of a horse box,’’ Smith told AAP. ‘‘The power was immense.’’

Wishnowsky was fishing and getting over dengue fever from a Bali trip when Smith called and invited him to join them in Melbourne. ‘‘He had a pretty aggressive sales pitch,’’ Wishnowsky said. ‘‘He told me then he was going to change my life.’’

Wishnowsky, despite working at a pub to to eat and pay off a mortgage in Perth, impressed at Prokick in Melbourne.

‘‘It was pretty apparent a few weeks in we had something really special,’’ Smith said.

It still was not an easy path to an elite US university.

Wishnowsky’s early high school exit meant he had to enrol in California’s Santa Barbara City junior college for two years to build up his grades.

He won the Ray Guy Award for college football’s best punter in 2016 and last year, after impressing scouts at the NFL combine with his punting and 40-yard dash time of 4.63 seconds, was snapped up by the 49ers in the fourth round of the draft. AAP

 ?? AP ?? Australian Mitch Wishnowsky stretches during a San Francisco 49ers practice session for today’s Super Bowl match in Florida against Kansas City.
AP Australian Mitch Wishnowsky stretches during a San Francisco 49ers practice session for today’s Super Bowl match in Florida against Kansas City.

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