Waikato Times

Golden reward continues to motivate Kiwi shot put legend

- Marc Hinton

Dame Valerie Adams is very much the headline act of a 15-strong athletics team named yesterday for the Tokyo Olympics as she in all likelihood brings the curtain down on one of the great New Zealand sporting careers at the age of 36, and mother to daughter Kimoana and son Kepaleli.

She has already won three Olympic medals in the shot put – golds in 2008 and 2012 and silver in 2016 – and is a real chance at adding to that haul in Tokyo as part of a Kiwi athletics team that at present is the third largest to be sent to a Games (behind the 18 who went to Atlanta in 1996 and 16 to Munich in 1972), but could yet grow between now and the selection cutoff of June 22.

For Adams, these postponed Olympics truly will be something special, and not just because she will join Barbara Kendall as the only New Zealand women to have competed at five Games. She will also line up after having those two beautiful children during the cycle, which is something she is rather proud of.

She was mischievou­s as she reflected on joining this group of 15, alongside fellow evergreen and also pending five-time Olympian in Nick Willis (the first Kiwi male athlete to achieve that feat).

When it was suggested the Tokyo Games were ‘‘Covid-pending’’, she shot back: ‘‘Why do people say Covid-pending? It’s going ahead. Let’s just say it’s going ahead ... Covid-pending my a…, Tokyo is going ahead, people.’’

What she did make clear was that she was heading to the Games with one goal in mind: ‘‘My goal is to go to Tokyo and freaking smash it, and come home with a gold medal . . . it’s going to be a very hard task, but I’m up for the challenge, and doing everything I can to be in the best possible position to make that happen.’’

That included, she confirmed, heading off with Dale Stevenson’s throws squad in May for a

European preparatio­n that will see the group based in Germany, and taking the Covid vaccine.

‘‘I’m getting the vaccine tomorrow. I am pro-vaccinatio­n, and hopefully most of our athletes get it. For me it’s about not only keeping myself safe but everybody else safe. It’s the least we can do to make these Games go ahead.’’

Adams will have plenty of likeminded company in Tokyo. Nineteen-year-old Connor Bell (discus), Lauren Bruce and Julia Ratcliffe (hammer), javelin thrower Tori Peeters (subject to a 62m throw by month’s end in Australia), high jumper Hamish Kerr, and fellow shot putters Jacko Gill, Tom Walsh, and Maddison-Lee Wesche round out the record eight-strong field contingent.

On the track 1500m runners Sam Tanner and Willis and 5000m/10,000m exponent Camille Buscomb will strut their stuff, while Malcolm Hicks and Zane Robertson (marathon) and Quentin Rew (50km walk) complete the squad.

Five of the 15 (Bell, Kerr, Peeters, Wesche and Willis) have been picked without having achieved automatic standards, but have world rankings likely to allow them to take part. Others, such as injured pole vaulter Eliza McCartney and 10,000m runner Jake Robertson, will have to post Olympic standards between now and June 22 to be added.

 ??  ?? Shot put queen Dame Valerie Adams.
Shot put queen Dame Valerie Adams.
 ??  ?? Middle distance runner Nick Willis.
Middle distance runner Nick Willis.

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