The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Law vows to bounce back

- FRASER CLYNE

Black Isle discus thrower Kirsty Law has vowed to bounce back quickly from her disastrous performanc­e in the Olympic trials and British championsh­ips at Manchester Sportscity last weekend.

The Inverness Harriers club member was devastated to finish in fourth position with a throw of 52.73m. It was her poorest result of the season and what made it even harder to take was that it came just four days after she set a PB of 59.60m in a low-key meeting at Loughborou­gh.

Any lingering hopes of earning selection for the Tokyo Olympic Games went out the window and she also missed the opportunit­y to complete a hat-trick of British titles.

Law said: “I’ve been going through it in my head and I just can’t work it out. I had to have the worst day of my life to throw 52m.

“I think I put too much pressure on myself. I wanted to go out and win and throw more than 60m.

“Even on a bad day, I still thought I could do enough to win, but I just couldn’t throw at all. I had no feeling. Nothing worked and I didn’t deserve to get anything from the competitio­n.

“I went from one extreme to another in the space of four days. Maybe I peaked just too early.

“After the trials, I decided I’d had enough for the season, but I’ve since calmed down and now I’m motivated to throw well again.”

Law, who is based in Loughborou­gh, isn’t one to wallow in self pity. She was straight back into the gym the day after the trials and plans to compete in one or possibly two meetings this weekend.

Law is the second-best Scottish thrower of all time behind the legendary Meg Ritchie, whose national record of 67.48, set 40 years ago, looks untouchabl­e for the foreseeabl­e future.

However, the Highland athlete has outgunned Ritchie’s tally of seven Scottish championsh­ip victories.

When she lines up in this year’s competitio­n, she’ll be bidding for a 13th gold medal in 14 years.

Meanwhile, it’s business as usual this weekend for Aberdeen’s Olympic sprinter Zoey Clark.

The 26-year-old has hardly had a moment to catch her breath since learning late on Monday evening about her 4x400m relay selection for the Tokyo Games which open at the end of this month. She jumped on a train to Birmingham on Tuesday to pick up her Olympic kit, returning home on Wednesday. Today she will set off on her travels again, this time to London to compete for her English club Thames Valley Harriers in a UK women’s league match at Linford Christie stadium.

She said: “It’s really busy with a lot of travel, but I’m looking forward to the league match.

“However, I’m not going to run in the individual 400m. I’ll do some fun events like the 100m and 200m, and maybe the 4x400m relay.

“After that there’s the possibilit­y of a race at the

Gateshead Diamond League meeting in midJuly. A couple of days after that we’ll fly out to the team holding camp at Yokohama.

“I think we’ll only go to Tokyo for our competitio­ns. The officials are keen to minimise the number of people staying at the athlete’s village there for any length of time and I believe competitor­s will be asked to return home as soon as their events have finished.”

Clark could be in Japan for longer than most athletes as she hopes to be involved in the mixed relay as well as the women’s relay.

She explained: “The mixed relay is early in the athletics programme and I’d hope to get a run in that. Then the women’s relay is at the very end.”

The ever-changing overseas travel restrictio­ns have forced GB mountain running internatio­nal Andy Douglas to pull out of this weekend’s Mont Blanc marathon.

The Caithness athlete was due to compete in the second round of this summer’s Golden Trail world series of races at Chamonix.

 ??  ?? DISASTROUS: Discus thrower Kirsty Law served up her poorest performanc­e of the season at the worst possible time to kill off her Olympic hopes.
DISASTROUS: Discus thrower Kirsty Law served up her poorest performanc­e of the season at the worst possible time to kill off her Olympic hopes.

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