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1st European Discus Throw Conference “Breaking the Myths” - September 17-18
World best teams
1USA203,18
Ian Waltz68,90
Jarred Rome68,44
Jason Young65,84
2EST202,62
Gerd Kanter71,88
Aleksander Tammert65,71
Märt Israel65,03
3World200,91
Virgilijus Alekna LTU71,25
Dzmitry Sivakou BLR64,83
Vikas Gowda IND64,83
4HUN199,05
Zoltan Kövago68,17
Gabor Mate66,32
Robert Fazekas64,56
5ESP197,16
Mario Pestano69,50
Yennifer Frank Casanas67,91
Jose Cuesta Fernan59,75
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Hoffa’s competitive fire 26. August 07



25 August 2007 – Osaka, Japan - After winning his first global outdoor title in the men’s Shot Put tonight – winning by a comfortable 43cm margin with a 22.04m effort - Reese Hoffa thanked the man he had displaced as World champion – his training partner, Adam Nelson – and his father for giving him the “competitive fire”. But it is the literal fire – the one that Hoffa started when he was four years old and which burned down the family home – that will live as long in his memory as any sporting success.
First call to mom

As Hoffa left the stadium here, he said one of the first calls he would have to make would be to his biological mother, Diana Watts. “When I was four years old my mum gave me up for adoption and, about 18 years later, I end up finding her on the internet,” Hoffa recalled. Mother and son were reunited and she would have been following his progress in Osaka back in Jacksonville, Florida. “I am sure she is very excited,” Hoffa said.

According to Hoffa’s recollection of events, his elder brother, Lamont, aged six at the time, held a cigarette lighter to the fabric cords that hung off the home curtains then used a cup of water to douse the flames. When no water was left, Lamont went for more, leaving the lighter on the bed. Reese flicked it on and the curtains caught fire, consuming the two-storey home.

Weeks after the blaze, his mother, an unmarried teenager, took Reese to an orphanage in Louisville and left him there.

“Deep down inside, I thought maybe she would be back tomorrow – it never happened,” Hoffa told the Washington Post. Separated from his brother as well as his mother, he drew the conclusion that starting of the fire had driven her to abandon him. “I burned down our house and that put a strain on our family,” he said.

Overcoming difficulties

Yet, despite his difficult start in life, Hoffa has developed into a dedicated athlete and bright personality. It has been suggested that, never mind athletics, he could just as easily have carved himself a career as a circus entertainer. He can juggle machetes, fire clubs and shots and can solve a Rubik cube in 45sec. At the 2003 Home Depot competition in Carson, California, he turned up wearing a cape and mask – like a scene from Phantom of the Opera – and competed as “the unknown thrower”.

He has a tendency, too, to perform 133kg cartwheels on the infield at top international meetings but he gave a more restrained celebration tonight. “This is a World Championships and a certain level of professionalism [is appropriate] for the event,” the 29-year-old Hoffa said. “There is a time and a place and this was not the place at all.”

Hoffa settled for shaking hands and bowing to officials. “The officials go out there - I am sure they are not being paid a lot – and they deserve a lot of respect for doing this just for the love of track and field,” he said. Having given the United States the first of many expected gold medals in these championships, Hoffa then paid tribute to Nelson.

Credit to training partner Nelson

Nelson maintained his record of winning a medal at every Olympic Games and World Championships since 2000 but had to settle for silver as Hoffa added an outdoor triumph to his 2006 World Indoor title. In his two previous outdoor global championships – the 2003 World Championships and 2004 Olympics – Hoffa had failed to make the final. Nelson, Hoffa said, had made the difference.

“In terms of my success over the years, I guess I go back to Adam,” Hoffa said. “When I was just a college athlete he came down to Georgia - I think it was 2001 - and in a way showed me the ropes. At the time I was not that good but I saw what an elite level shot putter looked like. He gave me tons of advice for many, many years – he just kicked my butt every day in practice to get me to where I needed to be mentally and physically.

“He has given me many pearls of information, not just in terms of throwing but the mental aspects of preparing for a meet. Definitely this was the first major championships that I have been able to use the knowledge I have gained from Adam to succeed.” And the part played by Hoffa’s father, Stephen? “I guess my competitive fire would have to come from him,” the champion said. “He gave me the blueprint to compete hard and do it with a lot of integrity”.

Hoffa is the sixth US winner of the men’s Shot Put in the last seven World Championships. “I guess the tradition of great throwing in the US is that we are so competitive,” Hoffa said. “In order to make the team, you really have to put together an incredible result. We don’t have an opportunity to just rest and think we can just rest up to the World Championships. We really have to earn our way there.”

Read Hoffa’s competitive fire from iaaf.org

Results
Final
PositionBibAthleteCountry123456Mark.
11105Reese HoffaUSA21.8121.6422.04X21.9221.5822.04.
21122Adam NelsonUSA21.4721.61XXXX21.61(SB)
3373Andrei MikhnevichBLR19.9721.2720.8820.7520.61X21.27(SB)
4852Rutger SmithNED20.9021.1320.90XXX21.13.
5895Tomasz MajewskiPOL20.35X20.3720.4120.0720.8720.87(PB)
6997Miran VodovnikSLO19.8520.42X20.6720.25X20.67(SB)
7613Ralf BartelsGER20.0220.34X20.4020.4520.0920.45.
8369Yury BialouBLR20.34XXXX20.3420.34.
9417Dylan ArmstrongCAN20.2220.2319.94NMNMNM20.23.
10978Pavel SofinRUS19.62XXNMNMNM19.62.
.723Dorian ScottJAMXXXNMNMNMNM.
.484Joachim OlsenDENXXXNMNMNMNM
Q Group A
PositionBibAthleteCountry123Mark
11122Adam NelsonUSAX20.81NM20.81Q
2484Joachim OlsenDEN20.62NMNM20.62Q
3369Yury BialouBLRX20.26NM20.26Q
4895Tomasz MajewskiPOLX20.25NM20.25Q
5723Dorian ScottJAM19.9020.0119.8720.01q
6957Anton LuboslavskiyRUSX19.7419.9119.91
7575Yves NiaréFRA19.2419.6219.5319.62
81016Milan HaborákSVK19.5019.55X19.55
9553Mika VasaraFIN19.4018.9119.5519.55
10372Pavel LyzhynBLRXX19.4519.45
11678Navpreet SinghIND19.0019.3419.3519.35
12789Sultan Abdulmajeed Al-HabashiKSA19.20XX19.20
13318Germán LauroARG19.19X18.6719.19
14435Marco Antonio VerniCHIXX18.6818.68
151089Noah BryantUSAX18.58X18.58
16472Antonin ŽalskýCZE18.4118.50X18.50
17825Ivan EmilianovMDA18.1517.7018.4718.47
.643Peter SackGERX--NM
.367Hamza AlicBIHXXXNM
.1003Dragan PericSRBNMNMNMDNS
Q Group B
PositionBibAthleteCountry123Mark
1852Rutger SmithNED21.04NMNM21.04Q
21105Reese HoffaUSA20.89NMNM20.89Q
3613Ralf BartelsGER19.9120.33NM20.33Q
4373Andrei MikhnevichBLR20.23NMNM20.23Q
5417Dylan ArmstrongCAN18.6220.0719.6520.07q
6997Miran VodovnikSLO19.5119.9719.1119.97q
7978Pavel SofinRUS19.4319.9219.6819.92q
8339Scott MartinAUS19.7119.81X19.81
91018Mikuláš KonopkaSVK18.78X19.6319.63
10480Petr StehlíkCZE19.25X19.5119.51
11544Robert HäggblomFINX19.29X19.29
12802Maris UrtansLATXX19.1719.17
13918Khalid Habash Al-SuwaidiQAT19.0918.8018.7519.09
14457Nedzad MulabegovicCRO18.69XX18.69
151002Milan JotanovicSRB18.57XX18.57
161046Ming Huang ChangTPE18.5318.0818.4818.53
171142Daniel TaylorUSAXX18.4518.45
18733Satoshi HataseJPN17.3017.7117.4217.71
19668Lajos KürthyHUN17.5617.43X17.56
.513Manuel MartínezESPXXXNM


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ERGO World Discus Challenge - September 18
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2007
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Top results 2008
NameResult
Gerd Kanter 71.88
Virgilijus Alekna71.25
Mario Pestano 69.50
Ehsan Hadadi 69,32
Ian Waltz68.90
Robert Harting68.65
Piotr Malachowski 68.65
Jarred Rome68.44
Zoltan Kövago68.17
Frank Casanas67.91

Jürgen Schults discus world record 74.08 is 8129 days old.
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