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Anika Thompson strikes gold as Nicola Tuthill wins silver at European U-23 Championships

Anika Thompson strikes gold as Nicola Tuthill wins silver at European U-23 Championships

Irish Examiner2 days ago
It was a dream second day for the Irish at the European U-23 Championships in Bergen, Norway on Friday, with Anika Thompson striking gold over 10,000m and Nicola Tuthill winning silver in the hammer throw.
Thompson, a student at the University of Oregon, turned in a superb performance in the 25-lap event, breaking her Irish U-23 record by 23 seconds and hitting the line in 32:31.47, with Germany's Kira Weis (32:36.52) and Carolina Schafer (33:04.43) following her home.
'I'm overjoyed,' said Thompson. 'Track and field is a sport of process and hard work and every day, I gave 100% for moments like this. I'm so grateful for all my family, friends and coaches who support me. The plan was to feel it out, go by instincts. I trusted my gut and I knew I had every tactic in the bag.'
Thompson played a patient game in the race, tracking Weis as the leader hit halfway in 16:16, with Thompson surging to the front with just over two laps to run. She cranked up the pace soon after and broke clear on the final lap, becoming just the second Irish gold medallist in the 28-year history of the championships after Sophie O'Sullivan in 2023.
Thompson was raised in Oregon but qualifies to represent Ireland through her Cork grandparents, competing for Leevale AC in national events. The 22-year-old had finished 11th in the same race two years ago and it was a special kind of pride getting to stand atop the podium and hear Amhrán na bhFiann.
'I live in the United States but my whole family is in Ireland,' she said. 'I grew up going to Ireland every summer and it was a dream of mine to represent Ireland. So this really means a lot to me. My grandad (Dan Joe Kelleher) passed away last fall, my Granny Maria is over there from Cork and it is such an honour – I'm so grateful for her support. I grew up watching Sonia O'Sullivan, Ciara Mageean, Donie Walsh. It was always a dream of mine to represent Ireland at European Championships and hopefully others in the future.'
It was the 12th Irish medal in the 15 editions of the championships to date and soon after, Tuthill earned number 13, winning silver in the hammer – the first ever medal for Ireland at this grade in a field event. The 21-year-old Cork athlete launched her leading throw of 70.90m in the fourth round, but had to settle for second behind Germany's Aileen Kuhn, who threw a PB of 72.53m. Bronze went to Valentina Savva of Cyprus with a national record of 70.22m.
'I'm delighted, second was where I was ranked and that's where I came,' said Tuthill. 'I'm always looking for a little bit more but these medals are so hard to come by so I'm delighted to get one.
'I'm not overly happy with my series of throws, I know there's more in me, but it's still another throw over 70 and in a major championship like this, where there's nerves and everything that comes with it, I'm delighted.'
The UCD student became an Olympian in Paris last year and last month, she broke her own Irish U-23 record with 71.71m in Finland – behind only Eileen O'Keeffe's 73.21m on the Irish senior all-time list. She will be back in action next week at the World University Games in Germany.
On Saturday, the leading Irish medal hope in Bergen is Nick Griggs, who races the 5000m final at 5.30pm Irish time. However, the Tyrone athlete will come up against Dutch star Niels Laros, who should cruise to victory having run a 3:45.94 mile to win in Eugene recently.
Meanwhile, there will be strong Irish interest at the London Diamond League with Rhasidat Adeleke, Sarah Healy and Mark English all competing. Adeleke will hope to ignite her season after some sub-par outings over 400m in recent weeks, the Dubliner dropping down to 200m where the big favourite is her training partner, the Olympic 100m champion Julien Alfred.
Adeleke is the Irish 200m record holder via the 22.34 she ran in 2023, while her season's best is the 22.57 she ran in Florida back in April.
Healy has been enjoying the best season of her career and she will have Ciara Mageean's national record of 4:14.58 in her sights when she lines up in the women's mile, where Olympic medallists Jess Hull of Australia and Gudaf Tsegay of Ethiopia are the favourites.
English will face a red-hot field in the 800m, the Donegal man enjoying a breakthrough season at the age of 32, having dipped under 1:44 for the first time when setting the national record of 1:43.92 to win in Hengelo last month. After a 1:43.98 clocking in Paris in his last outing four weeks ago, he has put in a block of altitude training and will be eyeing another Irish record in a field that includes Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi and previous world champions Marco Arop and Donavan Brazier.
Ireland will also have a team in the women's 4x100m, where the national record of 43.80, set at the 2018 Europeans in Berlin, could be under threat.
London Diamond League: Live: BBC One, 1.15pm; Virgin Media Two, 2pm
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One of Ireland's great athletes on a career that almost didn't happen
One of Ireland's great athletes on a career that almost didn't happen

The 42

time11 minutes ago

  • The 42

One of Ireland's great athletes on a career that almost didn't happen

IT WOULD BE no exaggeration to describe Thomas Barr as a trailblazer. The list of Irish athletes who have reached an Olympic final, let alone finished fourth in one, is not long. To this day, Barr remains the only Irishman to run a sub-49-second 400m hurdles, though he namechecks promising Donegal youngsters Fintan and Ethan Dewhirst as potential heirs to his throne. The time of 47.97, which he set at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, is an Irish record unlikely to be broken soon. And towards the latter half of his career, Barr was an important member of the winning European Championship mixed 4x400m relay team. 'It's funny,' he says. 'Even when I look back on my career, I think, Jesus: 'Did I really do that?'' What stands out about Barr's success is how unlikely it was. He was not a prodigy like the Irish sprint sensation of the moment, Rhasidat Adeleke. Instead, he was a late bloomer who nearly quit the sport as he entered college at the University of Limerick. Roughly six months since announcing his retirement, Barr sat down with The42 near his home in Limerick to reflect on what might have been had he not taken his parents' advice to stick at athletics for another year. Barr enjoys telling the story during his frequent visits to schools on behalf of the experiential learning programme Develop Me, about how, for years, he had poured himself into sport without achieving the results he desired. He was ready to walk away, as he wanted to try new things. 'I wanted to experience the sort of college lifestyle,' he says. 'I wanted to join all the new clubs and societies, and [undertake] extreme sports and stuff. 'But it was my parents who had said: Look, why don't you give it one more year under [my coaches] Hayley and Drew [Harrison]. 'It was my dad, he saw a talent in me in particular that no one else saw. '[They suggested] after that, if you're still not happy with the decision, or you're not getting where you want to end, at least you tried it, and you can move on.' That year, 2011, Barr qualified for the European Junior Championships and seldom looked back. 'Even at that point, I still didn't think it was a career. But I thought: 'Okay, I'm improving, so let's see where we can take it.' It was sort of like a marker or an appetiser, really, for what I could achieve if I gave it a go. 'It didn't change my mindset, but it just made the decision that I should keep going.' His parents weren't the only important family members in this regard. Jessie Barr was a significant influence on her younger brother Thomas. Morgan Treacy / INPHO Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO Barr's sister Jessie, three years his senior, was a considerable inspiration. Her many achievements included competing at the 2012 Olympics. It is only now that Barr appreciates the profound influence she had. 'She was so close to me, and she made it very accessible. I saw the work she was doing. I saw what it took to become an Olympian. I saw what it took to become a world-challenging athlete, a world-class talent. 'And so I thought, well, if Jessie can do it, why can't I? But it was never a conscious decision that I said: 'Oh, Jessie's doing it, why can't I?' She paved the way for me without me even knowing, because, even since I've retired, I've gotten some lovely messages from younger athletes even across Europe, saying when they saw me compete in an Olympic final and finished fourth, they thought that was just a fella from Waterford, a young lad, very unassuming, and it genuinely inspired them to become an athlete and to chase a dream, to try and get to that level.' He continues: 'And for me, that person was Jessie, who made it accessible, because those athletes that I know would have would have known who I was, would have seen me working and training in the background, and then they say: 'Well, that's what he did to get to get to there, and that's exactly what Jessie did.' 'She also taught me a lot about how to act as an athlete, and the sort of respect that you show for your competitors and all of that kind of stuff. So she was a huge influence on my career, and I followed in her footsteps. I just copied what events she did.' Advertisement Jessie's post-athletics career has been similarly impressive. Repeated injury woes prompted her retirement in 2019, but she was well prepared for this fate, having spent years working towards obtaining a master's and PhD in sports psychology. These days, Jessie is a performance psychologist at the Sport Ireland Institute, and her brother says he may have at least subconsciously leaned on some of this expertise. 'We never had a formal sit-down or a chat, or I never really pulled on her for psychological support, per se. 'But she could well have been unknown to me, filtering that information through in conversations and stuff, but I was working with with one of her colleagues in Sport Ireland, Kate Kirby, in the last two years for psychology support, because it was just too much of a conflict of interest for me to be working with Jessie. 'If she was chatting to me and telling me this, that and the other. [I'd be inclined to say] 'Ah, go away Jess, will ya?'' Not that Barr has not had his major psychological hurdles to navigate. The year leading up to the 2016 Olympics is a prime example. Ireland's Thomas Barr after finishing fourth at the Rio Olympics. Morgan Treacy / INPHO Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO The build-up had been ravaged by injury to the extent that little was expected of the Irish star in Rio. He now appreciates that all these woes turned out to be a blessing in disguise. 'People often ask: 'Are you disappointed with fourth? No, considering the context of that year, it was definitely my best year. 'I think that was one of the big bonuses of it — I went in with no target on my back. No one knew what I was at — including myself — so I just went on a wing and a prayer and ran free, almost. 'And so that helped from a psychological perspective, I went in with no burden. But even going forward, it helped me. 'I grew that year as an athlete, physically in one way, but psychologically and mentally, I grew a huge amount, and it matured me as an athlete to go through that. 'We always learn more from our failures or adversity than we do from when it all goes well. 'And there were times as well when I was injured in subsequent years, and it was never really as bad as Rio. So I thought: 'Oh, well, if I got through that, I can get through this.'' Dealing with injuries is far from the only challenge in getting to the level Barr ultimately reached. Financially, too, unless you are a Usain Bolt-esque phenomenon, sacrifices are paramount. Barr also enjoyed success as part of the Irish mixed relay team. Warren Grant / INPHO Warren Grant / INPHO / INPHO Had Barr instead pursued his degree in mechanical engineering, he would likely be in a much healthier financial position now. 'I'm not going to name this particular athlete, but last year, they were basically on the cusp of walking away from the sport, and saying: 'I can't keep doing this on the breadline.' And they were like: 'Right, this is my last one, last shot.' They managed to secure a sponsor, and since then, they have become a regular on the continental tour and the Diamond League this year. It flipped around that easily. 'But we have lost so many athletes through the cracks because of a lack of support, funding, sponsorship, and money. There's no two ways about it — it's difficult enough for somebody who's working at the moment full time, making money to afford rent, to afford living expenses, a car, etc. You put all of that into one box, and then you add on training camps, recovery, physio, everything else for an athlete just outside the system of getting support — it's where we start to lose athletes, even if they're living at home. It still is very, very difficult. 'I was lucky. My parents, when I was younger, were supportive, and they would have helped me out financially as well. I would have supplemented [athletics] with working part-time, weekends and summers as best I could, until I managed to make it to a position where I was starting to make money. 'But even in the latter years of my career, I started to come off of that sort of honey pot of money, and I was starting to scrimp again, and [was okay] only for the fact I put away a bit of money. I had to be frugal again, counting the pennies. [Otherwise] I wouldn't have survived through the end of my career as a full-time athlete; I would have had to work full time. A lot of our best athletes are on the breadline or working full-time unless they make it to that top 10 in the world, which is a big gap to try and bridge. 'So I think that's where what we see on Instagram and Twitter and everything is [deceptive]. And there are people under this false impression that all of our best athletes are full-time. They're making loads of money and are well looked after, but because of what we see on Instagram, it's all glamour or whatever. But when you look behind it, sometimes that's not the case. 'And I'm not saying that Athletics Ireland, Sport Ireland, etc, aren't doing what they can to help athletes. They're doing what they can with the budget they have, but it would be great if we could see that budget a little bit higher to spread that little bit farther down the chain for a couple of our younger athletes.' Barr's girlfriend Kelly McGrory is also a talented athlete. Morgan Treacy / INPHO Morgan Treacy / INPHO / INPHO Barr's latest challenge is dealing with life after athletics. At 32, he has to start all over again. Those aforementioned financial realities mean the Waterford native doesn't have the luxury of relaxing as an ex-Premier League footballer might. 'I'm doing a lot of school visits with Develop Me. They've all been paused for the summer, and I'm doing a bit of work with Timmy Crowe in Sports Equipment Ireland. 'And then my girlfriend Kelly [McGrory], her dad has an installation company up in Donegal, looking to set up down this neck of the woods. I'm trying to get the ball rolling on that as well. 'So there are a good few plates spinning. I'm handy with DIY and stuff, so helping friends out where I can with different projects.' McGrory herself is an accomplished athlete, a multiple-time Irish national champion in the 400-metre hurdles, who has represented the country at the 2023 World Athletics Championships and the 2024 Olympic Games in the women's 4×400 metres relay. In Paris, she ran the heats in the 4×400m relay before Adeleke replaced her in the final for the team that finished fourth. So, although Barr is no longer completely immersed in the sport as he once was, it is difficult to remove himself from it entirely for this reason. But, while his dinners are still 'healthy' on account of McGrory, there are other post-retirement treats Barr can avail of. 'Three friends and I went off snowboarding for a week in France, which I couldn't do when I was training. And I was on RTÉ with Joe Canning and Ray Goggins, on [the TV show] Uncharted, we went off to the Colombian rainforest, which is another opportunity that I would have had to say no to, but was right up my alley with all the extreme sports [I love]. And then only last weekend, I went with a few mates to a track in Kerry, drifting. 'There's a lot of that kind of stuff going on, keeping me going. And being able to tip away working in the garage on cars is my sort of thing. Now, it can be a huge form of stress if it doesn't go well, but it is sort of my distraction, my meditation.' Barr pictured competing at the National Senior Track and Field Championship last year. Bryan Keane / INPHO Bryan Keane / INPHO / INPHO Barr says a mentoring rather than coaching role with Athletics Ireland or Sport Ireland would be of interest down the line as he seeks to 'use the profile and the experience that I have to try and better the sport going forward'. At present, though, he is comfortable being 'Thomas Barr, the retired athlete'. The fact that he has several interests outside of sport means his adaptation has been smoother than is typically the case. 'Even when I had four weeks off in the summer [as an athlete], I was itching to get going and take all of those other interests off pause. 'So I couldn't wait, in a lot of ways, to retire, to be able to get stuck back into those. I remember at the start of my career, I had all of these interests going on. And I remember being told: 'You need to give up all of those. You need to put all your time and energy into your sport.' 'And I was nearly sneaking around: 'I'll go jet skiing today, or I'll go out for a swim, or I'll go and do this, jumping off a cliff or whatever. 'Or not even that, but just going through college and stuff, and I did mechanical engineering, so it was very labour-intensive. 'A lot of people were trying to convince me I should be putting all my eggs into training. I was like: 'Well, I enjoy my course, and I want to study. That's what I came to Limerick to do.'' Barr says the mentality has now shifted to the point where pursuing outside interests is encouraged more so than was previously the case. And in general, this greater sense of freedom is palpable. 'Even just a simple thing of if you're up from Limerick and my mates are like: 'Oh, we're going to go for a pint. You want to go for a pint?' I'm like: 'Yeah, perfect.' 'If I'm in the pub, I do get recognised relatively regularly, but I don't mind. There are times, of course, when my social battery might be drained and I'm not up for it, but I know it's not going to last forever. 'And also, Ireland is so small as well, that if you're going to the same places all the time, people see you once or twice, and then it's like: 'Oh, yeah. That's just the runner fellow.' They become sick of you. 'And for all of my career, I thrived off other people getting enjoyment out of what I was doing, and now I'm meeting people who supported me. 'So it's nice to be able to give back as best I can if someone does want the photo, or if someone wants to shake my hand and say: 'Well done.' 'If I can reiterate and say thanks for the support, then I'm happy to do that.'

Andy Lee's burgeoning career as a trainer looks set to make him one of boxing's main characters
Andy Lee's burgeoning career as a trainer looks set to make him one of boxing's main characters

The 42

time2 hours ago

  • The 42

Andy Lee's burgeoning career as a trainer looks set to make him one of boxing's main characters

KATIE TAYLOR'S THIRD success over Amanda Serrano at Madison Square Garden accounted for most of the boxing coverage in Ireland last weekend but Off-Broadway in this country's news cycle, Taylor's fellow Irish boxing great furthered his own case for being the best in the world. About 18 kilometres off Broadway, to be more precise. A night after Taylor's triumph, at the Louis Armstrong tennis stadium in Flushing, Queens, Andy Lee added the latest feather to his cap as a trainer, steering Englishman Hamzah Sheeraz to a victory that caught the eye of the boxing world. The 26-year-old Sheeraz appeared to have been on an inexorable ascent at middleweight as recently as February, reeling off 21 straight wins with 17 of them quick, but a highly fortunate draw with world champion Carlos Adames on the Artur Beterbiev-Dimitry Bivol rematch card in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, had made him look distinctly human, bearing some Sheeraz's inefficiencies for the first time on the biggest stage. Sheeraz split with his Los Angeles-based trainer, Ricky Funez, and turned instead to Dublin, where former middleweight champ Andy Lee supervised his jump to super-middleweight and lit the rocket under him once more. Last Saturday in Queens, in his first fight as a 168-pounder, Sheeraz stopped inside five rounds Edgar Berlanga (previously 23-1, 18KOs), the explosive Puerto Rican who had taken Saul 'Canelo' Alvarez the distance only a couple of fights prior. The result on paper would have been enough to catch the eye of any boxing fan who missed the fight, but the finish was a real head-turner. Sheeraz, his nose bloodied in the early exchanges, rediscovered the nasty gear that had been missing against Adames. He dropped Berlanga twice, hard, in the fourth, only for 'The Chosen One' to be saved by the bell. But Sheeraz closed the show almost instantaneously at the start of the fifth, his first three punches of the round dropping Berlanga again and forcing the intervention of referee David Fields. Coach Lee never actively chased the spotlight during his career as a fighter — although more of it would have been nice — but having already proven a highly popular pundit on either side of the Atlantic, the Limerick man looks destined to become one of boxing's main characters as a trainer. Berlanga appeared to acknowledge this on some level at the launch press conference in May, warning Sheeraz across the top table: 'I'mma fuck you up and Andy Lee on the same night, you heard?' 'It's crazy,' Lee told his British middleweight contemporary Darren Barker during a sit-down interview the following day. 'It's funny. I like the attention. Advertisement 'What's he targeting me for?' Lee laughed. 'But I like it. And I like him (Berlanga). I think he's good for the game. We need characters like this.' Barker replied: 'Of all the people to target!' And true enough, virtually none of Lee's 38 opponents ever spoke to him the way Berlanga did before the Sheeraz fight, but then Lee himself was never quite so forthright in assessing rivals' frailties as he is in his role as a coach. Berlanga had also nearly fallen foul of the Irishman's coaching expertise previously, having endured a far tougher night than most expected against the Lee-trained Jason Quigley a couple of years prior. Simply put, the role of a coach is to make an athlete better. Lee brought the maximum out of middleweight world-title challenger Quigley and he has unlocked new gears in all of his charges, most notably Samoan-Kiwi Joseph Parker whom he has guided back from relative obscurity to the top of the queue to challenge undisputed heavyweight champion Oleksandr Usyk. He has also recently reignited the career of British Olympic star Ben Whittaker, who turned to Lee after he hit the skids against Liam Cameron last October. Under Lee's tutelage, Whittaker took an immediate rematch against Cameron and blasted the Sheffield man out of there in the second round, once more looking like the star that British boxing hoped he would become. And while he previously contributed to Tyson Fury's world-title successes over Deontay Wilder — indeed, it may be no coincidence that Fury's best ever performance, in his second bout with the American, came off the back of a full camp with Lee as his co-trainer alongside SugarHill Steward — the Limerick man will get the chance to fledge his first world champion as a solo trainer this autumn. Following his mostly picturesque performance and contentious disqualification defeat for a punch after the bell in March, Paddy Donovan's rematch with Lewis Crocker looks set to take place at Windsor Park in September. Theirs will be the first all-Irish world-title fight in boxing history. Andy Lee and Paddy Donovan. Gary Carr / INPHO Gary Carr / INPHO / INPHO It was 'The Real Deal' Donovan who first lured his fellow Limerick man Lee back into the gym in 2019 and they will greatly fancy their chances of beating 'The Croc' for the vacant IBF welterweight strap, with Donovan having already ostensibly beaten up the Belfast man in his hometown. While far from a foregone conclusion, a world-title success for Donovan would position Lee as the frontrunner for Trainer of the Year, a global award for which he was already nominated by Ring Magazine at the end of a stellar 2024. The generational talents of Oleksandr Usyk could scupper that notion if the Ukrainian faces Lee's heavyweight, Joe Parker, before the end of the year, although Usyk may wait until early 2026 before returning to the ring following his sensational stoppage of Daniel Dubois on Saturday night. But Lee's 2025, and his coaching career to this point, are worthy of recognition in any case: there are few Irish coaches in any sport thriving to the same extent at an elite international level. A former student of the great Emanuel Steward and Adam Booth, Lee is well on his way to becoming one of boxing's most celebrated teachers.

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