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Keshorn Walcott

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Nationality
  
Trinidad and Tobago

Role
  
Olympic athlete

Disciplines
  
Name
  
Keshorn Walcott

Events
  
Javelin throw


Personal best(s)
  
90.16 (2015) NR

Weight
  
90 kg

Sport
  
Track and field

Height
  
1.83 m

Siblings
  
Elton Walcott

Keshorn Walcott Keshorn Walcott Biography Childhood Life Achievements


Born
  
2 April 1993 (age 31) (
1993-04-02
)
Toco, Trinidad and Tobago

Residence
  
Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago

Gold medals
  
Athletics at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's javelin throw

Keshorn walcott olympic javelin champion on trans world sport


Keshorn "Keshie" Walcott, ORTT (born 2 April 1993) is a Trinidadian track and field athlete who competes in the javelin throw. He is an Olympic champion, having won gold in 2012. He is the first Caribbean male athlete to win the gold medal in a throwing event in the history of the Olympics. He is also the holder of the North, Central American and Caribbean junior record.

Contents

Keshorn Walcott Keshorn Walcott breaks national record with 9016m throw

Walcott is the youngest Olympic gold medallist in the men's javelin (19 years 131 days), and the first athlete in any track and field event to win World Junior and Olympic titles in an individual event the same year.

Keshorn Walcott Olympics javelin Keshorn Walcott of Trinidad and Tobago

The YouTube Olympic Champion | Olympics on the Record


Early life and medals

Keshorn Walcott Glasgow 2014 Keshorn Walcott thinks gold would be huge step BBC

Born the third (and last) child of Beverly Walcott and Endy King, Walcott grew up playing football (soccer) and cricket, striving to keep up with his athletically talented older brother Elton. He was raised in the fishing village of Toco, in north-east Trinidad. He did not take up the javelin until the age of 15, but found immediate success. By April 2009, one week after his 16th birthday, he was the Caribbean youth (under-17) champion.

In 2010 he stepped up to the standard regulation javelin (800-gram), and he continued his domination of the Caribbean junior division, as the three-time winner in the Junior (under-20) javelin throw at the CARIFTA Games in 2010 to 2012, setting a new NACAC North, Central American and Caribbean junior record in 2012.

2012 World Junior Champion

He began the Olympic year in April with his fourth-consecutive victory at CARIFTA Juniors. A record throw of 77.59 m (254 ft 612 in) earned him the distinction of competing unbeaten throughout his CARIFTA career. In late May 2012 he twice improved his personal best, breaking through the 80-meter mark (262 feet) for the first time. At the Quantum Classic in Trinidad and Tobago he threw 78.94 m (258 ft 1134 in), breaking Trinidad's national javelin record of 78.06 m (256 ft 1 in), set in 1996 by Kurt Thompson. It was also a NACAC junior record as well. One week later he reset all those marks, while competing at the IAAF International Centennial Meet in Havana, Cuba. He extended the records with a winning throw of 80.11 m (262 ft 934 in).

2012 London Olympic Champion

Gusty winds in the stadium on Saturday evening 11 August, made conditions for the javelin throw less than ideal, and worse than during Wednesday's qualifying rounds. Walcott responded to the pressure of the Olympic finals by throwing a personal best distance on his first throw, giving him the lead, and then exceeding that distance on his second throw. He won the Olympic javelin gold medal with a throw of 84.58m (277 ft 6 in). He defeated a string of top athletes to win the competition including 90-metre thrower Tero Pitkämäki and two-time defending Olympic champion Andreas Thorkildsen, as well as Veselý, Oleksandr Pyatnytsya and Antti Ruuskanen. This made Walcott the youngest-ever Olympic champion in javelin throw and the second non-European to win the Olympic gold in men's javelin throw since American thrower Cy Young in Helsinki in 1952.

Steve Backley, a former three-time Olympic medalist in the javelin remarked that it was a "surprise win for Keshorn Walcott. Everyone else struggled with the wind".

Following his Olympic victory, Walcott was hailed as a national hero. On 13 August, the day of his arrival back in Trinidad, was declared a national holiday. He was awarded $150,000 in cash and given land near his hometown of Toco, as well as a luxury home in Port of Spain. In addition, both the Toco lighthouse (in north-east Trinidad) and the Toco Secondary School were renamed in his honour.

Walcott has been coached since 2009 by Cuban-born Ismael Lopez Mastrapa.

2013 to 2014

Walcott's 2013 season was hampered by injury. In his first competition since his Olympic victory, he "opened big", nearly matching his personal best with an opening round throw of 84.39 m (276 ft 1014 in) at a hometown meet in Hasley Crawford Stadium in Port of Spain, Trinidad, on Friday 3 May.

In an early March 2014 interview with BBC Scotland, Walcott said that after some rest his ankle "is back to normal". With no World or Olympic competitions to aim for, his 2014 season will be targeted on the 2014 Commonwealth Games, to be held in Glasgow, Scotland. He had a six-week training camp in Cuba in March and planned to compete at a few events in May 2014, before taking part in another training camp in Europe so he can adjust to Glasgow's climate. He said, "My coach likes me to get away from a lot of distractions and just focus on training and being healthy." In the qualifying round of the 2014 Commonwealth Games, Kershorn threw a new personal best of 85.28 m (279 ft 914 in) on 1 August, but in the finals on 2 August he finished second with a throw of 82.67m, trailing Julius Yego of Kenya's winning 83.87m.

At the IAAF Diamond League's final meeting, the Weltklasse in Zurich, Switzerland on 28 August 2014, he set a new personal best/national record of 85.77m (281 ft 4in) in the opening round, finishing second behind Germany’s Thomas Rohler's toss of 87.63m.

Seasonal bests

  • 2010 – 67.01 m (219 ft 10 in)
  • 2011 – 75.77 m (248 ft 7 in)
  • 2012 – 84.58 m (277 ft 534 in)
  • 2013 – 84.39 m (276 ft 1014 in)
  • 2014 – 85.77 m (281 ft 434 in)
  • 2015 – 90.16 m (295 ft 912 in) NR
  • 2016 – 88.68 m (290 ft 1114 in)
  • 2017 – 86.61 m (284 ft 134 in)
  • References

    Keshorn Walcott Wikipedia