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Tag: Finn

  • Real Life: Kayak cross champ Finn Butcher to be ‘different beast’ at 2028 LA Olympics

    Real Life: Kayak cross champ Finn Butcher to be ‘different beast’ at 2028 LA Olympics

    “It’s kind of like you’re solving a puzzle … but the puzzle’s constantly evolving. The things that you might think mentally that you’ve worked on and got on lock, they change — because you change, the context changes, the race changes, the way that you look at yourself changes.

    “Everything is just so fluid, and what we’re trying to do is solve this puzzle and try to, at the time that really matters, have the puzzle as whole as we can with as many tools as we’ve got and then be able to nail it at that moment.

    “That’s kind of what keeps you coming back — because there’s no time where everything’s perfect.”

    Butcher was pretty close to perfect in Paris, however, dominating the final from the start as he overcame three-time world champion Joe Clarke and the top canoeists in the world to take gold.

    Finn Butcher became one of New Zealand’s golden heroes with victory in the kayak cross at the Paris Olympics. Photo / Photosport
    Finn Butcher became one of New Zealand’s golden heroes with victory in the kayak cross at the Paris Olympics. Photo / Photosport

    Butcher told Real Life he had “a simple mindset” going into the biggest race of his life.

    “We knew the start was important, and to start well you’ve got to be really intent,” he explained.

    “You have to be ready to move as soon as that buzzer goes and the ramp’s dropping; get a little bit of slide before everyone else; and then as soon as you land, just go as hard as you can — and whatever happens, you’re going.”

    A jubilant Finn Butcher after crossing the finish line first and claiming gold in the men's canoe slalom cross at the Paris Olympics. Photo / Photosport
    A jubilant Finn Butcher after crossing the finish line first and claiming gold in the men’s canoe slalom cross at the Paris Olympics. Photo / Photosport

    Butcher said the psychological component of the kayak cross was what made it so compelling.

    “Like all high-performance sports to a degree, everyone’s on such a level playing field in terms of the physiology.

    “In our sport there’s a lot of different body types and people rely on different things; they might paddle a bit more technically so they don’t have to rely on their power or strength as much. But everyone’s best performance is not far away from each other.

    “It’s just, can you do that consistently in the moment? That’s what really matters.”

    His next big moment will come next year at the ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships, before he sets his sights on Olympic glory again in Los Angeles in four years.

    “Me this year is going to be so different to me in 2028, and me in 2028 is a completely different beast to 2020 — it’s just the way that things work,” he said.

    “It’s fascinating how you have to keep evolving or else you’re not going anywhere.”

    Real Life is a weekly interview show in which John Cowan speaks with prominent guests about their life, upbringing, and the way they see the world. Tune in Sundays from 7.30pm on Newstalk ZB or listen to the latest full interview here.

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  • Finn Russell’s dream dinner guests and the sport closest to his rugby style : Planet Rugby

    Finn Russell’s dream dinner guests and the sport closest to his rugby style : Planet Rugby

    Finn Russell is on the golf course, his ball nestled in the second cut, a line of trees obscuring his view to the green.

    The Scotland and Lions rugby star surveys the scene, shakes his head and breaks into a grin. What follows tells us everything about his approach to the sport he is rather better known for.

    “I see a tiny gap, I think I can go for it,” he says. “I know it’s probably not going to happen but I’m going to have a go. That’s the way I am.”

    Russell was born 50 miles from St Andrews, the home of golf, and is brother-in-law to Ewen Ferguson, a three-time winner on the DP World Tour.

    His day job is to steer teams from set-piece to try-line, rugby’s equivalent of tee to pin. Over a decade he has a built a reputation as one of the world’s most exciting playmakers.

    His high-risk high-reward tendencies make him a maverick, but also the best paid player in the Gallagher Premiership, which kicks off on Friday with his Bath team hosting Northampton in a repeat of last season’s final.

    To better understand what makes him tick, Russell agreed to be grilled on life away from the field. The tell-tale clues Planet Rugby sought were to be found on the golf course and in his choice of sporting dinner guests.

    Loves the creative side of golf

    “I’m not a great golfer, I’d say mid-teens (handicap), but when I play I like that creative side, to try to manufacture a shot,” he explains. “In a tough position you have to see a way out of it, create a shot. That appeals to me.

    “Take for example a long par four, a really tough one. You can either lay up or go for it. I’m going to go for it.

    “The risk-reward is probably not worth it but if it does come off it’s going to be brilliant and everyone is going to think you’re a great golfer, even if you’re 50 over at the time.

    “So for me, that one good shot, it’s worth it. A memory for a lifetime!”

    Russell says he has played only twice this year, both times with team-mate Will Muir. The first time he was four-over through the first nine and 14-over coming home. The next five and 12 over respectively.

    “A few holes wreck it,” admits the 31-year old. “In rugby I’ve got more control of the ball because I’ve done it for longer. In golf, I can see the shot, I just can’t always execute it.

    “I’ll try something then I’ll duff it one yard. I’ll try and play as if I’m a scratch golfer, try and shape my shots, put spin on, but half the time it’s luck. There’s always that risk of messing it up.”

    He has had those moments on a rugby field too, but not for a while now. Scotland have won their last four matches against England, lost only once to the auld enemy in seven and roamed unbeaten at Twickenham since 2017.

    Domestically, Bath’s million pound (a season) man took his underachieving club to the Grand Final last season and, despite playing a man down for almost all the game, came within a whisker of beating Northampton.

    Russell is now father to two daughters and that responsibility, allied to the expectation which comes with his senior leadership position at Bath, has mellowed him in some respects.

    League great reveals ‘massive dream’ to coach England after coming ‘close’ under Eddie Jones

    But ask him for the sporting company he would most like to keep and the twinkle returns to his eye.

    “Usain Bolt,” he says, without hesitation. “The greatest ever, yes, but he has a good character to go with it. That counts for me.

    ‘You’ve got to have a bit of personality’

    “If you’re dead boring, yeah you can be fast, but no-one’s going to want to talk to you just because of that. You’ve got to have a bit of personality. Like Noah Lyles. He talked the talk then won the Olympic 100m.

    “Who else? Andy Murray. I don’t know him that well, though my dad used to play badminton with his mum. Obviously, Andy is a great player and he also makes me laugh off the court. He doesn’t even like tennis now, he says!

    “One more would be Tiger Woods. Because he’s come back from a lot. I’ve been in tough positions before in rugby but Tiger.. fair play!”

    Reflecting on how far he has come in his sporting career reminds Russell of another golfing episode in his life.

    It took place in Scotland back in 2011 while the Rugby World Cup was going on in his absence down in New Zealand.

    Russell was then an apprentice stone mason and was working on one of the big houses overlooking the Queen’s course at Gleneagles.

    “I used to go into this bush over the back wall and find loads of golf balls and bring them home,” he says.

    The next time he was at Gleneagles was to play the Queen’s course. “I walked by that same house and that same bush and I was thinking how different my life is.”

    All of which might give the impression Russell would be satisfied were his career to end tomorrow. That is not the case.

    One club trophy, with Glasgow in 2015, is not enough. Nor are his two Lions experiences – one as a temporary stand-in in New Zealand, the other played out in empty stadiums in South Africa four years ago.

    “It’s a big ambition to play a Lions tour in front of fans,” he says. “Having done 10 days in 2017 then 2021 in Covid year, it’s made me desperate to get on the next tour for the full Lions experience.

    “As for Bath, losing the final was disappointing but doing so well with 14 men gives us a springboard into this season. When we came off it didn’t really feel like we had lost.

    “That has given us a good starting point for this season. We’ve come back in with the right mindset. Mentally we are in a good place, hungry for it all to start.”

    Tune into TNT Sports to enjoy all the best that live sport has to offer this season. TNT Sports is available through its streaming destination discovery+ and across all major TV platforms. Only sport can do this. For more info visit: tntsports.co.uk.

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