Weekend Herald

JASON WYNYARD

- Do you miss him?

Technique is 80 per cent of it. You have to address at exactly 45 degrees, and your hits are within a one or two millimetre window. It takes a lot of muscle memory and practice. David Bolstad. He had the whole game, the mental side, a magnificen­t technique, he was flawless with the axes he used and prepared, he was an amazing competitor. In our younger days we butted heads, and the rivalry went back to our fathers ( Pae Wynyard and Sonny Bolstad). David would stop at nothing to win . . . he would walk up and say “you’re not going to use that axe, are you?” It wasn’t nasty, but something to put doubt in your head. That wasn’t really my game. Later in life, we had a better understand­ing and realised we had pushed each other to where we ended up. It took a long time though . . . our relationsh­ip changed in 1996 when we beat the Aussies for the first time in 40 years. On paper, we should have been thrashed, but we knew we had to pull together. We hardly spoke before that. I really miss him. He’s a great loss to the sport . . . irreplacea­ble. There have been a few . . . an Australian called Dale Ryan. We were at a formal dinner when the world championsh­ips first started in Germany, and someone brought in a modified chainsaw with a big pipe, so it was really loud. Dale grabs it and slices open this pumpkin in the centre of the table. He gets up to all sorts of antics. Tai is quite gifted — he can do anything. He can look at things and replicate them. He was always good at athletics and even wood chopping which i s very difficult to learn. Karmyn ( Jason’s wife) was a good basketball player, she had a scholarshi­p in Alaska, but Tai found a love for basketball quite late, at about 12. He was the youngest Tall Black ever at 16 and got spotted by one of the Nike global people. We had 20 US colleges offering scholarshi­ps. The training at Kentucky is incredibly intense — I got to see that first hand — and it is awesome to see him in the fold there with future NBA stars. To reach the peak you have got to put your heart and soul into it and I don’t see that with Tai yet and there is only a small window. I think he is on track, and we’ve had really good feedback from the coaches. They love Tai and think he can do it but he needs to put that extra effort in outside of training. I’d like to compete for another five years, 10 if I can. But the body hurts so much — back troubles are the big issue. My training is predominan­tly gym- based now. I’d never set foot in a gym — I used to train by replicatin­g the events six days a week, eight hours a day. Wood choppers didn’t believe weights were of any benefit. When I started with Stihl, I didn’t have time to swing the axe. I met with ( rugby coach) Gordon Tietjens, who was running a sevens camp, to get some direction. He is an inspiratio­nal man. Through him I met trainers, a sports psychologi­st . . . I haven’t looked back really. My programmes are now written by Adam Storey, the Blues rugby trainer ( and Olympic weightlift­ing coach). It’s a juggling act with work, but I had t wo personal bests at last year’s world championsh­ips. My mental game is as strong as ever.

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