Commonwealth Games shooting gold medallist John Snowden will
be on his South Canterbury farm moving stock and planting
crops this weekend, his life far removed from the glitz and
glamour of international sport.
He might not even have got to New Delhi had his brother
Michael not moved his family from Brisbane to manage the farm
for a year, while Snowden chased the qualifying scores he
needed to get to the Games.
And when he and gold medal-winning fullbore pairs partner
Mike Collings went to a shoot in Perth on the way to the
Games because it used the same electronic targets as New
Delhi, they slept on the clubhouse floor at the range, not in
a ritzy central city hotel.
As Snowden, 41, stood surrounded by television cameras and
reporters today, a gold medal draped around his neck, you
sensed he felt the sacrifices were worth it, even if he
hadn't had a lot of sleep.
"We were late getting home from the range," he said.
"I was still buzzing a bit, and it was midnight before I got
to bed, I was still awake two hours later."
Over the past couple of weeks in the Commonwealth Games
Village, he has learned how other athletes had approached the
Games, and been surprised.
One men's hockey player told him he had played 40 tests since
last November, he said.
"There's no way we could ever have done that, I get to
Australia for a match a couple of times a year, and shoot the
local competitions at home, and that's about it really," he
said.
The travel that is done, is on the cheap, such as sleeping on
the range.
"It saves a few dollars. We've got a lot of friends now
around the world with shooting, and you can usually find
somewhere to doss down," he said.
"A lot of times, transport's the problem, it's easier to stay
on the range, then you don't have to hire a car to get your
gear out."
If one thing could make life easier, it would be a good farm
manager, now that his brother is back in Brisbane.
"He took a year of his work in Brisbane and his wife and kid
moved over from Brisbane for the best part of a year, and
helped out on the farm -- that was the period when we had the
trials.
"He was very helpful. I had a lot of weekends away, and with
stock you need somebody there all the time to keep an eye on
it.
"It's very handy to have him there. I never asked him to do
anything, it was just good timing, he happened to be free."
Protests over malfunctioning electronic targets that held up
the medal presentations for several hours had taken some of
gloss of his gold, he said.
Collings and Snowden had to wait anxiously for several hours
to hear if they had won, after the Australian pair who had
been leading complained some of their shots had not been
correctly recorded.
By the time all the protests had been dismissed a medal
ceremony due for 3pm (local time) was held in darkness, at
6.20pm.
"When you see the other events, you finish, you know who wins
straight away, and they get straight on the podium. That
whole atmosphere and the euphoria of the win is captured in
the medal ceremony," he said.
"But no, by the time we'd waited six or seven hours …you
know, it felt a wee bit ho hum really. It was still special,
but yeah, it could have been more special.
"It was only really Australia who could have beaten us if
they'd had a good match yesterday, but who knows? They may
still may not have beaten us, we still had a good score."
New Zealand won with a Commonwealth Games record 588 points,
with Scotland on 587, and England third on 584.
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