EUGENE, Ore. – Payton Otterdahl of Rosemount and North Dakota State earned a berth in the Tokyo Olympics by throwing 71 feet, 11 inches in the men's shot put Friday night at the U.S. Olympic Trials.
"This is the best day of my life, It feels fantastic," Otterdahl said. "I couldn't ask for anything more than to throw a personal best and make the Olympic team."
But his throw, which he said he sensed after "a perfect fling off the fingers" in gaining the third berth on the U.S. team, went under the radar after defending Olympic champion Ryan Crouser broke a 31-year-old world record with a heave of 76-8¼. Reigning world champion Joe Kovacs was second.
"Those guys are my heroes," Otterdahl said.
Crouser, 28, broke the record set by Randy Barnes, whose mark of 75-10¼, set on May 20, 1990, was one of the oldest in the record books.
When Crouser's fourth try plunked into the dirt, well beyond where any other mark had been made, the quarter-filled stadium sent out a collective gasp. About a half-minute passed while officials checked the distance. When it came up on the board, he was mobbed by his competitors.
Going the distance
Joe Klecker (Hopkins) made the Olympic team in the men's 10,000. He was ranked seventh in the event but finished third at 27:53.90, less than a third of a second behind first-place finisher Woody Kincaid's time of 27:53.62.
"I never won an NCAA title. Making the Olympic team today makes up for that," said Klecker, who finished his college career at Colorado in 2020.