Coaching added feet for Bo Taylor
Chris Yemma
Bo Taylor will be the first to tell you that coaching does indeed
make a significant difference.
He will also say that there is more finesse, technique and skill
involved in throwing a disc resembling a Frisbee than what initially
meets the eye.
Taylor, a junior, spent his first two years on the Newport Harbor
High track and field team relying on raw talent and brute strength.
But this year, a new coaching addition has helped him add feet to his
throws by improving on style.
Tony Ciarelli, the Sailor football team’s defensive coordinator,
also a world-class weightlifter and renown shot put and discus coach,
stepped in this season to guide the Newport throwing squad -- the
strongest aspect of the Sailors’ track and field team, more than just
physically speaking.
Under Ciarelli’s direction this season, Taylor, Newport’s top
throwing prospect, has learned the right technique to throwing the
shot and disc. The culmination of the new coaching has been apparent
in the CIF Southern Section postseason.
Taylor qualified first in the discus at the Division II
preliminaries May 14 with a lifetime-best 179 feet, 4 inches and
second in the shot with another lifetime best -- 56-5 1/4 .
He went on to top his shot put best at the CIF Masters Meet
Friday, throwing 59-5 1/2 to finish third and qualify for the state
championships Friday and Saturday in Sacramento.
“He’s definitely gotten better,” Newport Coach Nowell Kay said.
“It’s not unexpected because he did well last year, but just having
Ciarelli there to work with him helped a lot with his development.”
Ciarelli has brought in Olympic-class throwers such as four-time
Canadian national champion Jason Tunks, among others, to help Taylor,
along with other Newport throwers Trevor Theriot, Kurt Kalanz and
Kevin Williams, perfect their techniques.
“I’ve got a circle that’s a little bigger than most high school
coaches,” said Ciarelli, who also holds a clinic in the area that
attracts throwers from all over the state.
Ciarelli said he considers this as Taylor’s first year, despite
competing in the events his freshman and sophomore years.
“That’s the thing, there’s a lot of kids around the state that
could be great throwers, but it’s the proper technique that matters,”
he said.
The Newport throwing coach has the team on a new regiment,
consisting of weightlifting and agility drills early in the year and
more throwing as the season progresses.
The change is quite different from what Taylor was used to, having
initially gotten involved in the sport after a strenuous football and
basketball season his freshman year.
“I was trying to find a sport that I didn’t have to work as hard,”
said Taylor, who is now just a few feet short of breaking the 1981
Newport school record of 185-11 in the discus. “I guess I was just
tired of the other two sports, but this year we’ve been working as
hard as anyone at the school.”
Being a junior, Taylor has goals next season of climbing the ranks
all the way to state champion. The current state leader is Arroyo
Grande senior Danny Rohr, tossing 202 flat at the Arcadia
invitational earlier this season.
But next season, Rohr will be gone, and Taylor will have had two
years grooming under his belt.
“I think I have a good chance of winning state in both,” he said.
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