Date: Fri 11-Aug-1995
Date: Fri 11-Aug-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: KIMH
Illustration: I
Quick Words:
Russ-Bennett-Shot-Put
Full Text:
Russ Bennett: Hoping For A Shot At Better Things
B Y K IM J. H ARMON
He has always had the tools, it seems, the ability to hurl an eight- and
12-pound shot put a long way, but ever since Russ Bennett picked one up for
the time in the seventh grade, he has been involved in a never-ending battle
to improve.
He has had success, too . . . from his shot put state class title as a
sophomore to his four successive years of qualifying for the National Junior
Olympics championship meet and his gold medal performances in the annual state
Nutmeg Games.
" Russ is a very determined athlete, " said Russ Weiss, who coached his shot
put protege as a freshman and senior. " He worked many hours trying to improve
himself and right now he has some good techniques. What he has to work on is
refining those techniques. "
Russ, with the body of a football player or a weight-lifter, has always had
the strength to throw the shot put. But when he picked up an eight-pound ball
in seventh-grade gym class, what he had to learn was technique.
And he basically had to learn it himself.
" It seemed pretty easy at the time, " Russ admitted. " With my size, it made
it even easier. I was taught the basics, but I had to work on the technique
myself. "
It got him a good start for his high school track and field career.
" I got a lot of third places, " he said, " because there was always two
people on the team better than me in each event. We would almost always sweep
the weight events, ending up 1-2-3. "
It was during freshman year that, working with coach Weiss, Russ was able to
do some more refining of his technique while heaving a shot put that had
suddenly gotten four pounds heavier.
It was also during his freshman year that Russ had a brief taste of football
and wrestling, sports his body suggested he was more suited for. In the fall
of his freshman year, Russ played a lot of jayvee football and then moved to
varsity for the final games of the regular season and on into the state
championship. " I was kind of pressured into (playing), " Russ admitted. " I
did pretty well, but I told the coach, honestly, I couldn't do much for the
team because I wasn't into it as much as the others. Even though I had the
size and the potential, I just didn't have the heart for it. "
With his football career put to bed, Russ tried out for the wrestling team,
but after just two meets he was saddled with a knee injury that has plagued
him from time to time throughout the last three seasons.
But it hasn't stopped him from competing. Each summer, Russ has competed at
the annual Nutmeg Games. And this summer, for his last time in the high school
division, he brought home a gold medal in the shot and a silver medal in the
javelin. He has also spent each summer since his freshman year competing in
the Junior Olympics and each summer he has done well enough at the regional
competition to earn a spot at the National Junior Olympic championships.
" That's when I first really noticed I had a chance (in the shot put), in
Junior Olympics, " Russ said. " I took first in the state and second in the
region and qualified for the national meet in my first year. "
The extra exposure - and the constant practice - helped him for his sophomore
track and field season, when he won a CIAC Class L state championship in the
shot put. It was the kind of thing that earned Russ some attention from the
University of Connecticut track and field team which, unaware that he was a
sophomore, tried to lure him to Storrs to become a Husky.
But the Huskies had to wait for Russ to make it through his junior and senior
year, neither of which quite reached the success of his sophomore season,
although this spring, as a senior, Russ said, " I did pretty well, but it just
wasn't my best. I've hit a plateau that I've been stuck on for a while. I'm
getting close to 50, just inching my ways up there since my sophomore or
junior year. "
Russ medaled in the CIAC Class L meet, but failed to bring home a medal in the
State Opens, which would have gone a long way towards securing him a spot on
the UConn track and field team.
He is hoping his success at the class meet will mean something.
" The competition is a big jump from high school to college, " said coach
Weiss. " Russ has a powerful upper torso, but what I was trying to do in the
latter part of the season was work on his quickness. I told him that, when he
went on to college, they would probably get him to lose some weight and then
do some more work on his quickness. "
Coach Weiss believes Russ has the potential to become a solid member of the
UConn track team . . . even in the hammer throw, an event with which Russ has
had little experience. And in his last competition with the 16-pound shot, the
size of the collegiate shot, Russ earned a first-place finish with a throw of
42 feet.
Russ will be focussed on trying to earn a spot on the track and field team,
but he will also be focussed on his academics and a challenging major in the
neural science area.
" I want to just try to make the team at first and keep my grades up at the
same time, " he said. " That's going to be the challenge. "
The challenge will also be fitting in a music career. Russ has been in the
Newtown High School band for four years, traveling to Pasadena for the Rose
Bowl parade, and now has a bass-line set waiting for him at UConn.
There's a lot of stuff to fit on his plate, but Russ Bennett has the
determination to make it all work.