Valerie Adams pulls no punches telling life story

Olympian Valerie Adams flicks through Caitlin Nalder's school assignment about her at a book signing at Fraser Cove.
Olympian Valerie Adams flicks through Caitlin Nalder's school assignment about her at a book signing at Fraser Cove. Joel Ford

Valerie Adams fans of all ages turned up to meet their hero during her whirlwind book signing stopover in Tauranga.

A queue of fans lined up at The Warehouse, Fraser Cove yesterday, where the gold medallist was happily signing copies of Valerie, the Autobiography.

Carol Singh is such a big fan she camped out in the store for more than an hour before Adams' scheduled appearance.

"I told my grandson, 'Get Nanny down there, I want to be first'," she said. "I've been watching her the whole time and she's a Tongan girl and I go over there just about every year. She's just beautiful ... I wasn't going to miss this even if I had to crawl on my hands and knees to get here."

Ms Singh has been a long time fan of the shot put star and said Adams lived up to her expectations and more during their brief meeting.

Young up-and-coming shot putter Janita Tai was left speechless after meeting her hero.

"She's a Western Bay and a Bay of Plenty representative at shot put. She collects Val stories and Val's more or less an inspiration and an idol," said Janita's mother, Evelyn Tai.

Mrs Tai said her daughter had even taped Adams' performances at the Olympics in order to study and mimic her technique.

Caitlin Nalder, 10, chose to study the shot put champion for a school assignment on Olympians and brought along her project to show Adams.

"She's really cool and she's an inspiration to lots of kids," she said. "She really inspires me."

In the book, Adams has written of the pain that littered her path to Olympic glory this year.

For example, former husband Bertrand Vili's fondness for alcohol and how he got injured when he wrote off a Holden V8 car just two days before the 2006 Halberg sports awards.

She also writes of the split with coach and friend Kirsten Hellier and the day in London she came second to disgraced Belarussian Nadzeya Ostapchuk.

Valerie was written with the help of veteran sports journalist Phil Gifford, who described it as the most honest and candid autobiography he had worked on.
 


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